At
a glance:
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Born: April 2, 1912, in Springfield, Massachusetts
Died: March 7, 2006, in Reno, Nevada
Race/nationality/ethnic background: born of Ukrainian
Jewish parents who emigrated in 1910
Primary city and county of residence and work: Reno,
Washoe County
Major field of work: Attorney
Other role identities: Champion of the underdog
Biography:
On January 30, 2007 the Northern Nevada Women
Lawyers Association, in conjunction with the Washoe County
Courthouse Historical Society, honored the life and work of
Charlotte Hunter Arley, a pioneer Nevada
woman attorney. A plaque how hangs in
the historic courtroom where her most
famous case was tried. The “Petticoat
Trial” began on June 2, 1952 in Judge John
S. Belford’s courtroom. The press dubbed
it the “Petticoat Trial” because for the first
time in Washoe County both opposing
attorneys were women. It could also
easily have been called “the virgin trial”
because it was the first jury trial for
Charlotte and her opponent Nada
Novacovich and for Judge Belford as well. Charlotte prevailed and her client was
awarded $3,000.00.
Over the twenty years that Charlotte
and I were friends, we had many
conversations about this trial, her life and
her long legal career which she began at the ripe old age of 16
when she entered Northeastern Law School in Boston. She
became a lawyer because her father gave her the choice of
law or dentistry and she couldn’t see herself pulling teeth. She
had to wait until 1935 to take the Massachusett’s Bar because
she wasn’t old enough when she graduated from law school
.
Charlotte was a hard worker and never considered any
job beneath her. There were times when she worked 2 or 3
jobs. She always had great confidence in her own ability to
work hard and to take care of herself. Whenever she was
treated unfairly in her profession because she was a woman,
she shrugged it off with the explanation that that’s the way
things were in those days.” She then left that situation and
went on to something new. Charlotte had a great sense of
humor and a real zest for life. Her love of travel brought her
West and she worked in the gift shop at Yosemite during the
summers of 1936 and 1937. She then traveled to Canada,
Alaska, and finally Hawaii where she married for the first time.
Whenever I would ask her about her husband, Max, she would
avoid talking about him and say, “what can I tell you about
him? He was a saxophone player. That’s all you need to
know.” Her father had come to Reno to get a divorce from
her mother and Charlotte joined him here. She left Hawaii on
one of the last boats out before the war.
She didn’t plan on practicing law in Nevada when she came
to Reno, but she changed her mind and passed the Nevada
Bar. She was admitted to practice in 1947. There were three
women who passed the Nevada bar that year. Charlotte, Nellie
Price and Emilie Wanderer of Las Vegas. Charlotte took on
an assortment of divorce, personal injury, and criminal cases
over the years. Several of these cases were appealed to the
Nevada Supreme Court and Charlotte won
her share. She assured me that she “always represented the Plaintiffs because
they were the people who needed her the
most.” To Charlotte, being a lawyer was
all about justice and doing the right thing
and providing a service to people. Although
she did well financially over the years, she
always claimed that it was “never about
the money.” She never had fee
agreements with her clients, but they
usually paid her eventually when they
could afford it.
In Reno she met and married Jacques
Arley, the love of her life. She thought
that he was very handsome and she loved
the fact that he had been in the French
Resistance during the war. Charlotte and
Jacques lived in Portland, Oregon for about fifteen years
because of his work. After Jacques’ death, Charlotte moved
back to Reno and resumed her practice.
In 1989 the Northern Nevada Women Lawyers began
honoring outstanding women attorneys in the community.
Charlotte was the unanimous choice to be the first woman so
honored. She continued to serve her clients until she was well
in to her eighties. The clerks working behind the counter at
the courthouse filing office remember her coming in with her
clients and if they couldn’t afford the filing fees or occasionally
a marriage license fee, Charlotte paid the fees herself. After
all, being a lawyer was all about service to people who needed
you and service to the legal profession. Charlotte Hunter Arley
died on March 7, 2006, just shy of her 94th birthday.
Charlotte was a credit to her profession and contribute
so much to the Reno legal community. The community
recognized those long years of dedication and service when
they presented a memorial service in her honor which featured
a reenactment of the “Petticoat Trial”.
Researched and written by Kathleen Noneman

Sources of Information:
Conversations over 20 years between Charlotte Arley and
Kathleen Noneman.
Conversations with members of her family including her
niece, Alexa Hunter.
Oral history interviews with Victoria Ford, University of
Nevada Oral History Department, 2001.
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