Upon graduating from law school, Brewer moved to Kansas and established a law practice. He was named Commissioner of the Federal Circuit Court in Leavenworth in 1861. He held two other judgeships before being elected to the Kansas Supreme Court in 1870, where he served for 14 years. In 1884 he was named to the U.S. Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals.
Brewer was an active member of the Supreme Court, writing often in both concurring and dissenting opinions. He was a major contributor to the doctrine of substantive due process, the arguing that certain activities are entirely outside government control. In his time he frequently sided with Court majorities striking down property rights restrictions. Brewer also authored the unanimous opinion of the Court in Muller v. Oregon (1908), in support of a law restricting working hours for women.
Brewer was born to a family of Congregational missionaries in Smyrna, Turkey.
Brewer attended college at Wesleyan University and Yale University, graduating from the latter in 1856.
After 28 years on the bench, Brewer was nominated by Benjamin Harrison to the United States Supreme Court, in 1889, and confirmed in 1890 by the Senate.
DavidBrewer was born in what is present-day Turkey in January 1837, the son of Christian missionaries.
Brewer was a judge for the last 40 years of his life, first in the Supreme Court of Kansas, then as a federal circuit court judge, and, beginning in 1890, in the Supreme Court.
Brewer was a devout Christian, penning an opinion in 1892 in Church of the Holy Trinity v.