[1][2] Elected to the state supreme court as a Democrat, Weber "wrote the decisions in a large number of the most important and far-reaching cases that came before that tribunal".
4 of the Free and Accepted Masons of Utah, having gone through the three degrees sometime prior to the 1895 proceedings of that grand lodge where he is listed as a member.
Retiring as chief justice at the close of the year,[1] Weber administered the oath of office to his successor on January 5, 1925.
[8] Weber was appointed referee in bankruptcy by Tillman Davis Johnson of the United States district court.
[1] Weber died shortly after 11 o'clock in the morning at his country home in Mill Creek at the age of 66, after a long illness due to a complication of diseases.