Entertainment / Judge Wapner Judge Wapner Dead at 97 Joseph Wapner died in his sleep Sunday By Newser Editors and Wire Services Posted Feb 26, 2017 2:46 PM CST Copied In this Friday, Oct. 13, 1989, file photo, retired Judge Joseph A. Wapner of TV's 'The People's Court' congratulates his son, Judge Frederick N. Wapner, right, as he was enrobed as a Municipal Court judge in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Nick Ut, File) Joseph Wapner, the retired Los Angeles judge who presided over The People's Court with steady force during the heyday of the reality courtroom show, died Sunday at age 97. Son David Wapner tells the AP that his father died at home in his sleep. Joseph Wapner was hospitalized a week ago with breathing problems and had been under home hospice care. The People's Court, on which Wapner decided real small-claims from 1981 to 1993, was one of the granddaddies of the syndicated reality shows of today. Wapner's affable, no-nonsense approach attracted many fans, putting The People's Court in the top five in syndication at its peak. Before auditioning for the show, Wapner had spent more than 20 years on the bench in Los Angeles, first in Municipal Court and then in Superior Court. At one time he was presiding judge of the Los Angeles Superior Court, the largest court in the United States. He retired as judge in November 1979, the day after his 60th birthday. "Everything on the show is real," Wapner told the AP in a 1986 interview. "There's no script, no rehearsal, no retakes. Everything from beginning to end is like a real courtroom, and I personally consider each case as a trial." In some metropolitan counties, the number of small claims cases more than tripled during the 1980s; some cited Wapner as a cause. Click for much more on his life. (Wapner once called Judge Judy "a disgrace to the profession.") Report an error