Judge Irving is a native of Greenwood, Mississippi. In 1968, he graduated from Jackson State College and taught for four years in the public schools of the Mississippi Delta before going to law school. He graduated from the University of Mississippi School of Law in 1974, and in 1975, he became the first African American to clerk for the Mississippi Supreme Court when he became the law clerk for the late Chief Justice Robert G. Gillespie. In 1976, he served as an Earl Warren Fellow Intern with the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund in New York. In 1978, Judge Irving became the first African American assistant United States Attorney in Mississippi since reconstruction when he was hired by the U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Mississippi. He became the first African American to serve as board attorney for a Mississippi county when the Board of Supervisors of Humphreys County hired him in 1988.
Prior to being elected to the Court of Appeals of the State of Mississippi in 1998, Judge Irving spent approximately twenty years in private practice. He practiced law in Greenville, Mississippi, with two college friends for approximately ten years before returning home to Greenwood, where he enjoyed a solo practice for ten years before being elected to the bench. During his years as a private attorney, Judge Irving had a diverse practice which included representation of both civil and criminal clients and a number of public clients, including the Housing Authority of the City of Greenwood; the cities of Itta Bena and Shaw; the towns of Jonestown, Sledge, and Winstonville; and the Shaw, Mound Bayou, and Leflore County school districts. He also handled a number of impactful cases, including the successful defense of Hershal Wilburn’s challenge to the election of Peggy Hopson to the Board of Supervisors of Hinds County, which resulted in Hinds County having a majority African American board for the first time; and the defense of Orlando Fratesi’s challenge to the election of Carl Palmer to the Greenwood City Council. Although a new election was ordered, Judge Irving’s role in ensuring that African American voters were not disenfranchised during the new election ultimately resulted in Greenwood also having a majority African American council for the first time.
Judge Irving has served as a Presiding Judge on the Appeals Court since March of 2011, and was instrumental in expanding the Court’s Court on the Road Program to include annual oral arguments at Alcorn State University, Mississippi Valley State University, and Rust College. Judge Irving is a past president and treasurer of the Magnolia Bar Association. He is a member of the bar of the Supreme Court of the United States of America, American Bar Association, the Mississippi Bar, and the Magnolia Bar Association. He is also a life member of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc., a former member of the American Trial Lawyers Association and the Council of School Board Attorneys. Additionally, Judge Irving is a life member of the Jackson State University National Alumni Association and has established and funded an endowed scholarship at his beloved “Thee I Love.” He is a Methodist and a member of Wesley United Methodist Church in Greenwood. Judge Irving is married to the former Ethola Garrett Collins, and they have six children.