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Lord Chief Justice of Ireland

The Court of King's Bench (or Court of Queen's Bench during the reign of a Queen) was one of the senior courts of common law in Ireland. It was a mirror of the Court of King's Bench in England. The Lord Chief Justice was the most senior judge in the court, and the second most senior Irish judge under English rule and later when Ireland became part of the United Kingdom. Additionally, for a brief period between 1922 and 1924, the Lord Chief Justice of Ireland was the most senior judge in the Irish Free State.

The Four Courts
The headquarters of the Irish judicial system since 1804. The Court of King's Bench was one of the original four courts that sat there.

History of the position edit

The office was created during the Lordship of Ireland (1171–1536) and continued in existence under the Kingdom of Ireland (1536–1800) and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. Prior to the Supreme Court of Judicature Act (Ireland) 1877, the Lord Chief Justice presided over the Court of King's/Queen's Bench, and as such ranked foremost amongst the judges sitting at common law. After 1877, the Lord Chief Justice assumed the presidency of the Queen's Bench Division of the new High Court of Justice, which sat permanently in the Four Courts in Dublin.

Thomas Lefroy, later Lord Chief Justice of Ireland (LCJ 1852–1866), was used by Jane Austen as the model for her Pride and Prejudice character Mr. Darcy. Lefroy and Austen had had a romance in their youths. Other prominent Lord Chief Justices of Ireland include Lord Whiteside (LCJ 1866–1876), who as a Queen's Counsel had defended Irish nationalist leader Daniel O'Connell in court, Gerald FitzGerald, 3rd Earl of Desmond, Hugh de Lacy, Risteárd de Tiúit, John Doherty, Thomas Marlay, James Ley, Peter O'Brien, and James Henry Mussen Campbell, 1st Baron Glenavy (LCJ 1916–1918, later Chairman of Seanad Éireann and grandfather of the satirist Patrick Campbell). One Lord Chief Justice, Lord Kilwarden, was killed by a crowd during Robert Emmet's 1803 rebellion.

Abolition of the position edit

The abolition of the position of Lord Chief Justice of Ireland was originally envisaged in a draft of the Government of Ireland Bill 1920. The Bill originally proposed that the Lord Chief Justice of Ireland would become the Lord Chief Justice of Southern Ireland. However, the then incumbent, The Rt. Hon. Sir Thomas Molony, 1st Bt., vigorously lobbied for the right to continue to hold the title even after the Bill was passed. Ultimately, his arguments were at least in part accepted: The Act, in its transitional provisions, provided that while he would in effect be the first Lord Chief Justice of Southern Ireland, his title remained that of Lord Chief Justice of Ireland, although this was a transitional provision and was not a right to be enjoyed by his successors.[1]

Subsequently, the highest-ranking judicial posting in Ireland, that of Lord Chancellor of Ireland, was abolished in December 1922.[2] This left the office of the Lord Chief Justice of Ireland as the most senior judge in the Irish Free State but not for very long. The Constitution of the Irish Free State adopted in December 1922 clearly envisaged the early establishment of new courts for the nascent state and the abolition of the position of the Lord Chief Justice of Ireland.[3] However, this only took place when the Courts of Justice Act 1924 was finally adopted. Under that Act, the position of the Chief Justice of the Irish Free State superseded the position of Lord Chief Justice of Ireland as the highest judicial office in the Irish Free State.[4]

In what became Northern Ireland, the position was superseded by the position of Lord Chief Justice of Northern Ireland.[5]

List of holders edit

Date Name Notes Left Office
1324-7 Nicholas Fastolf, knight (1st term)
1327-8 Henry de Hambury From Hanbury, Worcestershire
1328-30 Nicholas Fastolf, knight (2nd term)
1330-1 Elias de Asshebournham, knight (1st term)
1331-2 Peter Tilliol, knight Born at Scaleby Castle, Cumberland
1332-3 Thomas Louth From Louth, Lincolnshire (1st term)
1333-4 Robert de Scardeburgh ("but probably did not act")
1334-7 Thomas Louth (2nd term)
1337 Elias de Asshebournham, knight (2nd term)
1337 Thomas Louth (3rd term)
1337-8 Elias de Asshebournham, knight (3rd term)
1338 Thomas Louth (4th term)
1338-41 Elias de Asshebournham (4th term)
1341-4 Thomas de Dent Patronymic derived from Dent, Yorkshire
1344-5 Robert de Scardeburgh From Scarborough, North Yorkshire (only substantive term)
1345-6 John le Hunt Born in Fenny Stratford, Buckinghamshire
1346 Henry de Motlowe, knight Possibly connected to Mobberley or Motburlege, Chesire
1346-51 John de Rednesse From Reedness, Yorkshire (1st term)
1351-4 Godfrey de Foljambe, knight Born in Tideswell, Derbyshire
1354-6 John de Rednesse (2nd term)
1356 Richard de Wirkeley Prior of the Order of Hospitallers in Ireland - possibly connected to Wakefield, Yorkshire
1356-9 John de Rednesse (3rd term)
1359 William le Petit
1359-61 John de Rednesse (4th term)
1361-3 William de Notton, knight From Notton, Yorkshire
1363-5 Richard White From Clongill, County Meath
1365-7 Thomas de la Dale, knight Born in Little Barford, Bedfordshire
1367-70 John Keppock, or Keppok (1st term)
1370-2 William de Skipwith, knight Family originally from Skipwith, Yorkshire
1372–82 John Keppock, or Keppok (2nd term)
1382 Sir Thomas Mortimer, knight Family originally from Mortemer, Seine-Maritime, Normandy
1384 John de Sotheron Born at Great Mitton, Lancashire
1385 John Penros Born in Escalls, Cornwall
1386 Edmund de Clay From the common pleas[6][7]
1388, 10 July Richard Plunkett Of a leading Anglo-Irish family with branches in County Meath and County Louth
1388, 23 September Peter Rowe (1st term)
1395 William Hankford From Hankford in the parish of Bulkworthy, Devon
1396 William Tynbegh, clerk Family originally from Tenby, Pembrokeshire
1397 Peter Rowe (2nd term)
1397 Stephen de Bray (1st term) From the common pleas - family possibly from Bray, County Wicklow
1404 Richard Rede From the Exchequer
1406 Stephen de Bray (2nd term)
1426 Henry Fortescue
1429 Stephen de Bray (3rd term)
1435 Christopher Bernevall, or Barnewall 2nd justice
1437 William Boys
1437 Christopher Bernevall, or Barnewall (2nd term)
1446 Richard Bye
1447 Robert Plunket
1447 Sir James Alleyn
1457 Nicholas Barnewall (1st term)
1461 Sir Thomas Fitz-Christopher Plunket (1st term)
1461 Nicholas Barnewall (2nd term)
1463 (or before) Sir Thomas Fitz-Christopher Plunket (2nd term)
1468 John Chevir From Kilkenny. Former Master of the Rolls in Ireland.
1474 Philip Bermingham (d 1490, buried St. Mary's Abbey, Dublin)
1490 Thomas Cusacke
1494 Thomas Bowring Family from Bowringsleigh, Devon
1496 John Topcliffe From the Exchequer
1513 Patrick Bermingham
1521 Patrick Bermingham By a new patent
1533 Sir Bartholomew Dillon, knight 2nd justice, from the Exchequer Died same year[8]
1534 Patrick Finglas From the Exchequer
1535 Sir Gerald Aylmer From the Exchequer[9]
1559 John Plunket
1562 John Plunket By a new patent
1583 James Dowdall
1586 Robert Gardiner Serjeant-at-law in England
1604 Sir James Ley Afterwards Earl of Marlborough: resigned
1608 Sir Humphrey Winch, knight Chief Baron; from the Exchequer Made a Justice of the Common Pleas of England
1612 Sir John Denham, knight Chief Baron, from the Exchequer
1617 Sir William Jones, knight Serjeant-at-law
1620 Sir George Shurley, or Shirley, knight Serjeant-at-law (d.1647)[10]
1655 Richard Pepys Under the Protectorate – died 2 January 1659
1659 John Santhey 19 Jan pro tem on Pepys' death[11]
1659 William Basill Attorney general; 24 Jan
1660 Sir James Barry, knight Afterwards Lord Santry
1673 Sir John Povey, knight From the Exchequer
1679 Sir Robert Booth, knight Died the next year
1680 Sir William Davys, knight Prime serjeant
1687 Thomas Nugent Removed
1690 Sir Richard Reynell, 1st Baronet Dismissed
1695 Sir Richard Pyne Chief Justice of the Common Pleas
1709 Alan Brodrick Removed
1711 Sir Richard Cox, knight and baronet Removed
1714 William Whitshed Removed to the Common Pleas
1727 John Rogerson Previously attorney general Died in office 1741
1741 Thomas Marlay Previously Chief Baron of the Exchequer Retired 1751
1751 St George Caulfeild Previously attorney general Retired 1760
1760 Warden Flood Previously attorney general Died in office 1764
1764 John Gore, later Lord Annaly Previously solicitor general; 24 Aug Died in office 1784
1784 John Scott Previously Prime serjeant; Created Lord Earlsfort, afterwards Viscount and Earl of Clonmell; 29 Apr Died in office 1798
1798 Arthur Wolfe, Lord Kilwarden Previously attorney-general; 13 June Murdered 23 July 1803
1803 William Downes Previously a judge of the Court of King's Bench; afterward 1st Baron Downes; 12 Sep Retired 1822
1822 Charles Kendal Bushe Previously solicitor general from 1805; 14 Feb Retired 1841
1841 Edward Pennefather Previously solicitor general; 10 Nov Retired 1846
1846 Francis Blackburne Previously Master of the Rolls; 21 Jan Became Lord Chancellor 1852
1852 Thomas Langlois Lefroy Previously a Baron of the Exchequer Retired 1866
1866 James Whiteside Former attorney-general Died in office 1876
1877 George Augustus Chichester May Previously attorney-general Retired 1887
1887 Michael Morris Previously Chief Justice of the Common Pleas Became Lord of Appeal in Ordinary 1889
1889 Peter O'Brien Previously attorney-general Retired 1913
1913 Richard Robert Cherry Previously a Lord Justice of Appeal Retired 1916
1916 James Henry Mussen Campbell Previously attorney-general Became Lord Chancellor 1918
1918 Thomas Molony Previously a Lord Justice of Appeal Position abolished

Sources edit

  • List from Liber Munerum Publicorum Hiberniae, by Rowley Lascelles, copied in Haydn's Book of Dignities
  • Names from 1852 onwards from The Oxford Companion to Law, ed David M. Walker, 1980
  • Francis Elrington Ball The Judges in Ireland 1221–1921 2 Vols (John Murray London 1926)

References edit

  1. ^ For a thorough account, see: W.N. Osborough, Studies in Irish Legal History, Four Courts Press 1999, pp 318–326.
  2. ^ Schedule II, Part II, Irish Free State Consequential Provisions Act 1922, a United Kingdom statute.
  3. ^ Article 75, Constitution of the Irish Free State (Saorstát Éireann) Act 1922.
  4. ^ Section 5, Courts of Justice Act 1924.
  5. ^ "Constitutional Reform Act 2005". from the original on 28 September 2019. Retrieved 2 September 2021.
  6. ^ For holders of the office of Lord Chief Justice, the period 1383–86 seems to have been one of great confusion, and it is not clear whether all those nominated actually took up the position – see Ball The Judges in Ireland .
  7. ^ Haydn's Book of Dignities says that "John de Shriggeley, from the Exchequer" served at this point, but Elrington Ball's 'Judges in Ireland', P157 does not mention him
  8. ^ Date from Ball, F. Elrington The Judges in Ireland 1221–1921 John Murray London 1926, P191 – although Haydn's Book of Dignities says that he took office in 1532
  9. ^ Date from Ball, F. Elrington The Judges in Ireland 1221–1921 John Murray London 1926, P156 – although Haydn's Book of Dignities says that he took office in 1546
  10. ^ date from Ball, F. Elrington The Judges in Ireland 1221–1921 (London 1926), p.328 – although Haydn's Book of Dignities says that he took office in 1619
  11. ^ Robert Dunlop, 'Ireland under the Commonwealth' Vol 2, P 470n

Further reading edit

  • Daire Hogan, R.R. Cherry, Lord Chief Justice of Ireland, 1914–16

External links edit

  • Lord Chief Justice O'Brien anecdotes

lord, chief, justice, ireland, confused, with, chief, justice, irish, common, pleas, court, king, bench, court, queen, bench, during, reign, queen, senior, courts, common, ireland, mirror, court, king, bench, england, lord, chief, justice, most, senior, judge,. Not to be confused with Chief Justice of the Irish Common Pleas The Court of King s Bench or Court of Queen s Bench during the reign of a Queen was one of the senior courts of common law in Ireland It was a mirror of the Court of King s Bench in England The Lord Chief Justice was the most senior judge in the court and the second most senior Irish judge under English rule and later when Ireland became part of the United Kingdom Additionally for a brief period between 1922 and 1924 the Lord Chief Justice of Ireland was the most senior judge in the Irish Free State The Four CourtsThe headquarters of the Irish judicial system since 1804 The Court of King s Bench was one of the original four courts that sat there Contents 1 History of the position 2 Abolition of the position 3 List of holders 4 Sources 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory of the position editThe office was created during the Lordship of Ireland 1171 1536 and continued in existence under the Kingdom of Ireland 1536 1800 and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Prior to the Supreme Court of Judicature Act Ireland 1877 the Lord Chief Justice presided over the Court of King s Queen s Bench and as such ranked foremost amongst the judges sitting at common law After 1877 the Lord Chief Justice assumed the presidency of the Queen s Bench Division of the new High Court of Justice which sat permanently in the Four Courts in Dublin Thomas Lefroy later Lord Chief Justice of Ireland LCJ 1852 1866 was used by Jane Austen as the model for her Pride and Prejudice character Mr Darcy Lefroy and Austen had had a romance in their youths Other prominent Lord Chief Justices of Ireland include Lord Whiteside LCJ 1866 1876 who as a Queen s Counsel had defended Irish nationalist leader Daniel O Connell in court Gerald FitzGerald 3rd Earl of Desmond Hugh de Lacy Risteard de Tiuit John Doherty Thomas Marlay James Ley Peter O Brien and James Henry Mussen Campbell 1st Baron Glenavy LCJ 1916 1918 later Chairman of Seanad Eireann and grandfather of the satirist Patrick Campbell One Lord Chief Justice Lord Kilwarden was killed by a crowd during Robert Emmet s 1803 rebellion Abolition of the position editThe abolition of the position of Lord Chief Justice of Ireland was originally envisaged in a draft of the Government of Ireland Bill 1920 The Bill originally proposed that the Lord Chief Justice of Ireland would become the Lord Chief Justice of Southern Ireland However the then incumbent The Rt Hon Sir Thomas Molony 1st Bt vigorously lobbied for the right to continue to hold the title even after the Bill was passed Ultimately his arguments were at least in part accepted The Act in its transitional provisions provided that while he would in effect be the first Lord Chief Justice of Southern Ireland his title remained that of Lord Chief Justice of Ireland although this was a transitional provision and was not a right to be enjoyed by his successors 1 Subsequently the highest ranking judicial posting in Ireland that of Lord Chancellor of Ireland was abolished in December 1922 2 This left the office of the Lord Chief Justice of Ireland as the most senior judge in the Irish Free State but not for very long The Constitution of the Irish Free State adopted in December 1922 clearly envisaged the early establishment of new courts for the nascent state and the abolition of the position of the Lord Chief Justice of Ireland 3 However this only took place when the Courts of Justice Act 1924 was finally adopted Under that Act the position of the Chief Justice of the Irish Free State superseded the position of Lord Chief Justice of Ireland as the highest judicial office in the Irish Free State 4 In what became Northern Ireland the position was superseded by the position of Lord Chief Justice of Northern Ireland 5 List of holders editDate Name Notes Left Office1324 7 Nicholas Fastolf knight 1st term 1327 8 Henry de Hambury From Hanbury Worcestershire1328 30 Nicholas Fastolf knight 2nd term 1330 1 Elias de Asshebournham knight 1st term 1331 2 Peter Tilliol knight Born at Scaleby Castle Cumberland1332 3 Thomas Louth From Louth Lincolnshire 1st term 1333 4 Robert de Scardeburgh but probably did not act 1334 7 Thomas Louth 2nd term 1337 Elias de Asshebournham knight 2nd term 1337 Thomas Louth 3rd term 1337 8 Elias de Asshebournham knight 3rd term 1338 Thomas Louth 4th term 1338 41 Elias de Asshebournham 4th term 1341 4 Thomas de Dent Patronymic derived from Dent Yorkshire1344 5 Robert de Scardeburgh From Scarborough North Yorkshire only substantive term 1345 6 John le Hunt Born in Fenny Stratford Buckinghamshire1346 Henry de Motlowe knight Possibly connected to Mobberley or Motburlege Chesire1346 51 John de Rednesse From Reedness Yorkshire 1st term 1351 4 Godfrey de Foljambe knight Born in Tideswell Derbyshire1354 6 John de Rednesse 2nd term 1356 Richard de Wirkeley Prior of the Order of Hospitallers in Ireland possibly connected to Wakefield Yorkshire1356 9 John de Rednesse 3rd term 1359 William le Petit1359 61 John de Rednesse 4th term 1361 3 William de Notton knight From Notton Yorkshire1363 5 Richard White From Clongill County Meath1365 7 Thomas de la Dale knight Born in Little Barford Bedfordshire1367 70 John Keppock or Keppok 1st term 1370 2 William de Skipwith knight Family originally from Skipwith Yorkshire1372 82 John Keppock or Keppok 2nd term 1382 Sir Thomas Mortimer knight Family originally from Mortemer Seine Maritime Normandy1384 John de Sotheron Born at Great Mitton Lancashire1385 John Penros Born in Escalls Cornwall1386 Edmund de Clay From the common pleas 6 7 1388 10 July Richard Plunkett Of a leading Anglo Irish family with branches in County Meath and County Louth1388 23 September Peter Rowe 1st term 1395 William Hankford From Hankford in the parish of Bulkworthy Devon1396 William Tynbegh clerk Family originally from Tenby Pembrokeshire1397 Peter Rowe 2nd term 1397 Stephen de Bray 1st term From the common pleas family possibly from Bray County Wicklow1404 Richard Rede From the Exchequer1406 Stephen de Bray 2nd term 1426 Henry Fortescue1429 Stephen de Bray 3rd term 1435 Christopher Bernevall or Barnewall 2nd justice1437 William Boys1437 Christopher Bernevall or Barnewall 2nd term 1446 Richard Bye1447 Robert Plunket1447 Sir James Alleyn1457 Nicholas Barnewall 1st term 1461 Sir Thomas Fitz Christopher Plunket 1st term 1461 Nicholas Barnewall 2nd term 1463 or before Sir Thomas Fitz Christopher Plunket 2nd term 1468 John Chevir From Kilkenny Former Master of the Rolls in Ireland 1474 Philip Bermingham d 1490 buried St Mary s Abbey Dublin 1490 Thomas Cusacke1494 Thomas Bowring Family from Bowringsleigh Devon1496 John Topcliffe From the Exchequer1513 Patrick Bermingham1521 Patrick Bermingham By a new patent1533 Sir Bartholomew Dillon knight 2nd justice from the Exchequer Died same year 8 1534 Patrick Finglas From the Exchequer1535 Sir Gerald Aylmer From the Exchequer 9 1559 John Plunket1562 John Plunket By a new patent1583 James Dowdall1586 Robert Gardiner Serjeant at law in England1604 Sir James Ley Afterwards Earl of Marlborough resigned1608 Sir Humphrey Winch knight Chief Baron from the Exchequer Made a Justice of the Common Pleas of England1612 Sir John Denham knight Chief Baron from the Exchequer1617 Sir William Jones knight Serjeant at law1620 Sir George Shurley or Shirley knight Serjeant at law d 1647 10 1655 Richard Pepys Under the Protectorate died 2 January 16591659 John Santhey 19 Jan pro tem on Pepys death 11 1659 William Basill Attorney general 24 Jan1660 Sir James Barry knight Afterwards Lord Santry1673 Sir John Povey knight From the Exchequer1679 Sir Robert Booth knight Died the next year1680 Sir William Davys knight Prime serjeant1687 Thomas Nugent Removed1690 Sir Richard Reynell 1st Baronet Dismissed1695 Sir Richard Pyne Chief Justice of the Common Pleas1709 Alan Brodrick Removed1711 Sir Richard Cox knight and baronet Removed1714 William Whitshed Removed to the Common Pleas1727 John Rogerson Previously attorney general Died in office 17411741 Thomas Marlay Previously Chief Baron of the Exchequer Retired 17511751 St George Caulfeild Previously attorney general Retired 17601760 Warden Flood Previously attorney general Died in office 17641764 John Gore later Lord Annaly Previously solicitor general 24 Aug Died in office 17841784 John Scott Previously Prime serjeant Created Lord Earlsfort afterwards Viscount and Earl of Clonmell 29 Apr Died in office 17981798 Arthur Wolfe Lord Kilwarden Previously attorney general 13 June Murdered 23 July 18031803 William Downes Previously a judge of the Court of King s Bench afterward 1st Baron Downes 12 Sep Retired 18221822 Charles Kendal Bushe Previously solicitor general from 1805 14 Feb Retired 18411841 Edward Pennefather Previously solicitor general 10 Nov Retired 18461846 Francis Blackburne Previously Master of the Rolls 21 Jan Became Lord Chancellor 18521852 Thomas Langlois Lefroy Previously a Baron of the Exchequer Retired 18661866 James Whiteside Former attorney general Died in office 18761877 George Augustus Chichester May Previously attorney general Retired 18871887 Michael Morris Previously Chief Justice of the Common Pleas Became Lord of Appeal in Ordinary 18891889 Peter O Brien Previously attorney general Retired 19131913 Richard Robert Cherry Previously a Lord Justice of Appeal Retired 19161916 James Henry Mussen Campbell Previously attorney general Became Lord Chancellor 19181918 Thomas Molony Previously a Lord Justice of Appeal Position abolishedSources editList from Liber Munerum Publicorum Hiberniae by Rowley Lascelles copied in Haydn s Book of Dignities Names from 1852 onwards from The Oxford Companion to Law ed David M Walker 1980 Francis Elrington Ball The Judges in Ireland 1221 1921 2 Vols John Murray London 1926 References edit For a thorough account see W N Osborough Studies in Irish Legal History Four Courts Press 1999 pp 318 326 Schedule II Part II Irish Free State Consequential Provisions Act 1922 a United Kingdom statute Article 75 Constitution of the Irish Free State Saorstat Eireann Act 1922 Section 5 Courts of Justice Act 1924 Constitutional Reform Act 2005 Archived from the original on 28 September 2019 Retrieved 2 September 2021 For holders of the office of Lord Chief Justice the period 1383 86 seems to have been one of great confusion and it is not clear whether all those nominated actually took up the position see Ball The Judges in Ireland Haydn s Book of Dignities says that John de Shriggeley from the Exchequer served at this point but Elrington Ball s Judges in Ireland P157 does not mention him Date from Ball F Elrington The Judges in Ireland 1221 1921 John Murray London 1926 P191 although Haydn s Book of Dignities says that he took office in 1532 Date from Ball F Elrington The Judges in Ireland 1221 1921 John Murray London 1926 P156 although Haydn s Book of Dignities says that he took office in 1546 date from Ball F Elrington The Judges in Ireland 1221 1921 London 1926 p 328 although Haydn s Book of Dignities says that he took office in 1619 Robert Dunlop Ireland under the Commonwealth Vol 2 P 470nFurther reading editDaire Hogan R R Cherry Lord Chief Justice of Ireland 1914 16External links editLord Chief Justice O Brien anecdotes Tim Healy QC MP Anecdotes about Lord Chief Justice O Brien Order of the Governor General of the Irish Free State concerning the substitution of Saorstat Eireann for Southern Ireland Text about Sir Richard Cox Lord Chief Justice of Ireland Ireland s Millennia RTE biography of James Campbell 1st Baron Glenavy LCJ 1916 1918 Part of the process of changing laws to replace Lord Chief Justice of Ireland with Chief Justice of Ireland Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lord Chief Justice of Ireland amp oldid 1155459522, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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