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Sir Alexander Cockburn, 12th Baronet

Sir Alexander James Edmund Cockburn, 12th Baronet GCB (24 December 1802 – 20 November 1880) was a British jurist and politician who served as the Lord Chief Justice for 21 years. He heard some of the leading causes célèbres of the nineteenth century.

Alexander Cockburn
Lord Chief Justice of the Queen's Bench
In office
24 June 1859 – 20 November 1880
MonarchQueen Victoria
Preceded byThe Lord Campbell
Succeeded byThe Lord Coleridge
Lord Chief Justice of England
Chief Justice of the Common Pleas
In office
November 1856 – 24 June 1859
MonarchQueen Victoria
Preceded bySir John Jervis
Succeeded bySir William Erle
Personal details
Born
Alexander James Edmund Cockburn

(1802-12-24)24 December 1802
Altona, Brandenburg
Kingdom of Prussia
Died20 November 1880(1880-11-20) (aged 77)
40 Hertford Street, Mayfair, London
United Kingdom
Resting placeKensal Green Cemetery
Brent, Greater London
United Kingdom
NationalityBritish
SpouseAmelia (Emily) Godfrey (marriage not found)
ChildrenLouisa Charlotte Cockburn
Alexander Dalton Cockburn
Alma materTrinity Hall, Cambridge
OccupationBarrister, judge

In 1847, he decided to stand for parliament, and was elected unopposed as Liberal Member of Parliament for Southampton. His speech in the House of Commons on behalf of the government in the Don Pacifico dispute with Greece commended him to Lord John Russell, who appointed him Solicitor-General in 1850 and Attorney General in 1851, a post which he held till the resignation of the ministry in February 1852.[1]

Early life and career edit

Cockburn was born in Altona, in what is now Germany and was then part of Brandenburg,[2][3] to Alexander Cockburn and his wife Yolande, daughter of René Michel de Vignier de La Saline, vicomte de Vignier,[4] of Santo Domingo.[1][5] His father served as British Consul to Hamburg and the Hanse towns and later as envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary to Württemberg and the Republic of Colombia;[6] he was the fourth son of Sir James Cockburn, 8th Baronet (born c.1729, died July 1804), his three elder brothers having succeeded to the baronetcy, but died without heirs.

He was initially educated largely abroad and became fluent in French and familiar with German, Italian and Spanish. He was educated at Trinity Hall, Cambridge, gaining a first in Civil law in 1824–5 and graduating in 1829 with an LL.B. degree, and also being elected a fellow, and afterwards an honorary fellow.[7] He entered the Middle Temple in 1825, and was called to the bar in 1829. He joined the western circuit and built up a substantial practice though he was sufficiently diffident about his success in London to devote little of his energies there, not even keeping his Chambers open.[5]

As advocate (1832–1847) edit

Three years after his call, the Reform Bill was passed. Cockburn started to practise in election law, including acting for Henry Lytton Bulwer and Edward Ellice. In 1833, with William Rowe, he published a parliamentary brief on the decisions of election committees. In 1834, Ellice recommended Cockburn as member of the commission to enquire into the state of the corporations of England and Wales. Through his parliamentary work Cockburn met Joseph Parkes and himself became interested in politics as a profession in itself, not simply as a pretext for legal argument. Cockburn had become ambitious and in 1838 he turned down the offer of a judicial appointment in India with the sentiment "I am going in for something better than that". He became Recorder of Southampton and from that point started to reduce his election and parliamentary work in favour of more publicly notorious cases. In 1841 he was made a Q.C.[5]

  • Trial of Dr Cockburn: In 1841 a charge of simony, brought against his uncle, William, Dean of York, enabled Cockburn to appear conspicuously in a case which attracted considerable public attention, the proceedings taking the form of a motion for prohibition duly obtained against the ecclesiastical court, which had deprived Dr Cockburn of his office.[1]
  • Daniel McNaghten: Sir Robert Peel's secretary, Edward Drummond, was shot by Daniel McNaghten in 1843. Cockburn, briefed on behalf of the assassin, made a speech which helped to establish the insanity defence in Britain for the next century.[5] At the trial, Cockburn had made extensive and effective use of Isaac Ray's Treatise on the Medical Jurisprudence of Insanity. Cockburn quoted extensively from the book which rejected traditional views of the insanity defence based on the defendant's ability to distinguish "right from wrong" in favour of a broader approach based on causation.[8][9] Cockburn displayed a mastery of the scientific evidence and was an innovator in exploiting forensic science in court.[10]
  • The winner of the 1844 Derby: In 1844, he appeared in Wood v. Peel to determine the winner of a bet (the Gaming Act 1845 deemed bets unenforceable in law) as to whether the Derby winner Running Rein was a four-year-old or a three-year-old. Running Rein could not be produced when the judge, Baron Alderson, demanded, and as a result Cockburn lost the case, while his strenuous advocacy of his client's cause had led him into making, in his opening speech, strictures on Lord George Bentinck's conduct in the case which should have been held back.[11][12]
  • Lieutenant Henry Hawkey: In 1846 Hawkey, an officer of the Royal Marines, was tried for murder at Winchester assizes after shooting James Alexander Seton in a duel; Cockburn secured Hawkey's acquittal. James Seton was the last British person to be killed in a duel in the United Kingdom.
  • The Achilli trial: During the short administration of Lord Derby, Cockburn was engaged against Sir Frederic Thesiger Attorney General at the time, and for John Henry Newman, in the case of a friar named Giacinto Achilli who had accused Newman of libel. The jury who heard the case under Lord Campbell found that Newman's plea of justification was not proved except in one particular, a verdict which, together with the methods of the judge and the conduct of the audience, attracted considerable comment.[1]

As law officer of the Crown (1850–1856) edit

Lord John Russell appointed Cockburn as Solicitor-General in 1850, and as Attorney General in 1851, which latter post he held until the resignation of the ministry in February 1852. In December 1852, under Lord Aberdeen's ministry, Cockburn again became Attorney General, and remained so until 1856, taking part in many celebrated trials.[1] In 1854 Cockburn was made Recorder of Bristol.

Cockburn shepherded through Parliament the Common Law Procedure Act 1852[13] and the Common Law Procedure Act 1854.[14]

  • William Palmer: In his tenure as Attorney General from 1852 to 1856, he led for the crown in the trial of William Palmer of Rugeley in Staffordshire, an ex-medical man who poisoned a friend named Cook with strychnine in order to steal from his estate. Cockburn made an exhaustive study of the medical aspects of the case and won a conviction after a twelve-day trial, again demonstrating his skill with forensic science.[1]
  • The Hopwood will case (1855).[1]
  • The Swynfen will case (1856).[1][15]

As judge (1856–1880) edit

In 1856, he became Chief Justice of the Common Pleas. He inherited the baronetcy in 1858. In 1859, Lord Campbell became Lord Chancellor, and Cockburn became Lord Chief Justice of the Queen's Bench.

Cockburn always sought out the most sensational cases and was astute in rearranging his diary so that he could sit in any trial likely to attract the attention of the press.[16]

Several Prime Ministers offered to nominate Cockburn for a peerage, and he finally accepted the offer in 1864. However, Queen Victoria refused, noting that "this peerage has been more than once previously refused upon the ground of the notoriously bad moral character of the Chief Justice".[17]

In 1875, the three English common law courts (the Queen's Bench, the Court of Common Pleas, and the Court of the Exchequer) merged to become divisions of the new High Court of Justice. The head of each court (Lord Chief Justice Cockburn, Chief Justice of the Common Pleas Lord Coleridge, and Chief Baron of the Exchequer Sir Fitzroy Kelly) continued in post. After the deaths of Kelly and Cockburn in 1880, the three divisions were merged into a single division, with Lord Coleridge as Lord Chief Justice of England.[18]

  • Martin v. Mackonachie: Cockburn sitting in the Queen's Bench division granted a writ to quash Lord Penzance's suspension of Alexander Heriot Mackonochie from his clerical office for breach of the Public Worship Regulation Act 1874. Cockburn's decision was overturned by the Court of Appeal.[19]
  • The Tichborne Case: Cockburn presided over the civil case in which Arthur Orton attempted to establish his identity as the missing baronet Sir Roger Tichborne. This trial collapsed after 103 days, the longest civil trial on record. Cockburn then presided over the subsequent trial of Orton for perjury, a famous trial that lasted 188 days, setting a record for criminal trials, of which Cockburn CJ's summing-up occupied eighteen.[1][20]
  • R v. Hicklin: He developed the Hicklin test for obscenity.[21]
  • The Alabama claims: He also played a role in the arbitration of the Alabama claims at Geneva in 1872, in which he represented the British government. He dissented from the majority view as to British liability for the actions of British-built privateer ships. He prepared the English translation of the arbitrators' award and published a controversial dissenting opinion in which he admitted British liability for the actions of the CSS Alabama, though not on the grounds given in the award, and discounted liability for the CSS Florida and CSS Shenandoah.[1]
  • The Overend-Gurney fraud trial: the trial of the partners of Overend & Gurney, a bank that had collapsed in spectacular circumstances following precarious risks taken by the managers. In his summing up, Cockburn expressed the view that the defendants had been guilty of nothing more than "grave error".[22]
  • Woodley v. Metropolitan District Railway Co.:[23] Woodley was set to repair a wall in a darkened railway tunnel in which trains continued to run, without warning or dedicated lookout, and with barely sufficient clearance between train and wall for the workman to make himself safe when a train passed. Woodley was seriously injured when he reached across the rail for a tool and was struck by a passing train. Cockburn CJ held that the employer was not liable, invoking the principle of volenti non-fit injuria.[24]
  • Lavinia Ryves's claim to be the daughter of Prince Henry, Duke of Cumberland and Strathearn, a claim that ultimately failed after Cockburn CJ told the jury in summing up that Ryves's evidence comprised "outrages on all probability".[25]
  • The trial of Michael Barrett for the Clerkenwell explosion.[26]
  • The trial of Boulton and Park for transvestism and "conspiring and inciting persons to commit an unnatural offence".[27]
  • The trial of Henry Wainwright for murder.[28] The crime, in which Wainwright was arrested in possession of the dismembered body of his victim, was given more publicity at the time than those of Jack the Ripper.[29]
  • The Eastbourne manslaughter

Personality edit

In personal appearance Cockburn was of small stature with a large head, but possessed a very dignified manner. He enjoyed yachting and other sport, and writing (he wrote an unpublished novel). Something of an adventurer in his youth, he was fond of socialising and womanising, fathering two illegitimate children. He "was also throughout his life addicted to frivolities not altogether consistent with advancement in a learned profession, or with the positions of dignity which he successively occupied." He lived for many years in some state at Wakehurst Place in Sussex. In his later years, he reminisced, "Whatever happens, I have had my whack". He once had to escape through the window of the robing room at Rougemont Castle, Exeter, to evade bailiffs.[1][5] Shortly before he became Chief Justice of the Common Pleas, Cockburn was walking in London's Haymarket with fellow barrister William Ballantine when he saw a police constable roughly handling a woman. The pair stopped to protest but found themselves accused of obstructing a constable in the execution of his duty, arrested by the constable and conveyed to Vine Street Police Station. At the station they met an acquaintance who explained to the inspector who they were and they were released.[30]

He was a passionate champion of the proper role of the advocate and on the occasion of a reception for Antoine Pierre Berryer in Middle Temple Hall, said:[1]

The arms which an advocate wields he ought to use as a warrior, not as an assassin. He ought to uphold the interests of his clients per fas, not per nefas. He ought to know how to reconcile the interests of his clients with the eternal interests of truth and justice.

— The Times, 9 November 1864

As a judge he did not have the highest reputation, with a joke within the legal profession being that he became a first rate judge only because he sat with Lord Blackburn.[5] Charles Francis Adams, Sr., a fellow judge on the Geneva tribunal to resolve the Alabama claims issue, felt that Sir Alexander's temper was so short that he seemed mentally unbalanced.[31]

Family and death edit

Although Cockburn never married, he had one acknowledged illegitimate son and one illegitimate daughter by the unmarried Amelia (Emily) Godfrey (17 September 1818, baptised 11 October 1818 All Saints' Church, Epping), the daughter of William Daniel Leake Godfrey (1788–1868) and his wife Louisa Hannah (née Dalley, 1791–1852):[5][32][33][34]

  1. Louisa Charlotte Cockburn (3 August 1838 Stratford, Essex baptised 16 June 1839 All Saints' Church, West Ham, Essex – Isle of Wight 25 April 1869[3][35]), who married at Chelsea, London, on 25 June 1863[36] to the Rev. Charles William Cavendish (Chiswick 24 September 1822 – Ryde, Isle of Wight 21 December 1890),[37] rector of Little Casterton, Rutland, later a Catholic convert who became secretary of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith, and a grandson of George Cavendish, 1st Earl of Burlington, with issue:
    1. Louis Francis John Charles Raphael Cavendish (24 October 1864[38] – 31 December 1890[39]), who never married[40][41][42]
  2. Alexander Cockburn Dalton or Alexander Dalton (Alex) Cockburn (Sydenham bapt 10 Sep 1845 – Westminster 16 July 1887[3] ), Capt. 2nd Regt Life Guards, who never married[42][43][44][45] and to whom Cockburn left the majority of his fortune.[5] His son did not succeed him as Baronet of Langton, which became dormant.

Cockburn died on 20 November 1880,[1] of angina pectoris at his house at 40 Hertford Street, Mayfair, London; he had continued working up until his death despite three heart attacks and warnings from his doctor.[5] As he never married, he produced no legitimate heirs, despite having a surviving male child. As a result, the baronetcy became dormant upon his death.[1] His remains were deposited in Catacomb A of Kensal Green Cemetery.

Ancestors edit

Arms edit

Coat of arms of Sir Alexander Cockburn, 12th Baronet
Crest
A cock Proper.
Escutcheon
Quarterly 1st & 4th Gules six mascles Or three two and one 2nd & 3rd Argent three cocks Gules.
Supporters
On either side a lion Gules the sinister guardant.
Motto
Vigilans Et Audax [47]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Cockburn, Sir Alexander James Edmund" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 6 (11th ed.). 1911. p. 623.
  2. ^ 1851 Census for England – Barrister, aged 47, of Wakehurst Place, Ardingly, Sussex, with the mother (Louisa Hannah Godfrey née Dalley) and sister (Caroline Louisa Matilda Godfrey) of his partner Amelia (Emily) Godfrey – HO107/1642 f.115. p. 18
  3. ^ a b c 1861 Census for England – Lord Chief Justice, aged 58, visiting Chute Lodge, Wiltshire born Altona, with children: Louisa C. Cockburn aged 22 born Stratford, Essex; Alexander Cockburn aged 15 born Sydenham, Surrey – RG9/716 f.19 p. 3
  4. ^ So styled in English sources and reference books, but the title seems correctly to be attributable to his eldest brother. See: www.ghcaraibe.org/bul/ghc158-159/p3839.rtf
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i Lobban, Michael. "Cockburn, Sir Alexander James Edmund, twelfth baronet (1802–1880)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/5765. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  6. ^ The Foreign Office List and Diplomatic and Consular Year Book, vol. 10, 1857, pp. 35–6
  7. ^ "Cockburn, Alexander James Edmund (CKBN822AJ)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  8. ^ Cornish, W. & Clarke, G. (1989). Law and Society in England 1750–1950. London: Sweet & Maxwell. pp. 603–604. ISBN 0-421-31150-9.
  9. ^ Diamond (1956)
  10. ^ Bucknill (1881)
  11. ^ Burke, E. (1845). The Annual Register, or a View of the History and Politics of the Year 1844. London: Rivington. pp. 350–352. (Google Books)
  12. ^ Foulkes (2010)
  13. ^ Common Law Procedure Act 1852, 15 & 16 Vict c. 76
  14. ^ Common Law Procedure Act 1854, 17&18 Vict c.125
  15. ^ Kingston (1923) pp. 169–170
  16. ^ Kingston (1923) p.172
  17. ^ "Letters of Queen Victoria" 1.257, ed. G. E. Buckle; cited in the Dictionary of National Biography
  18. ^ The Lord Burnett of Maldon (14 November 2019). "What's in a Name? The High Court and its Divisions" (PDF). judiciary.uk. Retrieved 10 October 2020.
  19. ^ Towle, E. A., ed. Russell, E. F. (1890). Alexander Heriot Mackonochie: A Memoir. London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner, & Co.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) Chapter IX
  20. ^ Diamond (2004) 60–61
  21. ^ [Anon.] (2001) "Cockburn, Sir Alexander James Edmund, 10th Baronet", Encyclopædia Britannica Deluxe CD-ROM
  22. ^ Elliott, G. (2006). The Mystery of Overend & Gurney: A Financial Scandal in Victorian London. London: Methuen. pp. 212–221. ISBN 0-413-77573-9.
  23. ^ (1877) 2 Ex D 384
  24. ^ Lunney, M. & Oliphant, K. (2003). Tort Law: Text and Materials (2nd ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 254–255. ISBN 0-19-926055-9.
  25. ^ Kingston (1923) pp172–174
  26. ^ Kingston (1923) pp174–175
  27. ^ Diamond (2004) 121–122
  28. ^ Renton, A. Wood (1898). "The Judicial Work of Chief Justice Cockburn". 10 Jurid. Rev. 395.
  29. ^ Wiener, Martin J. (2004). Men of blood: violence, manliness and criminal justice in Victorian England. Cambridge University Press. pp. 143–144. ISBN 0-521-83198-9.
  30. ^ Kingston (1923) p.171
  31. ^ Foreman, Amanda. "A World on Fire".Allen Lane, 2010, p. 811.
  32. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 September 2007. (120 KB)
  33. ^ Nicholas Mander (2011). Borromean Rings: The Genealogy of the Mander Family. Owlpen Press. Pages 204-5.
  34. ^ "Louisa Charlotte Cockburn born 1838". All Saints' Church, West Ham, Essex Baptism Register. Retrieved 23 August 2021. born 3 August 1838; bapt 16 June 1839; father = Alexander Edmund Cockburn; mother = Emily Cockburn
  35. ^ GRO Register of Deaths – JUN 1869 2b 332 I WIGHT Aged 30
  36. ^ GRO Register of Marriages – JUN 1863 1a 417 CHELSEA. Cavendish = Cockburn
  37. ^ GRO Register of Deaths – DEC 1890 2b 409 I WIGHT Aged 68
  38. ^ GRO Register of Births – DEC 1864 1a 242 ST GEO HAN SQ
  39. ^ GRO Register of Deaths – MAR 1891 1a 445 WESTMINSTER Aged 26
  40. ^ 1871 Census for England: Aged 6 of Burlington Gardens, Westminster, London – RG10/137 f.31 p. 25
  41. ^ 1881 Census for England: Aged 16 of Charlemont, Spencer Drive, Chiswick, London – RG11/1178 f.43 p. 37
  42. ^ a b FreeBMD
  43. ^ 1871 Census for England: Cavalry Officer, unmarried aged 26, of Cavalry Barracks, Clewer, Berkshire – RG10/1302 f.89 p. 1 – born Sydenham, Surrey
  44. ^ 1881 Census for England: Unmarried of no occupation, aged 35, of 24 James Street, Westminster, London – RG11/118 f.105 p. 41 – born Sydenham
  45. ^ National Probate Calendar (Index of Wills and Administrations): Alexander Dalton Cockburn, Esq. ... formerly Captain in the 2nd Regiment of Life Guards who died 16 July 1887 at 59 Jermyn Street, London ...Probate 2 September 1887
  46. ^ "Ancestors of Alexander Edmund Cockburn". Ancestry.co.uk. Retrieved 29 August 2021.
  47. ^ Debrett's Judicial Bench. 2 March 2021.

Bibliography edit

  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Cockburn, Sir Alexander James Edmund". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 6 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 623.
  • Leigh Rayment's list of baronets –
  • Obituaries:
    • The Times, 22 November 1880; 26 November 1880
    • Law Times, 27 November 1880, 68–9
    • Solicitors' Journal, 25 (1880–81), 76–7
  • Bucknill, J. C. (1881). "The Late Lord Chief Justice of England on Lunacy". Brain. 4 (1): 1–26. doi:10.1093/brain/4.1.1.
  • Diamond, B. L. (1956). "Isaac Ray and the trial of Daniel M'Naghten". American Journal of Psychiatry. 112 (8): 651–656. doi:10.1176/ajp.112.8.651. PMID 13292555.
  • Diamond, Michael (2004). Victorian Sensation: Or, the Spectacular, the Shocking and the Scandalous in Nineteenth-Century Britain. Anthem Press. ISBN 1-84331-150-X.
  • Foulkes, N. (2010). Gentlemen and Blackguards: Gambling Mania and Plot to Steal the Derby of 1844. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. p. Ch.17–19. ISBN 978-0-297-84459-4.
  • Hamilton, John Andrew (1887). "Cockburn, Alexander James Edmund" . In Stephen, Leslie (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 11. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  • Kingston, C. (1923). Famous Judges and Famous Trials. London: Stanley Paul & Co. p. Ch.9. ISBN 0-8377-2336-1.
  • Lobban, M. (2004) "Cockburn, Sir Alexander James Edmund, twelfth baronet (1802–1880)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, accessed 24 July 2007 (subscription or UK public library membership required)
  • Russell, C. (1894). "Reminiscences of Lord Chief Justice Coleridge". North American Review: September.
  • Veeder, Van Vechten (1900). "Sir Alexander Cockburn". Harvard Law Review. Harvard Law Review, Vol. 14, No. 2. 14 (2): 79–97. doi:10.2307/1323051. JSTOR 1323051.

External links edit

  • Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by Sir Alexander Cockburn
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Southampton
1847 – 1857
With: Brodie Willcox
Succeeded by
Legal offices
Preceded by Solicitor General
1850–1851
Succeeded by
Preceded by Attorney General
1851–1852
Succeeded by
Preceded by Attorney General
1852–1856
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chief Justice of the Common Pleas
1856–1859
Succeeded by
Preceded by Lord Chief Justice of the Queen's Bench
1859–1880
Succeeded byas Lord Chief Justice of England
Baronetage of Nova Scotia
Preceded by Baronet
(of Langton)
1858–1880
Dormant

alexander, cockburn, 12th, baronet, alexander, james, edmund, cockburn, 12th, baronet, december, 1802, november, 1880, british, jurist, politician, served, lord, chief, justice, years, heard, some, leading, causes, célèbres, nineteenth, century, right, honoura. Sir Alexander James Edmund Cockburn 12th Baronet GCB 24 December 1802 20 November 1880 was a British jurist and politician who served as the Lord Chief Justice for 21 years He heard some of the leading causes celebres of the nineteenth century The Right Honourable SirAlexander CockburnBt GCBPortrait by George Frederic WattsLord Chief Justice of the Queen s BenchIn office 24 June 1859 20 November 1880MonarchQueen VictoriaPreceded byThe Lord CampbellSucceeded byThe Lord ColeridgeLord Chief Justice of EnglandChief Justice of the Common PleasIn office November 1856 24 June 1859MonarchQueen VictoriaPreceded bySir John JervisSucceeded bySir William ErlePersonal detailsBornAlexander James Edmund Cockburn 1802 12 24 24 December 1802Altona BrandenburgKingdom of PrussiaDied20 November 1880 1880 11 20 aged 77 40 Hertford Street Mayfair LondonUnited KingdomResting placeKensal Green CemeteryBrent Greater LondonUnited KingdomNationalityBritishSpouseAmelia Emily Godfrey marriage not found ChildrenLouisa Charlotte CockburnAlexander Dalton CockburnAlma materTrinity Hall CambridgeOccupationBarrister judgeIn 1847 he decided to stand for parliament and was elected unopposed as Liberal Member of Parliament for Southampton His speech in the House of Commons on behalf of the government in the Don Pacifico dispute with Greece commended him to Lord John Russell who appointed him Solicitor General in 1850 and Attorney General in 1851 a post which he held till the resignation of the ministry in February 1852 1 Contents 1 Early life and career 2 As advocate 1832 1847 3 As law officer of the Crown 1850 1856 4 As judge 1856 1880 5 Personality 6 Family and death 7 Ancestors 8 Arms 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 External linksEarly life and career editCockburn was born in Altona in what is now Germany and was then part of Brandenburg 2 3 to Alexander Cockburn and his wife Yolande daughter of Rene Michel de Vignier de La Saline vicomte de Vignier 4 of Santo Domingo 1 5 His father served as British Consul to Hamburg and the Hanse towns and later as envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary to Wurttemberg and the Republic of Colombia 6 he was the fourth son of Sir James Cockburn 8th Baronet born c 1729 died July 1804 his three elder brothers having succeeded to the baronetcy but died without heirs He was initially educated largely abroad and became fluent in French and familiar with German Italian and Spanish He was educated at Trinity Hall Cambridge gaining a first in Civil law in 1824 5 and graduating in 1829 with an LL B degree and also being elected a fellow and afterwards an honorary fellow 7 He entered the Middle Temple in 1825 and was called to the bar in 1829 He joined the western circuit and built up a substantial practice though he was sufficiently diffident about his success in London to devote little of his energies there not even keeping his Chambers open 5 As advocate 1832 1847 editThree years after his call the Reform Bill was passed Cockburn started to practise in election law including acting for Henry Lytton Bulwer and Edward Ellice In 1833 with William Rowe he published a parliamentary brief on the decisions of election committees In 1834 Ellice recommended Cockburn as member of the commission to enquire into the state of the corporations of England and Wales Through his parliamentary work Cockburn met Joseph Parkes and himself became interested in politics as a profession in itself not simply as a pretext for legal argument Cockburn had become ambitious and in 1838 he turned down the offer of a judicial appointment in India with the sentiment I am going in for something better than that He became Recorder of Southampton and from that point started to reduce his election and parliamentary work in favour of more publicly notorious cases In 1841 he was made a Q C 5 Trial of Dr Cockburn In 1841 a charge of simony brought against his uncle William Dean of York enabled Cockburn to appear conspicuously in a case which attracted considerable public attention the proceedings taking the form of a motion for prohibition duly obtained against the ecclesiastical court which had deprived Dr Cockburn of his office 1 Daniel McNaghten Sir Robert Peel s secretary Edward Drummond was shot by Daniel McNaghten in 1843 Cockburn briefed on behalf of the assassin made a speech which helped to establish the insanity defence in Britain for the next century 5 At the trial Cockburn had made extensive and effective use of Isaac Ray s Treatise on the Medical Jurisprudence of Insanity Cockburn quoted extensively from the book which rejected traditional views of the insanity defence based on the defendant s ability to distinguish right from wrong in favour of a broader approach based on causation 8 9 Cockburn displayed a mastery of the scientific evidence and was an innovator in exploiting forensic science in court 10 The winner of the 1844 Derby In 1844 he appeared in Wood v Peel to determine the winner of a bet the Gaming Act 1845 deemed bets unenforceable in law as to whether the Derby winner Running Rein was a four year old or a three year old Running Rein could not be produced when the judge Baron Alderson demanded and as a result Cockburn lost the case while his strenuous advocacy of his client s cause had led him into making in his opening speech strictures on Lord George Bentinck s conduct in the case which should have been held back 11 12 Lieutenant Henry Hawkey In 1846 Hawkey an officer of the Royal Marines was tried for murder at Winchester assizes after shooting James Alexander Seton in a duel Cockburn secured Hawkey s acquittal James Seton was the last British person to be killed in a duel in the United Kingdom The Achilli trial During the short administration of Lord Derby Cockburn was engaged against Sir Frederic Thesiger Attorney General at the time and for John Henry Newman in the case of a friar named Giacinto Achilli who had accused Newman of libel The jury who heard the case under Lord Campbell found that Newman s plea of justification was not proved except in one particular a verdict which together with the methods of the judge and the conduct of the audience attracted considerable comment 1 As law officer of the Crown 1850 1856 editLord John Russell appointed Cockburn as Solicitor General in 1850 and as Attorney General in 1851 which latter post he held until the resignation of the ministry in February 1852 In December 1852 under Lord Aberdeen s ministry Cockburn again became Attorney General and remained so until 1856 taking part in many celebrated trials 1 In 1854 Cockburn was made Recorder of Bristol Cockburn shepherded through Parliament the Common Law Procedure Act 1852 13 and the Common Law Procedure Act 1854 14 William Palmer In his tenure as Attorney General from 1852 to 1856 he led for the crown in the trial of William Palmer of Rugeley in Staffordshire an ex medical man who poisoned a friend named Cook with strychnine in order to steal from his estate Cockburn made an exhaustive study of the medical aspects of the case and won a conviction after a twelve day trial again demonstrating his skill with forensic science 1 The Hopwood will case 1855 1 The Swynfen will case 1856 1 15 As judge 1856 1880 editIn 1856 he became Chief Justice of the Common Pleas He inherited the baronetcy in 1858 In 1859 Lord Campbell became Lord Chancellor and Cockburn became Lord Chief Justice of the Queen s Bench Cockburn always sought out the most sensational cases and was astute in rearranging his diary so that he could sit in any trial likely to attract the attention of the press 16 Several Prime Ministers offered to nominate Cockburn for a peerage and he finally accepted the offer in 1864 However Queen Victoria refused noting that this peerage has been more than once previously refused upon the ground of the notoriously bad moral character of the Chief Justice 17 In 1875 the three English common law courts the Queen s Bench the Court of Common Pleas and the Court of the Exchequer merged to become divisions of the new High Court of Justice The head of each court Lord Chief Justice Cockburn Chief Justice of the Common Pleas Lord Coleridge and Chief Baron of the Exchequer Sir Fitzroy Kelly continued in post After the deaths of Kelly and Cockburn in 1880 the three divisions were merged into a single division with Lord Coleridge as Lord Chief Justice of England 18 Martin v Mackonachie Cockburn sitting in the Queen s Bench division granted a writ to quash Lord Penzance s suspension of Alexander Heriot Mackonochie from his clerical office for breach of the Public Worship Regulation Act 1874 Cockburn s decision was overturned by the Court of Appeal 19 The Tichborne Case Cockburn presided over the civil case in which Arthur Orton attempted to establish his identity as the missing baronet Sir Roger Tichborne This trial collapsed after 103 days the longest civil trial on record Cockburn then presided over the subsequent trial of Orton for perjury a famous trial that lasted 188 days setting a record for criminal trials of which Cockburn CJ s summing up occupied eighteen 1 20 R v Hicklin He developed the Hicklin test for obscenity 21 The Alabama claims He also played a role in the arbitration of the Alabama claims at Geneva in 1872 in which he represented the British government He dissented from the majority view as to British liability for the actions of British built privateer ships He prepared the English translation of the arbitrators award and published a controversial dissenting opinion in which he admitted British liability for the actions of the CSS Alabama though not on the grounds given in the award and discounted liability for the CSS Florida and CSS Shenandoah 1 The Overend Gurney fraud trial the trial of the partners of Overend amp Gurney a bank that had collapsed in spectacular circumstances following precarious risks taken by the managers In his summing up Cockburn expressed the view that the defendants had been guilty of nothing more than grave error 22 Woodley v Metropolitan District Railway Co 23 Woodley was set to repair a wall in a darkened railway tunnel in which trains continued to run without warning or dedicated lookout and with barely sufficient clearance between train and wall for the workman to make himself safe when a train passed Woodley was seriously injured when he reached across the rail for a tool and was struck by a passing train Cockburn CJ held that the employer was not liable invoking the principle of volenti non fit injuria 24 Lavinia Ryves s claim to be the daughter of Prince Henry Duke of Cumberland and Strathearn a claim that ultimately failed after Cockburn CJ told the jury in summing up that Ryves s evidence comprised outrages on all probability 25 The trial of Michael Barrett for the Clerkenwell explosion 26 The trial of Boulton and Park for transvestism and conspiring and inciting persons to commit an unnatural offence 27 The trial of Henry Wainwright for murder 28 The crime in which Wainwright was arrested in possession of the dismembered body of his victim was given more publicity at the time than those of Jack the Ripper 29 The Eastbourne manslaughterPersonality editIn personal appearance Cockburn was of small stature with a large head but possessed a very dignified manner He enjoyed yachting and other sport and writing he wrote an unpublished novel Something of an adventurer in his youth he was fond of socialising and womanising fathering two illegitimate children He was also throughout his life addicted to frivolities not altogether consistent with advancement in a learned profession or with the positions of dignity which he successively occupied He lived for many years in some state at Wakehurst Place in Sussex In his later years he reminisced Whatever happens I have had my whack He once had to escape through the window of the robing room at Rougemont Castle Exeter to evade bailiffs 1 5 Shortly before he became Chief Justice of the Common Pleas Cockburn was walking in London s Haymarket with fellow barrister William Ballantine when he saw a police constable roughly handling a woman The pair stopped to protest but found themselves accused of obstructing a constable in the execution of his duty arrested by the constable and conveyed to Vine Street Police Station At the station they met an acquaintance who explained to the inspector who they were and they were released 30 He was a passionate champion of the proper role of the advocate and on the occasion of a reception for Antoine Pierre Berryer in Middle Temple Hall said 1 The arms which an advocate wields he ought to use as a warrior not as an assassin He ought to uphold the interests of his clients per fas not per nefas He ought to know how to reconcile the interests of his clients with the eternal interests of truth and justice The Times 9 November 1864 As a judge he did not have the highest reputation with a joke within the legal profession being that he became a first rate judge only because he sat with Lord Blackburn 5 Charles Francis Adams Sr a fellow judge on the Geneva tribunal to resolve the Alabama claims issue felt that Sir Alexander s temper was so short that he seemed mentally unbalanced 31 Family and death editAlthough Cockburn never married he had one acknowledged illegitimate son and one illegitimate daughter by the unmarried Amelia Emily Godfrey 17 September 1818 baptised 11 October 1818 All Saints Church Epping the daughter of William Daniel Leake Godfrey 1788 1868 and his wife Louisa Hannah nee Dalley 1791 1852 5 32 33 34 Louisa Charlotte Cockburn 3 August 1838 Stratford Essex baptised 16 June 1839 All Saints Church West Ham Essex Isle of Wight 25 April 1869 3 35 who married at Chelsea London on 25 June 1863 36 to the Rev Charles William Cavendish Chiswick 24 September 1822 Ryde Isle of Wight 21 December 1890 37 rector of Little Casterton Rutland later a Catholic convert who became secretary of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith and a grandson of George Cavendish 1st Earl of Burlington with issue Louis Francis John Charles Raphael Cavendish 24 October 1864 38 31 December 1890 39 who never married 40 41 42 Alexander Cockburn Dalton or Alexander Dalton Alex Cockburn Sydenham bapt 10 Sep 1845 Westminster 16 July 1887 3 Capt 2nd Regt Life Guards who never married 42 43 44 45 and to whom Cockburn left the majority of his fortune 5 His son did not succeed him as Baronet of Langton which became dormant Cockburn died on 20 November 1880 1 of angina pectoris at his house at 40 Hertford Street Mayfair London he had continued working up until his death despite three heart attacks and warnings from his doctor 5 As he never married he produced no legitimate heirs despite having a surviving male child As a result the baronetcy became dormant upon his death 1 His remains were deposited in Catacomb A of Kensal Green Cemetery Ancestors editAncestors of Sir Alexander Cockburn 12th Baronet 46 32 Archibald Cockburn 4th Bart died 1705 16 Alexander Cockburn 6th Bart died 1739 33 Marion Sinclair8 William Cockburn17 Mary Ancrum4 James Cockburn 8th Bart 1729 1804 32 18 James Cockburn died 1718 33 9 Frances Cockburn2 Alexander Cockburn 1776 1852 20 Gabriel Ayscough10 Francis Ayscough 1701 1763 21 Mary5 Augusta Anne Ayscough 1749 1837 44 Charles Lyttelton 3rd Bart 1628 1716 22 Thomas Lyttelton 4th Bart 1686 1751 45 Anne Temple died 1718 11 Anne Lyttelton 1714 1776 46 Richard Temple 3rd Bart 1634 1697 23 Christian Temple47 Mary Knapp died 1726 1 Alexander Cockburn 12th Bart 1802 1880 6 Rene Michel de Vignier de La Saline vicomte de Vignier3 Yolande de Vignier 1780 1810 Arms editCoat of arms of Sir Alexander Cockburn 12th Baronet Crest A cock Proper Escutcheon Quarterly 1st amp 4th Gules six mascles Or three two and one 2nd amp 3rd Argent three cocks Gules Supporters On either side a lion Gules the sinister guardant Motto Vigilans Et Audax 47 References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Cockburn Sir Alexander James Edmund Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 6 11th ed 1911 p 623 1851 Census for England Barrister aged 47 of Wakehurst Place Ardingly Sussex with the mother Louisa Hannah Godfrey nee Dalley and sister Caroline Louisa Matilda Godfrey of his partner Amelia Emily Godfrey HO107 1642 f 115 p 18 a b c 1861 Census for England Lord Chief Justice aged 58 visiting Chute Lodge Wiltshire born Altona with children Louisa C Cockburn aged 22 born Stratford Essex Alexander Cockburn aged 15 born Sydenham Surrey RG9 716 f 19 p 3 So styled in English sources and reference books but the title seems correctly to be attributable to his eldest brother See www ghcaraibe org bul ghc158 159 p3839 rtf a b c d e f g h i Lobban Michael Cockburn Sir Alexander James Edmund twelfth baronet 1802 1880 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 5765 Subscription or UK public library membership required The Foreign Office List and Diplomatic and Consular Year Book vol 10 1857 pp 35 6 Cockburn Alexander James Edmund CKBN822AJ A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge Cornish W amp Clarke G 1989 Law and Society in England 1750 1950 London Sweet amp Maxwell pp 603 604 ISBN 0 421 31150 9 Diamond 1956 Bucknill 1881 Burke E 1845 The Annual Register or a View of the History and Politics of the Year 1844 London Rivington pp 350 352 Google Books Foulkes 2010 Common Law Procedure Act 1852 15 amp 16 Vict c 76 Common Law Procedure Act 1854 17 amp 18 Vict c 125 Kingston 1923 pp 169 170 Kingston 1923 p 172 Letters of Queen Victoria 1 257 ed G E Buckle cited in the Dictionary of National Biography The Lord Burnett of Maldon 14 November 2019 What s in a Name The High Court and its Divisions PDF judiciary uk Retrieved 10 October 2020 Towle E A ed Russell E F 1890 Alexander Heriot Mackonochie A Memoir London Kegan Paul Trench Trubner amp Co a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Chapter IX Diamond 2004 60 61 Anon 2001 Cockburn Sir Alexander James Edmund 10th Baronet Encyclopaedia Britannica Deluxe CD ROM Elliott G 2006 The Mystery of Overend amp Gurney A Financial Scandal in Victorian London London Methuen pp 212 221 ISBN 0 413 77573 9 1877 2 Ex D 384 Lunney M amp Oliphant K 2003 Tort Law Text and Materials 2nd ed Oxford Oxford University Press pp 254 255 ISBN 0 19 926055 9 Kingston 1923 pp172 174 Kingston 1923 pp174 175 Diamond 2004 121 122 Renton A Wood 1898 The Judicial Work of Chief Justice Cockburn 10 Jurid Rev 395 Wiener Martin J 2004 Men of blood violence manliness and criminal justice in Victorian England Cambridge University Press pp 143 144 ISBN 0 521 83198 9 Kingston 1923 p 171 Foreman Amanda A World on Fire Allen Lane 2010 p 811 Haffenden family tree PDF Archived from the original PDF on 27 September 2007 120 KB Nicholas Mander 2011 Borromean Rings The Genealogy of the Mander Family Owlpen Press Pages 204 5 Louisa Charlotte Cockburn born 1838 All Saints Church West Ham Essex Baptism Register Retrieved 23 August 2021 born 3 August 1838 bapt 16 June 1839 father Alexander Edmund Cockburn mother Emily Cockburn GRO Register of Deaths JUN 1869 2b 332 I WIGHT Aged 30 GRO Register of Marriages JUN 1863 1a 417 CHELSEA Cavendish Cockburn GRO Register of Deaths DEC 1890 2b 409 I WIGHT Aged 68 GRO Register of Births DEC 1864 1a 242 ST GEO HAN SQ GRO Register of Deaths MAR 1891 1a 445 WESTMINSTER Aged 26 1871 Census for England Aged 6 of Burlington Gardens Westminster London RG10 137 f 31 p 25 1881 Census for England Aged 16 of Charlemont Spencer Drive Chiswick London RG11 1178 f 43 p 37 a b FreeBMD 1871 Census for England Cavalry Officer unmarried aged 26 of Cavalry Barracks Clewer Berkshire RG10 1302 f 89 p 1 born Sydenham Surrey 1881 Census for England Unmarried of no occupation aged 35 of 24 James Street Westminster London RG11 118 f 105 p 41 born Sydenham National Probate Calendar Index of Wills and Administrations Alexander Dalton Cockburn Esq formerly Captain in the 2nd Regiment of Life Guards who died 16 July 1887 at 59 Jermyn Street London Probate 2 September 1887 Ancestors of Alexander Edmund Cockburn Ancestry co uk Retrieved 29 August 2021 Debrett s Judicial Bench 2 March 2021 Bibliography edit nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Cockburn Sir Alexander James Edmund Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 6 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 623 Leigh Rayment s Historical List of MPs Constituencies beginning with S part 3 Leigh Rayment s list of baronets Baronetcies beginning with C part 3 Obituaries The Times 22 November 1880 26 November 1880 Law Times 27 November 1880 68 9 Solicitors Journal 25 1880 81 76 7 Bucknill J C 1881 The Late Lord Chief Justice of England on Lunacy Brain 4 1 1 26 doi 10 1093 brain 4 1 1 Diamond B L 1956 Isaac Ray and the trial of Daniel M Naghten American Journal of Psychiatry 112 8 651 656 doi 10 1176 ajp 112 8 651 PMID 13292555 Diamond Michael 2004 Victorian Sensation Or the Spectacular the Shocking and the Scandalous in Nineteenth Century Britain Anthem Press ISBN 1 84331 150 X Foulkes N 2010 Gentlemen and Blackguards Gambling Mania and Plot to Steal the Derby of 1844 London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson p Ch 17 19 ISBN 978 0 297 84459 4 Hamilton John Andrew 1887 Cockburn Alexander James Edmund In Stephen Leslie ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 11 London Smith Elder amp Co Kingston C 1923 Famous Judges and Famous Trials London Stanley Paul amp Co p Ch 9 ISBN 0 8377 2336 1 Lobban M 2004 Cockburn Sir Alexander James Edmund twelfth baronet 1802 1880 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press accessed 24 July 2007 subscription or UK public library membership required Russell C 1894 Reminiscences of Lord Chief Justice Coleridge North American Review September Veeder Van Vechten 1900 Sir Alexander Cockburn Harvard Law Review Harvard Law Review Vol 14 No 2 14 2 79 97 doi 10 2307 1323051 JSTOR 1323051 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sir Alexander Cockburn 12th Baronet Hansard 1803 2005 contributions in Parliament by Sir Alexander CockburnParliament of the United KingdomPreceded byHumphrey MildmayGeorge William Hope Member of Parliament for Southampton1847 1857 With Brodie Willcox Succeeded byThomas Matthias WeguelinBrodie WillcoxLegal officesPreceded bySir John Romilly Solicitor General1850 1851 Succeeded bySir William Page WoodPreceded bySir John Romilly Attorney General1851 1852 Succeeded bySir Frederic ThesigerPreceded bySir Frederic Thesiger Attorney General1852 1856 Succeeded bySir Richard BethellPreceded bySir John Jervis Chief Justice of the Common Pleas1856 1859 Succeeded bySir William ErlePreceded byThe Lord Campbell Lord Chief Justice of the Queen s Bench1859 1880 Succeeded byThe Lord Coleridgeas Lord Chief Justice of EnglandBaronetage of Nova ScotiaPreceded byWilliam Cockburn Baronet of Langton 1858 1880 Dormant Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sir Alexander Cockburn 12th Baronet amp oldid 1195717000, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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