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'''Sir James O'Connor''', [[QC]] [[Privy Council of Ireland|PC (I)]] (1 April 1872 – 29 December 1931<ref>{{cite journal |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PrIvAQAAIAAJ&q=%22returned+to+practice+at+the+english+bar%22&dq=%22returned+to+practice+at+the+english+bar%22&hl=en&ei=fBUdTYKuGpS6sQObs-nIAg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=2&ved=0CDAQ6AEwAQ |title=The Irish Jurist|volume=23 |page=144 |accessdate=30 December 2010}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Z-IgAAAAMAAJ&q=%22James+O%27Connor%22+1872-1931.&dq=%22James+O%27Connor%22+1872-1931.&hl=en&ei=0BMdTYqjH5G-sAPx_bDICg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=4&ved=0CDUQ6AEwAw |title=Whitehall Diary: Ireland, 1918–1925 |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=1971 |author=Thomas Jones |accessdate=30 December 2010}}</ref>) was an [[Irish people|Irish]] [[barrister]] and judge. He was appointed [[Solicitor-General for Ireland]] in 1914, and [[Attorney-General for Ireland]] in 1917. He served briefly as a [[High Court]] judge, then as a [[Lord Justice]] of the [[Irish Court of Appeal]] from 1918 to his enforced retirement in 1924. After a period of practice at the English Bar he returned to Ireland and was admitted to practice as a solicitor, a decision which caused some controversy, and resulted in a leading judgement on the standard of professional conduct to be expected of a retired judge.
Sir '''James O'Connor''', [[Queen's Counsel|KC]] [[Privy Council of Ireland|PC (I)]] (1 April 1872 – 29 December 1931) was an Irish [[solicitor]], [[barrister]] and judge. He was appointed [[Solicitor-General for Ireland]] in 1914, [[Attorney-General for Ireland]] in 1917, and a judge of the [[Supreme Court of Judicature (Ireland)|Supreme Court of Judicature of Ireland]] in 1918. After his enforced retirement in 1924, he practised at the [[English bar]] until 1929, when he returned to Ireland and was readmitted to practice as a solicitor, a controversial move necessitating a leading judgment on the standard of professional conduct to be expected of a retired judge.<ref>Hogan 1988 p.144 fn(4)</ref>


==Biography==
==Biography==
James O'Connor was born in [[Wexford]], the third son of Michael O'Connor, the senior partner in a long-established solicitors' firm, and was educated at [[Blackrock College]]. He married Mary Keogh in 1897.<ref name="Ball1927">{{cite book |last1=Ball |first1=F. Elrington |title=The judges in Ireland, 1221–1921 |volume=II |date=1927 |publisher=E. P. Dutton |location=New York |page=386 |url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uiug.30112003558472&view=1up&seq=400 |accessdate=27 June 2020}}</ref> He practised as a solicitor for a few years before being [[call to the bar|called]] to the [[Bar Council of Ireland|Irish bar]] in 1900; he became [[Queen's Counsel|King's Counsel]] in 1908.<ref name="Ball1927"/> In 1911 he published a treatise on the powers and duties of [[justices of the peace]] in Ireland.<ref>{{cite book |last1=O'Connor |first1=James |last2=Farran |first2=Edmond Chomley |last3=Byrne |first3=William |last4=Kough |first4=C. Norman |title=The Irish Justice of the peace: a treatise on the powers and duties of justices of the peace in Ireland and certain matters connected therewith |date=1911 |publisher=E. Ponsonby |location=Dublin |url=https://archive.org/details/irishjusticeofpe00ocon/page/n1 |accessdate=27 June 2020}}</ref> On 20 May 1909 he was admitted to the [[Middle Temple]], but withdrew a few years later without being called to the English bar.<ref>Sturgess 1949 Vol.2 p.778</ref> A [[Liberal Unionist]] and a Catholic,<ref name="Ball1927"/> within a few years he had built up a large practice, and he rose in his profession with remarkable speed: he was appointed Solicitor-General at 42, Attorney General at 45, and at 46 briefly a judge of the [[Court of Chancery (Ireland)|Chancery division]] of the [[High Court of Justice in Ireland]] and then a Lord Justice of the [[Court of Appeal in Ireland]] at 46.<ref name="Ball1927"/>


In January 1921, during the [[Irish War of Independence]], O'Connor met informally in London with [[Irish Unionist Alliance|Irish Unionist]] leader [[Edward Carson]] and [[Sinn Féin]] activist Fr [[Michael O'Flanagan]] to discuss a peaceful solution to the conflict, but without success.<ref>{{cite web |last1=O'Connor |first1=James |title=Memorandum of an interview with Edward Carson |url=http://www.difp.ie/docs/volume/1/1921/129.htm |website=Documents on Irish Foreign Policy |publisher=Royal Irish Academy |accessdate=27 June 2020 |date=January 1921}}</ref> In 1922 he was appointed by the [[Provisional Government of Ireland (1922)|Provisional Government]] to the commission examining [[History of rail transport in Ireland|Irish railways]].<ref>{{cite book |author1=Irish Railways Commission |title=Report |date=1922 |publisher=Stationery Office |location=Dublin |page=19 |url=https://archive.org/details/tuarasgbhailchoi00irel/page/n21 |accessdate=27 June 2020}}</ref> His judicial career was cut short by the [[Courts of Justice Act 1924]], which abolished the High Court and Court of Appeal established [[Supreme Court of Judicature Act (Ireland) 1877|in 1877]], only two of whose judges were appointed to the [[Irish Free State]]'s new [[High Court (Ireland)|High Court]] and [[Supreme Court of Ireland|Supreme Court]]. The judges forced into retirement received generous compensation, and O'Connor was one of many who moved to England. He was [[knighted]] in the [[1925 New Year Honours]].<ref name="Ball1927"/><ref>{{cite journal |author1=Central Chancery of the Orders of Knighthood |authorlink1=Central Chancery of the Orders of Knighthood |title=His Majesty's intention of conferring the Honour of Knighthood |journal=The London Gazette |date=1 January 1925 |issue=33007 [Supplement] |page=2 |url=https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/33007/supplement/2 |accessdate=27 June 2020}}</ref> He rejoined the [[Middle Temple]] on 23 April 1925 and was called to the English bar on 6 May 1925.<ref>Sturgess 1949 Vol.3 p.885</ref> The ''[[Cambridge Law Journal]]'' published his address, "Thoughts about the [[common law|Common Law]]", in 1928.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=O'Connor |first1=James |title=Thoughts about the Common Law |journal=The Cambridge Law Journal |date=1928 |volume=3 |issue=2 |pages=161–172 |jstor=4515281 |issn=0008-1973}}</ref> Serious ill health compelled him to give up practice. He published a two-volume history of Ireland since the [[1798 rebellion]].<ref>{{cite book |last1=O'Connor |first1=James |title=History of Ireland, 1798–1924 |date=1925 |publisher=Arnold |location=London |language=en |oclc=655144042}}</ref> He returned to Ireland, where his health improved, at least in the short term, and his doctors advised him that return to legal practice would be beneficial to his health.
James O'Connor was born in [[Wexford]], the third son of Michael O'Connor, the senior partner in a long-established solicitors firm, and was educated at [[Blackrock College]]. He married Mary Keogh in 1897.<ref>Ball F. Elrington '' The Judges in Ireland 1221–1921'' John Murray London 1826</ref> He practised as a solicitor for a few years before being called to the Bar in 1900; he became [[Queen's Counsel|King's Counsel]] in 1908. On 20 May 1909 he was admitted to the [[Middle Temple]], but withdrew a few years later without being Called to the English Bar.<ref>Sturgess, H.A.C. (1949). ''Register of Admissions to the Honourable Society of the Middle Temple''. Butterworth & Co. (Publishers) Ltd.: Temple Bar. Vol. 2, p.778.</ref> Within a few years he had built up a large practice, and he rose in his profession with remarkable speed: he was appointed Solicitor-General at 42, Attorney General at 45 and a judge of the Court of Appeal at 46. He wrote a two-volume work on [[Justices of the Peace]] (3rd edition 1925).

In January 1921, during the [[Irish War of Independence]], O'Connor met informally in London with [[Irish Unionist Alliance|Irish Unionist]] leader [[Edward Carson]] and [[Sinn Féin]] activist [[Michael O'Flanagan|Fr Michael O'Flanagan]] to discuss a peaceful solution to the conflict, but without success.<ref>[No. 129 UCDA P150/1902 http://www.difp.ie/docs/volume/1/1921/129.htm]</ref> Nearly a year later the [[Anglo-Irish Treaty]] was ratified by both sides.

His career was cut short by the [[Courts of Justice Act 1924]] which abolished the High Court and Court of Appeal then in existence, and only two of the judges of these courts were appointed to the new [[High Court (Ireland)|High Court]] and [[Supreme Court of Ireland|Supreme Court]]. The judges who were forced into retirement received generous compensation for their loss of salary. Like many of his colleagues he moved to England. He rejoined the [[Middle Temple]] on 23 April 1925 and was Called to the English Bar a few weeks later on 6 May 1925.<ref>Sturgess, H.A.C. (1949). ''Register of Admissions to the Honourable Society of the Middle Temple''. Butterworth & Co. (Publishers) Ltd.: Temple Bar. Vol. 3, p.885.</ref> Serious ill-health compelled him to give up practice. He returned to Ireland, where his health improved, at least in the short term, and his doctors advised him that return to legal practice would be beneficial to his health.


==''In re O'Connor's Application''==
==''In re O'Connor's Application''==
O'Connor is best remembered today for the ruling on his application for re-admission to practice as a solicitor, in which the [[Chief Justice of the Irish Free State|Chief Justice]] held that while the application would be granted, as a general rule for a senior judge to return to legal practice was contrary to [[public policy]]. The case began badly when O'Connor filed an 8-line [[affidavit]] which, remarkably, did not refer to his career as a judge at all. The Chief Justice, [[Hugh Kennedy]], made clear his disapproval of this conduct, required a further detailed affidavit and asked for the attendance of the [[Attorney General of Ireland|Attorney General]]. The Attorney General's view was that "such a practice would open an avenue to corruption".


The tenor of Kennedy's judgment suggests that he agreed with the Attorney General. He noted that, although some senior English judges like [[Francis Pemberton]] had returned to practice at the bar, none had done so since the [[Act of Settlement 1701]], which in his view reflected the understanding that appointment to the Bench means that "the practice of law is abandoned forever" because "if a man should step down from the privileged position of the Bench and throw off what is a sacred office to engage in the rough-and tumble of litigious contest … he will shake the authority of the judicial limb of Government, and mar the prestige of the Courts of Justice upon which the whole structure of the State must always lean. Moreover, a new way of [[scandal]] and [[corruption]] would be opened up."<ref>[1930] I.R. 623 at 632</ref>
O'Connor is best remembered today for the ruling on his application for re-admission to practice as a solicitor, in which the [[Chief Justice of the Irish Free State|Chief Justice]] held that while the application would be granted, as a general rule for a senior judge to return to legal practice was contrary to public policy.<ref>''Re O'Connor's Application'' [1930] I.R. 623</ref> The case began badly when O'Connor filed an 8-line [[affidavit]] which, remarkably, did not refer to his career as a judge at all. The Chief Justice made clear his disapproval of this conduct, required a further detailed affidavit and asked for the attendance of the [[Attorney General of Ireland|Attorney General]]. The Attorney General's view was that "such a practice would open an avenue to corruption".


However, Kennedy found that special circumstances existed: notably that O'Connor had not wished to return to practice but had been forcibly retired from the Bench, and it was on medical advice that he was seeking an active profession. Kennedy was careful to state that he was certain that O'Connor had no improper motive; he granted the application on condition that O'Connor did not seek to [[Appearance (law)|appear]] in court.
The tenor of [[Chief Justice of the Irish Free State|Chief Justice]] [[Hugh Kennedy|Kennedy]]'s judgment suggests that he agreed with the Attorney General. He noted that before the [[Act of Settlement 1701]], some senior judges (like [[Francis Pemberton|Sir Francis Pemberton]]) had returned to practice at the Bar. However, such conduct was unknown since 1701, and this, in his view, reflected the understanding that appointment to the Bench means that "the practice of law is abandoned forever". The reason he explained was that "if a man should step down from the privileged position of the Bench and throw off what is a sacred office to engage in the rough-and tumble of litigious contest … he will shake the authority of the judicial limb of Government, and mar the prestige of the Courts of Justice upon which the whole structure of the State must always lean. Moreover, a new way of scandal and [[corruption]] would be opened up."<ref>[1930] I.R. 623 at 632</ref>


==Death and reputation==
However Kennedy found that special circumstances existed: notably that O'Connor had not wished to return to practice but had been forcibly retired from the Bench, and it was on medical advice that he was seeking an active profession. Kennedy was careful to state that he was certain that O'Connor had no improper motive; he granted the application on condition that O'Connor did not seek to appear in Court.
O'Connor rejoined the family firm, but the recovery in his health was short-lived and he died in 1931 aged 59.


[[Gerard Hogan]] suggests that both Kennedy's judgment in the case and his diary reveal his low personal and professional opinion of O'Connor.<ref>Hogan 1988 p.153</ref> It is true that Kennedy had an extremely poor opinion of the pre-Independence judges as a whole, recommended their removal from the Bench {{lang|fr|en bloc}}, and did not suggest O'Connor as one of the very few exceptions. On the other hand, he spelt out clearly that O'Connor was free from any suggestion of corruption and, according to one report, stated that his "returning to the fold" would be a great honour to the legal profession.<ref>[1929] 63 ILTSJ 299; cited in Hogan 1988 p.146</ref>
O'Connor rejoined the family firm, but the recovery in his health was short-lived and he died in 1931 at 59.


[[Maurice Healy (writer)|Maurice Healy]] described O'Connor as a man of great ability, but with no respect for the traditions of the Irish bar: in Healy's view he was a failure as a Law Officer, but a good High Court judge and an even better appeal court judge.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Healy |first1=Maurice |title=The old Munster Circuit: a book of memories and traditions |date=1986 |orig-year=1939 |url-access=registration |via=[[Internet Archive]] |publisher=Mercier Press |location=Cork; Dublin |isbn=0-85342-597-3 |page=188 |url=https://archive.org/details/oldmunstercircui00heal/page/188 |accessdate=27 June 2020}}</ref>
==Reputation==


==References==
Hogan<ref>''Irish Jurist'' Volume 23</ref> suggests that both Kennedy's judgment in the case and his diary reveal his low personal and professional opinion of O'Connor. It is true that Kennedy had an extremely poor opinion of the pre-Independence judges as a whole, recommended their removal from the Bench {{lang|fr|en bloc}}, and did not suggest O'Connor as one of the very few exceptions. On the other hand, he spelt out clearly that O'Connor was free from any suggestion of corruption and, according to one report, stated that his "return to the fold" would be a great honour to the legal profession.<ref>[[Irish Law Times]] Volume 63</ref>
===Sources===
* {{cite journal |last1=Hogan |first1=G. W. |title=Chief Justice Kennedy and Sir James O'Connor's Application |journal=Irish Jurist |date=Summer 1988 |volume=23 |issue=1 |pages=144–158 |jstor=44027350 |issn=0021-1273}}
* {{Cite book |last=Sturgess |first=H.A.C. |date=1949 |title=Register of Admissions to the Honourable Society of the Middle Temple |publisher=Butterworth |location=London |oclc=963632724}}
* ''Re O'Connor's Application'' [1930] I.R. 623


===Citations===
[[Maurice Healy (writer)|Maurice Healy]] described O'Connor as a man of great ability, but with no respect for the traditions of the [[Irish Bar]]: in Healy's view he was a failure as a Law Officer, but a good High Court judge and an even better appeal court judge.<ref>''The Old Munster Circuit'' Michael Joseph Ltd. 1939</ref>
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==References==


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Revision as of 18:44, 27 June 2020

Sir James O'Connor, KC PC (I) (1 April 1872 – 29 December 1931) was an Irish solicitor, barrister and judge. He was appointed Solicitor-General for Ireland in 1914, Attorney-General for Ireland in 1917, and a judge of the Supreme Court of Judicature of Ireland in 1918. After his enforced retirement in 1924, he practised at the English bar until 1929, when he returned to Ireland and was readmitted to practice as a solicitor, a controversial move necessitating a leading judgment on the standard of professional conduct to be expected of a retired judge.[1]

Biography

James O'Connor was born in Wexford, the third son of Michael O'Connor, the senior partner in a long-established solicitors' firm, and was educated at Blackrock College. He married Mary Keogh in 1897.[2] He practised as a solicitor for a few years before being called to the Irish bar in 1900; he became King's Counsel in 1908.[2] In 1911 he published a treatise on the powers and duties of justices of the peace in Ireland.[3] On 20 May 1909 he was admitted to the Middle Temple, but withdrew a few years later without being called to the English bar.[4] A Liberal Unionist and a Catholic,[2] within a few years he had built up a large practice, and he rose in his profession with remarkable speed: he was appointed Solicitor-General at 42, Attorney General at 45, and at 46 briefly a judge of the Chancery division of the High Court of Justice in Ireland and then a Lord Justice of the Court of Appeal in Ireland at 46.[2]

In January 1921, during the Irish War of Independence, O'Connor met informally in London with Irish Unionist leader Edward Carson and Sinn Féin activist Fr Michael O'Flanagan to discuss a peaceful solution to the conflict, but without success.[5] In 1922 he was appointed by the Provisional Government to the commission examining Irish railways.[6] His judicial career was cut short by the Courts of Justice Act 1924, which abolished the High Court and Court of Appeal established in 1877, only two of whose judges were appointed to the Irish Free State's new High Court and Supreme Court. The judges forced into retirement received generous compensation, and O'Connor was one of many who moved to England. He was knighted in the 1925 New Year Honours.[2][7] He rejoined the Middle Temple on 23 April 1925 and was called to the English bar on 6 May 1925.[8] The Cambridge Law Journal published his address, "Thoughts about the Common Law", in 1928.[9] Serious ill health compelled him to give up practice. He published a two-volume history of Ireland since the 1798 rebellion.[10] He returned to Ireland, where his health improved, at least in the short term, and his doctors advised him that return to legal practice would be beneficial to his health.

In re O'Connor's Application

O'Connor is best remembered today for the ruling on his application for re-admission to practice as a solicitor, in which the Chief Justice held that while the application would be granted, as a general rule for a senior judge to return to legal practice was contrary to public policy. The case began badly when O'Connor filed an 8-line affidavit which, remarkably, did not refer to his career as a judge at all. The Chief Justice, Hugh Kennedy, made clear his disapproval of this conduct, required a further detailed affidavit and asked for the attendance of the Attorney General. The Attorney General's view was that "such a practice would open an avenue to corruption".

The tenor of Kennedy's judgment suggests that he agreed with the Attorney General. He noted that, although some senior English judges like Francis Pemberton had returned to practice at the bar, none had done so since the Act of Settlement 1701, which in his view reflected the understanding that appointment to the Bench means that "the practice of law is abandoned forever" because "if a man should step down from the privileged position of the Bench and throw off what is a sacred office to engage in the rough-and tumble of litigious contest … he will shake the authority of the judicial limb of Government, and mar the prestige of the Courts of Justice upon which the whole structure of the State must always lean. Moreover, a new way of scandal and corruption would be opened up."[11]

However, Kennedy found that special circumstances existed: notably that O'Connor had not wished to return to practice but had been forcibly retired from the Bench, and it was on medical advice that he was seeking an active profession. Kennedy was careful to state that he was certain that O'Connor had no improper motive; he granted the application on condition that O'Connor did not seek to appear in court.

Death and reputation

O'Connor rejoined the family firm, but the recovery in his health was short-lived and he died in 1931 aged 59.

Gerard Hogan suggests that both Kennedy's judgment in the case and his diary reveal his low personal and professional opinion of O'Connor.[12] It is true that Kennedy had an extremely poor opinion of the pre-Independence judges as a whole, recommended their removal from the Bench en bloc, and did not suggest O'Connor as one of the very few exceptions. On the other hand, he spelt out clearly that O'Connor was free from any suggestion of corruption and, according to one report, stated that his "returning to the fold" would be a great honour to the legal profession.[13]

Maurice Healy described O'Connor as a man of great ability, but with no respect for the traditions of the Irish bar: in Healy's view he was a failure as a Law Officer, but a good High Court judge and an even better appeal court judge.[14]

References

Sources

  • Hogan, G. W. (Summer 1988). "Chief Justice Kennedy and Sir James O'Connor's Application". Irish Jurist. 23 (1): 144–158. ISSN 0021-1273. JSTOR 44027350.
  • Sturgess, H.A.C. (1949). Register of Admissions to the Honourable Society of the Middle Temple. London: Butterworth. OCLC 963632724.
  • Re O'Connor's Application [1930] I.R. 623

Citations

  1. ^ Hogan 1988 p.144 fn(4)
  2. ^ a b c d e Ball, F. Elrington (1927). The judges in Ireland, 1221–1921. Vol. II. New York: E. P. Dutton. p. 386. Retrieved 27 June 2020.
  3. ^ O'Connor, James; Farran, Edmond Chomley; Byrne, William; Kough, C. Norman (1911). The Irish Justice of the peace: a treatise on the powers and duties of justices of the peace in Ireland and certain matters connected therewith. Dublin: E. Ponsonby. Retrieved 27 June 2020.
  4. ^ Sturgess 1949 Vol.2 p.778
  5. ^ O'Connor, James (January 1921). "Memorandum of an interview with Edward Carson". Documents on Irish Foreign Policy. Royal Irish Academy. Retrieved 27 June 2020.
  6. ^ Irish Railways Commission (1922). Report. Dublin: Stationery Office. p. 19. Retrieved 27 June 2020.
  7. ^ Central Chancery of the Orders of Knighthood (1 January 1925). "His Majesty's intention of conferring the Honour of Knighthood". The London Gazette (33007 [Supplement]): 2. Retrieved 27 June 2020.
  8. ^ Sturgess 1949 Vol.3 p.885
  9. ^ O'Connor, James (1928). "Thoughts about the Common Law". The Cambridge Law Journal. 3 (2): 161–172. ISSN 0008-1973. JSTOR 4515281.
  10. ^ O'Connor, James (1925). History of Ireland, 1798–1924. London: Arnold. OCLC 655144042.
  11. ^ [1930] I.R. 623 at 632
  12. ^ Hogan 1988 p.153
  13. ^ [1929] 63 ILTSJ 299; cited in Hogan 1988 p.146
  14. ^ Healy, Maurice (1986) [1939]. The old Munster Circuit: a book of memories and traditions. Cork; Dublin: Mercier Press. p. 188. ISBN 0-85342-597-3. Retrieved 27 June 2020 – via Internet Archive.
Legal offices
Preceded by Solicitor-General for Ireland
1914–1917
Succeeded by
Preceded by Attorney-General for Ireland
1917–1918
Succeeded by