Gerald FitzGibbon (Irish lawyer)

Gerald FitzGibbon (1837–1909) was an Irish barrister and judge, who is regarded as one of the outstanding Irish jurists of his time. He was the second of three eminent lawyers of the same family – father, son and grandson – who were all named Gerald FitzGibbon.

Background and early career

He was the elder of the two sons of Gerald FitzGibbon, QC, Master in Chancery, and his wife Ellen Patterson of Belfast; his younger brother Henry (died 1912) was a distinguished doctor.[1] He was educated at the University of Dublin, where he was an outstanding scholar. He retained deep feelings of affection and loyalty towards the University throughout his life, and gave evidence on its behalf before a Royal Commission in 1906.[2]

He entered Lincoln's Inn in 1857. He was called to the Irish Bar in 1860 and to the English Bar the following year. He went on the Munster Circuit, where he quickly acquired a large practice. He was a fine lawyer and an eloquent speaker. Maurice Healy recalled his "beautiful voice", and compared it to that of the great Russian singer Feodor Chaliapin : this, combined with a certain natural acting ability, made his arguments extraordinarily persuasive. Notable Courtroom triumphs included the libel action O'Keeffe v Cardinal Cullen- an unprecedented legal victory by a Catholic priest against his own Cardinal (although the verdict was reversed on appeal)[3]- and the disputed will case Bagot v Bagot. Having initially refused to take silk in 1868 he became Queen's Counsel in 1872.[4]

He was a Bencher of the King's Inns, and his portrait still hangs in the Dining Hall there. In 1876 he became Law Adviser to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, and the following year he became Solicitor General for Ireland.[5]

Lord Justice of Appeal

In 1878 he was appointed to the Bench as Lord Justice of the Irish Court of Appeal, and served on that Court with immense distinction for more than thirty years.

Reputation

The old Court of Appeal has often been called the strongest tribunal ever to exist in Ireland, due to the presence of such exceptional judges as Fitzgibbon himself, Hugh Holmes, Christopher Palles and Edward Gibson, 1st Baron Ashbourne. While Palles is usually regarded as the greatest of the four, some contemporaries thought that FitzGibbon was at least his equal: it is noteworthy that when the House of Lords heard an appeal from a decision where FitzGibbon had dissented, they generally preferred his view to that of his colleagues.[6]

Maurice Healy believed that FitzGibbon fell short of true greatness due to a certain lack of judicial impartiality, in that if he had a strong sympathy for one party to the appeal, he always found a way of deciding in their favour.[7] On the other hand Healy thought that the courtesy with which he conducted every appeal, and the deep interest he took in the legal arguments, made appearing in front of him "an intellectual treat".[8] Delaney praises him both for his profound erudition and his innate sense of justice[9] but agrees with Healy that FitzGibbon, like Lord Ashbourne, was a pragmatist, who would always find in favour of the party he believed to have justice on their side, even if the precedents pointed the other way. Palles and Holmes, by contrast, although they were no less anxious to do justice between the parties, went strictly by the precedents.[10]

Quinn v Leathem

Fitzgibbon went regularly on assize, most often to Belfast. It was there in 1896 that he sat as the trial judge, with a jury, in the controversial case of Quinn v Leathem.[11] The House of Lords subsequently found that for several members of a trade union to ask a businessman only to deal with customers who employ union labour amounts to a conspiracy to injure him, even though such a request, when made by an individual, had previously been found by the same tribunal in Allen v Flood[12] to be perfectly lawful. While the judgment on appeal aroused great indignation, FitzGibbon, from the report of his summing up to the jury, seems to have stated the law (as it stood at the time) correctly.

Judicial style

His judgments were written in a clear, sharp and decisive style, often with an abrupt opening sentence like "I doubt that the King's Bench can have been conscious of the consequences of its decision in this case".[13]

A good example of his judicial style can be found in Aaron's Reefs v Twiss,[14] where the Court of Appeal were divided on the question of whether certain statements in a company's prospectus were simply "optimistic" or actually fraudulent. FitzGibbon found that there is no legal difference between a company which omits crucial facts from its prospectus and one which deliberately misrepresents the facts, remarking that "if a company cannot be floated if the whole truth be disclosed by its prospectus, it cannot be honestly launched at all". To the argument that the application of this standard of commercial honesty would be fatal to most company prospectuses, he observed drily: "So much the better".[15]

Political and social life

He was a strong Conservative in politics, and a close friend of Lord Randolph Churchill;[16] it was in a letter to FitzGibbon in 1886 that Churchill made his famous remark that to effectively oppose Gladstone's Irish Home Rule policy, "the Orange[17] card would be the one to play".[18] Yet FitzGibbon had a wide circle of friends of differing political views, and his daughter Anne married a close relative of Gladstone. His house, Kilrock,[19] on the Hill of Howth, was one of the centres of Dublin social life: here he entertained not only his legal colleagues, but many of the leading Irish and British politicians of the day.[20] His Christmas parties at Kilrock were for many years one of the high points of the social calendar.[21]

He was a man of great erudition, and had numerous interests outside the law. He was a devoted member of the Church of Ireland, and spoke eloquently in 1904 of his confidence in the future of "the Church which I love".[22] He was a member of the General Synod of the Church: he was called the most influential laymen of his time, and was rewarded with a statue in St. Patrick's Cathedral.[23] At the same time he was an active Freemason, and contributed much of his time and money to Masonic causes and charities.[24]

He took a deep interest in Irish education, chairing a committee on educational endowments from 1885 to 1897. He gave evidence to the Royal Commission on the future of the University of Dublin in 1906.[25] He strongly defended the University's policy on the admission of Roman Catholics, pointing out that Chief Baron Palles, one of his most distinguished colleagues on the Bench, was a Catholic graduate of the same University, and shared FitzGibbon's deep attachment to it.[26] He generously praised Clongowes Wood College, Palles' old school, as an example of the best of Roman Catholic education.[27]

He was a member of both the Privy Council of Ireland and from 1900 of the British Privy Council.[28]

Death and tributes

He died rather suddenly at Kilrock on 14 October 1909. The next day the Lord Chief Justice of England in open court paid tribute to "that great judge, profound lawyer and man of wide and varied learning". This was apparently the only time an Irish judge has been honoured in this way.[29] The Times paid him an equally glowing tribute, describing him as a man whose gifts could have easily seen him rise to the top of the political rather than the judicial sphere.

He is buried in old St. Fintan's Cemetery, Sutton, near the ruined church. His statue (picture above) stands in the North Aisle of St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin.[30]

Family

He married in 1864 Margaret Ann FitzGerald, daughter of Francis Alexander FitzGerald, Baron of the Court of Exchequer: they had seven children, including the third Gerald Fitzgibbon, judge of the Supreme Court of Ireland.[31] Of his daughters Janet married Sir William Shone, and Anne married John Gladstone, great-nephew of the statesman.[32] The family were members of the Church of Ireland.

In literature

He appears briefly in Ulysses by James Joyce.

References

  1. Ball, F. Elrington The Judges in Ireland 1221–1921 London John Murray 1926 Vol. 2 p.372
  2. Fitzgerald, David "Gerald FitzGibbon" Dictionary of National Biography 1912 Supplement p.30
  3. The alleged libel was in fact a sentence of suspension.
  4. Fitzgerald p.30
  5. Ball p.372
  6. Fitzgerald p.30
  7. Healy, Maurice The Old Munster Circuit (1939) Mecier Press edition pp. 260–1
  8. Healy p.260
  9. Delaney, V.T.H Christopher Palles Allen Figgis and Co Dublin 1960 p.138
  10. Delaney p.158
  11. [1901] A.C 495
  12. [1898] A.C. 1
  13. Antrim County Land, Building and Investment Co. v Stewart [1904] 2 I.R 357
  14. [1895] 2 !.R 207
  15. [1895] 2 I.R. 207 at 269
  16. Jenkins, Roy Churchill Macmillan London 2001 p.13
  17. i.e. the Orange Order-Jenkins p.13
  18. Ferguson, Kenneth King's Inns Barristers 1868–2004 Dublin 2005 p.48
  19. Kilrock House still exists and is now operated by the Health Services Executive.
  20. Ferguson p.48
  21. Ball p.322
  22. Ferguson p.47
  23. Ferguson p.47
  24. Fitzgerald p.31
  25. Delaney p.23
  26. Delaney p.23
  27. Delaney p.23
  28. Ball p.372
  29. Fitzgerald p.31
  30. FitzGerald p.31
  31. Ball p.372
  32. Ferguson p.48
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, April 26, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.