Jonathan Christian

Jonathan Christian QC, PC (17 February 1808, Carrick-on-Suir, County Tipperary – 29 October 1887, Dublin), was an Irish judge.[1] He served as Solicitor-General for Ireland from 1856 to 1858. He was a judge of the Court of Common Pleas (Ireland) from 1858 to 1867 when he was appointed Lord Justice of Appeal in Chancery. On the creation of the new Irish Court of Appeal in 1878 he served briefly on the Court but retired after a few months.[2]

Christian was considered one of the best Irish lawyers of his time but as a judge regularly courted controversy. His bitter and sarcastic temper and open contempt for most of his colleagues led to frequent clashes both in Court and in the Press. Though he was rebuked several times by the House of Commons, no serious thought seems to have been given to removing him from office.

Family

He was born in Carrick-on-Suir, third son of George Christian, solicitor and his wife Margaret Cormack. He was educated at the University of Dublin, entered Gray's Inn in 1831 and was called to the Irish Bar in 1834.[3] He married Mary Thomas in 1859 and had four sons and four daughters. He lived at Ravenswell, Bray, County Wicklow.

Early career

His early years at the Bar were not successful, and he admitted to being near despair at times. His practice lay in the Court of Chancery (Ireland) : Chancery procedures then were extremely complex and he found them at first almost unintelligible. Gradually he mastered the intricacies of Chancery practice and became a leader of the Bar, and took silk in 1841. It was said that his expertise left the Lord Chancellor quite unable to argue with him.[4]

He was appointed Law Adviser to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, an influential post which involved assisting the Attorney General and Solicitor General, but resigned in 1841, on the ground that it interfered with his private practice. He was appointed Third Sergeant in 1851 but resigned in 1855, allegedly because he was disappointed at not receiving further promotion. Promotion did come his way: he was appointed Solicitor General the following year and a judge of the Court of Common Pleas in 1858. He was unusual in having no strong political views: it was said that his political allegiance was known only to himself.[5]

Controversy

As a judge of the Common Pleas Christian got on well with his colleagues, and any dissenting judgements he wrote were short and courteous. It was after his appointment as Lord Justice of Appeal in 1867 that his behaviour began to attract unfavourable comment, as he went out of his way to court controversy on a wide variety of topics.

Law Reports

Christian developed a violent antipathy to the Irish Reports, castigating them in open Court as "nonsense","worthless rubbish" and "disjointed twaddle".[6] Attempts by colleagues to get him to moderate his language failed. Christian threatened to refuse to let his judgements be reported, and in his last years relations with the law reporters were so bad that they simply published their uncorrected notes rather than sending them to the judge for revision.

Vice-Chancellor

In 1867 a new office of Vice-Chancellor for Ireland was created; it was filled throughout its existence by one man, Hedges Eyre Chatterton, who retired in 1904. Despite his length of service, he was not considered a judge of the first rank, and Christian combined feelings of professional contempt and personal dislike for him. He usually voted on appeal to overturn his judgments, and frequently added personal attacks on Chatterton, despite protests from his colleagues.The feud between the two judges reached the Press in 1870 when the Irish Times, without naming them, quoted one judge's opinion that another was "lazy, stupid, conceited and dogmatic".[7] Although Christian denied it, it was universally believed that he was the author of the remarks, which were aimed at Chatterton. Chatterton was fortunate in enjoying the support of the Lord Chancellor of Ireland, Thomas O'Hagan, 1st Baron O'Hagan, who was also on bad terms with Christian.

Lord O'Hagan

Christian had worked well with Abraham Brewster, O'Hagan's predecessor, whom he respected. For O'Hagan he felt the same dislike and contempt which he felt for Chatterton. Although they had served together in the Common Pleas without any obvious ill-will, Christian considered O'Hagan's appointment as Lord Chancellor to be a purely political act, and that he was unfit to be either head of the judiciary or an appeal judge in Chancery; he also complained of what he saw as O'Hagan's laziness, which put an extra burden on him.[8] During O'Hagan's first term as Chancellor Christian subjected him to constant criticism; unwisely he did not confine these attacks to the Courtroom but published numerous pamphlets, an activity which was widely seen as improper. When O'Hagan became Chancellor for the second time, a friend congratulated him on escaping from "the misnamed Christian " who had retired two years earlier.

Irish Land Acts

A major source of contention between Christian and O'Hagan was the First Irish Land Act 1870, which O'Hagan steered through Parliament. The Act provided for compensation for tenants in the event of eviction. Christian, though he was not a landowner and was not as a rule much interested in politics, objected strongly to the policy of the Act, which he believed to be most unjust to landlords. His attacks from the Bench on the Act led to serious rebukes both from the House of Commons and from the Press, which commented on the impropriety of a judge attacking the Act which it was his duty to enforce.[9]

Later years

O'Hagan's retirement did nothing to lessen Christian's ill-temper; other judges came in for attack, including Chief Justice James Whiteside, whom he accused of speaking constantly on matters of which he was ignorant. In his later years he seems to have been a lonely and isolated figure: his vigorous opposition to the Supreme Court of Judicature (Ireland) Act 1877 was entirely unsuccessful.[10] A feeling of isolation may partly explain his decision to retire, though certainly his increasing deafness also played a part.

Assessment

Delaney praises Christian as a great master of equity, a man of great learning and a judge with a great desire to see justice done,[11] bur he does not deny that Christian loved controversy. Even his supporters spoke of "arrows too sharply pointed "; critics spoke of his "spirit of personal sarcasm, cold, keen and cynical". No doubt Christian was genuinely concerned to uphold high standards of judicial conduct, but as Hogan points out, his own conduct struck most observers as far more improper than anything he complained of in others.[12]

References

  1. Daire Hogan (2004). "Christian, Jonathan (1808–1887)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 30 December 2010.
  2. Ball, F. Elrington The Judges in Ireland 1221–1921 John Murray London 1926 Vol. 2 p.360
  3. Ball, p.360
  4. Hogan, Daire "Arrows Too Sharply Pointed-the relations of Lord Justice Christian and Lord O'Hagan" published in The Common Law Tradition Irish Academic Press Dublin 1990
  5. Delaney V.T.H " Christopher Palles " Allen Figgis and Co. 1960
  6. Delaney, pp.91–2
  7. Hogan, p.70
  8. Hogan, p.80
  9. Hogan, p.79
  10. Delaney p.92
  11. Delaney p.92
  12. Hogan, p.62
Legal offices
Preceded by
John FitzGerald
Solicitor-General for Ireland
1856–1858
Succeeded by
Henry George Hughes
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, May 24, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.