William Henn

William Henn (c.1720-1796) was an Irish judge, remembered mainly for the portrait of him in Jonah Barringtons Personal Sketches.

Life

He was born at Ballynacally, County Clare, second son of Thomas Henn of Paradise Hill.[1] The Henn family, who were originally from London, had acquired large estates in Clare in the seventeenth century. They had a long association with the law: Henry Hene, or Henn, who is generally thought to have been William's direct ancestor, was Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer 1680-87.[2] John Bennett (Irish politician), his colleague on the Court of King's Bench, was a cousin.[3]

William entered Middle Temple in 1738, took his degree as Bachelor of Arts from the University of Dublin in 1740, was called to the Irish Bar in 1744 and became King's Counsel in 1762. He was made a justice of the Court of King's Bench (Ireland) in 1768 and remained on the Bench until 1791. [4]He died in Dublin in 1796.

Reputation

Jonah Barrington called him a "very excellent private character" but did not rate his judicial qualities very highly. According to Barrington, Henn was "dreadfully puzzled" when on assize at Wexford in about the year 1789 by the arguments of two young barristers each of whom pleaded with great eloquence that the law was in his client's favour. Having argued their contradictory positions at length, they requested the judge to give his ruling. Henn, at a loss as to which side was in the right, whispered to his registrar: "I wish to God I knew what the law really was!", to which the registrar replied that if he knew what the law was, he would happily share his knowledge with the judge.[5]

John Scott, 1st Earl of Clonmell, who presided in the King's Bench where Henn was a junior judge, had a very low opinion of him, calling him "at best a fool".[6] Admittedly Scott in private expressed his contempt for nearly all the Irish judges of his time, including some with whom he was outwardly friendly: Henn's cousin John Bennett in particular he saw as an enemy.[7]

Family

William Henn married Elizabeth Parry; he was the father of William Henn junior, a Master in Chancery, and grandfather of Jonathan Henn, a barrister, who is best remembered for prosecuting John Mitchel.

References

  1. Ball, F. Elrington The Judges in Ireland 1221-1921 John Murray London 1926 Vol.2 p.216
  2. Ball, p.216
  3. Lenox-Conyngham, Melosina Diaries of Ireland Lilliput Press Dublin 1998 p.59
  4. Ball p.216
  5. Barrington, Jonah Personal Sketches of his Own Times Henry Colburn London 1827 Vol.1 pp.453-4
  6. Lenox-Conyngham p.59
  7. Ball p.175
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