Roderick Meagher

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Roderick Pitt "Roddy" Meagher

Roderick Pitt "Roddy" Meagher AO QC is an Australian Jurist and former judge.

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[edit] Early years and education

Meagher is a descendent of William Pitt the Younger and a cousin of Patrick White. His family owned a chain of country stores. In 1949, Meagher was Head Prefect or 'Captain of the School' at St Ignatius' College, Riverview.

In 1956, Meagher graduated from Sydney University with degrees in Arts and Law. He attended St John's College.

[edit] Legal career

Meagher was called to the NSW Bar in 1960. He lectured at the Faculty of Law at Sydney University within the same year. After taking Silk, Justice Meagher served as President of the New South Wales Bar Association from 1979–1981.

Meagher was a Justice of the NSW Supreme Court and the Court of Appeal of New South Wales from 1989-15 March 2004.

He currently serves as a patron to the Macquarie University "Macquarie Journal of Business Law"[1].

[edit] Publications

With William Gummow he co-edited five editions of Jacobs on Trusts and again with Gummow and Lehane he co-authored Equity: Doctrines and Remedies, the preeminent work on equity in Australia. Meagher has also made various contributions to Quadrant Magazine. He was described by NSW Chief Justice Jim Spigelman as "one of the intellectual giants of our legal history"[2].

He was author of "Portraits on Yellow Paper" published in 2004.

[edit] Honours

In 2000 the Senate of the University of Syndey conferred on Meagher - "scholar, lawyer, judge and individualist", as the citation to the Senate called him - the honourary degree of Doctor of Laws (LLD), a very rare distinction. The Senate was invited to confer the degree on Meagher for his intellectual contributions to the law in particular, referring to the classic text Equity: Doctrines & Remedies, of which Meagher was and remains co-author, as having helped reverse the general decline of equity jurisprudence: "[t]hat book has probably enjoyed greater esteem than any other Australian legal treatise, not only in universities but also with the Bench and Bar in this country, England and elsewhere. There is no equivalent to it in England, the United States or anywhere else".[[3]] The citation also commended Meagher's service to the University of Sydney Faculty of Law, in his capacity since 1960 as lecturer in Roman law and then Challis Lecturer in Equity, commenting that "[h]is lectures were a constant source of inspiration, delight and guidance for generations of law students".[1]

In 2005 Meagher was admitted as an Officer of the Order of Australia "for service to the judiciary, particularly judicial administration, to reform of the building and construction industry, and to the community through the Australian Naval Reserve and conservation and arts organisations"[4].

[edit] Individual Cases and Incidents

  • When John Laws was fined $50,000 for using "gross and coarse" terms on 2UE, Justice Meagher dissented and called for a jail term, stating that $50,000 was the sort of money Laws would spend "on a small cocktail party."[5]
  • Justice Mary Gaudron, in a speech to the Women Lawyers Association of NSW, brought Meagher into controversy by deeming his comment that "The bar desperately needs more women barristers [because] there are so many bad ones that people may say that women ... are hopeless by nature"[6] as evidence of a brooding "wilfully unreconstructed" view of women in Law.
  • He notably opposed the Sydney University school of Law's move from a City to Darlington campus, saying, "As long as it was in the city, the school had lots of barristers and solicitors prepared to lecture there, but those people will not be prepared to struggle up to the University. There has never been a close inter-relationship between the professions and the academics in law ... There's a certain amount of co-operation at the moment but even that amount is going to vanish"[7].

[edit] Criticism

Patrick Atiyah has criticised Meagher's conservative view of legal doctrine in the Law Quarterly Review.

[edit] Sources

[edit] External links