Edward Ridley
Sir Edward Ridley, PC, KC ( August 1843 - 14 October 1928) was a British barrister, judge and Conservative Politician, MP for South Northumberland from 1878–80.[1][2]
He was the son of Sir Matthew White Ridley, 4th Baronet, and his wife Cecilia Ann, eldest daughter of Sir James Parke, afterwards Baron Wensleydale. His brother was Matthew White Ridley, 1st Viscount Ridley.
He was educated at Harrow and Corpus Christi College, Oxford. He was a fellow of All Souls College, Oxford, 1866–1882.
He married Alice Davenport, daughter of William Bromley Davenport, of Cheshire. They had two sons, the younger was Guy Ridley.
He was a barrister 1868, QC 1892 and knighted (Knight Bachelor) in 1897.
Giving the Plymouth Law Society’s Annual Pilgrim Fathers Lecture in December 2009, Lord Justice Toulson recounted that Ridley’s appointment to the High Court bench in 1897 had been “greeted with horror”[3][4] and that The Law Times had written “no-one will believe that he would have been appointed to the High Court Bench but for his connections. […] Such an innovation, we repeat, was only possible where the hard-working official, the bearer of so many heavy burdens of the High Court judges, was highly connected. This is Ridleyism. Let it be known hereafter as Ridleyism […]”.[3][5] Toulson further noted that Ridley’s appointment had been described by The Solicitors’ Journal as “a grave mistake”[3][5] and that on Ridley’s death Sir Frederick Pollock had written: “Sir E. Ridley, good scholar, Fellow of All Souls, successful, sicut dicunt [so they say], as an Official Referee, and by general opinion of the Bar the worst High Court judge of our time, ill-tempered and grossly unfair: which is rather a mystery”.[3][5][6] Lord Justice MacKinnon called Ridley “the worst judge I have appeared before”, saying that “he had a perverse instinct for unfairness”.[3][7]
References
- ↑ ‘RIDLEY, Rt Hon. Sir Edward’, Who Was Who, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 1920–2007; online edn, Oxford University Press, Dec 2007 accessed 21 Dec 2013
- ↑ Sir Edward Ridley. Judge And Scholar. (Obituaries) The Times Monday, Oct 15, 1928; pg. 21; Issue 45024; col C
- 1 2 3 4 5 Toulson, Roger (3 December 2009). "Judging judicial appointments" (PDF). Retrieved 10 March 2015.
- ↑ Stevens, Robert (18 October 2002). The English Judges: Their Role in the Changing Constitution. Hart Publishing. p. 15. ISBN 978-1841132266.
- 1 2 3 Heuston, R. F. V. (1964). Lives of the Lord Chancellors (1885 – 1940). Clarendon Press. p. 51. ASIN B0000CM3YN.
- ↑ DeWolfe, Mark, ed. (1941). Holmes-Pollock Letters: The Correspondence of Mr. Justice Holmes and Sir Edward Pollock 1874-1932. II. Harvard University Press. p. 232. ASIN B00460Z6Z4.
- ↑ MacKinnon, “The Origin of the Commercial Court,” (1944) LQR (60), 324–325.
External links
- Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by Edward Ridley
Parliament of the United Kingdom | ||
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Preceded by Hon. Henry Liddell Wentworth Beaumont |
Member of Parliament for South Northumberland 1878 – 1880 With: Wentworth Beaumont |
Succeeded by Albert Grey Wentworth Beaumont |