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A black-letter lawyer.


THE LIFE--STORY of Sir Redmond Barry Sir Redmond Barry KCMG (June 7 1813 – November 23 1880) was a British colonial judge in Victoria, Australia.

Barry was the son of Major-General Henry Green Barry, of Ballyclough, County Cork and his wife Phoebe.
 is, I think, well known to most Victorians. His many and substantial civic activities make him a prominent candidate for the title of Melbourne's finest citizen. As Sir Ninian Stephen Sir Ninian Martin Stephen, KG, AK, GCMG, GCVO, KBE, QC (born 15 June 1923) is an eminent Australian. He is a former High Court judge and was the 20th Governor-General of Australia. Early life
Ninian Martin Stephen was born on 15 June 1923 in Oxfordshire, England.
 memorably remarked some years ago, 'Barry opened everything in Melbourne worth opening'. One thinks immediately of the University of Melbourne
  • AsiaWeek is now discontinued.
Comments:

In 2006, Times Higher Education Supplement ranked the University of Melbourne 22nd in the world. Because of the drop in ranking, University of Melbourne is currently behind four Asian universities - Beijing University,
, the Public Library, the Supreme Court Library, the Melbourne Hospital and even the Melbourne Philharmonic Society--in all these he was the driving force.

My task in this paper is to write of Barry as a judge.

An Irishman and graduate of Trinity College, Dublin For other institutions named Trinity College, see .
Trinity is located in the centre of Dublin, Ireland, on College Green opposite the former Irish Houses of Parliament (now a branch of the Bank of Ireland).
, Barry arrived in the Port Phillip
"Port Phillip" may also refer to a Local Government Area called the City of Port Phillip.


Port Phillip, also commonly called Port Phillip Bay or (locally) just the Bay, is a large bay in southern Victoria, Australia.
 District as a qualified barrister in late 1839. The court system in the District then consisted simply of a Court of Quarter Sessions QUARTER SESSIONS. A court bearing this name, mostly invested with the trial of criminals. It takes its name from sitting quarterly or once in three months.
     2. The English courts of quarter sessions were erected during the reign of Edward III. Vide Stat.
, a Magistrates Court and a Court of Requests for the recovery of small debts. While practicing at the Port Phillip Bar, Barry was appointed in January 1843 Commissioner of the Court of Requests at an annual salary of 100 [pounds sterling]. He was to serve in this post for a number of years. J.L. Forde, who wrote an early history of the Victorian Bar The Victorian Bar is the bar association for the Australian State of Victoria. It's members are barristers registered to practice in Victoria. As of 19 January 2006, there are 1627 counsel practising as members of the Victorian Bar. , describes Barry as disposing of the business of this bumble tribunal, 'With all the care, patience, dignity, and conscientiousness which he displayed long after when he was a Judge.' (1) From April 1841 a member of the Supreme Court of New South Wales New South Wales, state (1991 pop. 5,164,549), 309,443 sq mi (801,457 sq km), SE Australia. It is bounded on the E by the Pacific Ocean. Sydney is the capital. The other principal urban centers are Newcastle, Wagga Wagga, Lismore, Wollongong, and Broken Hill. , Mr Justice Willis, was resident in the District but his judicial behaviour was so unacceptable he was removed in June 1843. In the meantime Adv. 1. in the meantime - during the intervening time; "meanwhile I will not think about the problem"; "meantime he was attentive to his other interests"; "in the meantime the police were notified"
meantime, meanwhile
 Barry had been appointed 'Standing Counsel' for Aboriginal people charged with criminal offences--an appointment which carried no salary. He took this appointment very seriously, fighting hard for his clients in court and saving a number from the gallows GALLOWS. An erection on which to bang criminals condemned to death. .

In 1851 Barry was appointed Solicitor-General in the first government of the new Colony.

In January 1852, upon the establishment of the Supreme Court of Victoria, Barry was appointed to the Court as Senior Puisne PUISNE. Since born; the younger; as, a puisne judge, is an associate judge.  Judge, and he held that appointment (and occasionally that of Acting Chief Justice) until his death in 1880.

Barry was a complex man indeed. On more than one occasion he imposed sentence of death on a prisoner for whom a jury had made a strong recommendation to mercy. His sentence of imprisonment Imprisonment
See also Isolation.

Alcatraz Island

former federal maximum security penitentiary, near San Francisco; “escapeproof.” [Am. Hist.: Flexner, 218]

Altmark, the

German prison ship in World War II. [Br. Hist.
 on the mother of Ned Kelly Edward "Ned" Kelly (c. January 1855 – 11 November 1880) is Australia's most famous bushranger, and, to many, a folk hero for his defiance of the colonial authorities. Born near Melbourne to an Irish convict father, as a young man he clashed with the police.  in 1878 (see later) undoubtedly led to the outbreak of lawlessness by her son's gang. Even senior police officers considered it excessive and said as much to a Royal Commission.

I shall not detail Barry's initial education, which was directed to his obtaining a commission in the British Army The British Army is the land armed forces branch of the British Armed Forces. It came into being with unification of the governments and armed forces of England and Scotland into the United Kingdom of Great Britain in 1707. . But, from 1832, he was tutored in Greek and Latin in Cork as a preparation for entry to Trinity College Trinity College, Ireland: see Dublin, Univ. of.
Trinity College

Private liberal arts college in Hartford, Conn., founded in 1823. It is historically affiliated with the Episcopal church, though its curriculum is nonsectarian.
. He was accepted there as an undergraduate in the following year and, in 1834, entered the King's Inns The society was created in 1541, this being 51 years before Trinity College, Dublin was founded, making it one of Ireland's oldest professional and educational institutions. The name refers to King Henry VIII under whose reign it originated, and he granted lands at the Inns Quay where , an establishment of the Irish Bar in Dublin. At that time regulations required that to be admitted to legal practice in Ireland an individual had to complete six terms at an English Inn of Court. Barry did this at Lincoln's Inn Lincoln's Inn: see Inns of Court. , commencing in April 1837. In the same year he graduated Bachelor of Arts from Trinity College and was admitted to the Irish Bar in November 1838.

The ample evidence that exists of Barry's work ethic work ethic
n.
A set of values based on the moral virtues of hard work and diligence.


work ethic
Noun

a belief in the moral value of work
 and his approach to study permits the inference that he took his legal education seriously in an era when admission to practice did not require that.

Even such accurate and objective writers as Ann Galbally (2) and Peter Ryan People named Peter Ryan include:
  • Peter Ryan, Australian rugby league footballer
  • Peter Ryan (driver), Formula One race driver from Canada
  • Peter Ryan (police commissioner), was the Commissioner of the New South Wales Police from 1996 until 2002
 (3) have not been enthusiastic about Barry's judicial qualities. The former notes that he 'was never to become a distinguished jurist' and the latter mentions that 'he did not enunciate any new legal principles'.

My position is that Barry was an ideal judge for his times. The fledgling colony did not need a Sir Owen Dixon Sir Owen Dixon OM GCMG KBE PC (1886 - 1972) Australian judge and diplomat, was the sixth Chief Justice of Australia. A justice of the High Court for thirty-five years, Dixon is widely regarded as Australia's greatest ever jurist.  or a Lord Denning. What it needed--and got in Barry--were judges who would work hard so that the cases in the Supreme Court were completed with dispatch; who were prepared to take on the arduous travel inevitably involved in circuits and who were also prepared to publicly affirm the importance of the rule of law in troubled times--particularly after the gold discoveries.

For serious criminal proceedings in the colony, Courts of Assize assize

In law, a session, or sitting, of a court. It originally referred to a judicial inquest in which a panel of men conducted an investigation. It was later applied to special sessions of high courts in England and France.
 operated in the various bailiwicks from 1874. In the Spring Assizes as·size  
n.
1.
a. A session of a court.

b. A decree or edict rendered at such a session.

2.
a.
 at Beechworth in 1878, Ellen Kelly, the mother of Ned Kelly, and two men named Skillion and Williamson were tried before Barry and a jury for aiding and abetting a·bet  
tr.v. a·bet·ted, a·bet·ting, a·bets
1. To approve, encourage, and support (an action or a plan of action); urge and help on.

2.
 the attempted murder In the criminal law, attempted murder is committed when the defendant does an act that is more than merely preparatory to the commission of the crime of murder and, at the time of these acts, the person has a specific intention to kill.  of a police officer, Trooper Fitzpatrick. They were all convicted. In his evidence to the jury, Fitzpatrick said that he had gone to Ellen Kelly's home with a warrant to arrest her son Dan for cattle stealing. There, Ned Kelly, with the support of the accused, had fired a shot at him, wounding him in the wrist. Barry sentenced the two men to six years' imprisonment with hard labour, and Ellen Kelly to three years' imprisonment, also with hard labour. He declared he did this because she had a child of six months that she was still feeding. Ned Kelly had never been apprehended and was not present at the trial.

For many years now there has been an oral tradition that, in sentencing Ellen Kelly, Barry remarked: 'If your son Ned was here, I would sentence him to 15 years imprisonment' (some versions have 21 years imprisonment). Accordingly, Kelly supporters have argued that Barry should have disqualified dis·qual·i·fy  
tr.v. dis·qual·i·fied, dis·qual·i·fy·ing, dis·qual·i·fies
1.
a. To render unqualified or unfit.

b. To declare unqualified or ineligible.

2.
 himself from presiding at Ned's trial for murder in October 1880.

In my opinion the oral tradition is not soundly based. The Ovens and Murray Advertiser reported the Spring Assizes at Beechworth in 1878 in very great detail particularly statements made by Barry. There is no reference to the alleged remark in the reports in this newspaper. The first reference to it in print occurred a year later in a pro Kelly publication called The Mansfield Pamphlet. The likelihood is that the writer of the pamphlet attributed to Barry observations made by the Editor of the Ovens and Murray Advertiser. He had written that Ned Kelly was 'a notorious ruffian' adding 'the only pity is that Ned Kelly, one of the most notorious young desperados Desperados is the plural form of desperado. It may refer to:
  • , a stealth-based real-time tactics computer game.
  • , the sequel to the above game.
 ever known in these parts, has escaped detection'.

Further, the skilled and experienced Melbourne barrister, Hickman Molesworth, held the murder brief lot Ned Kelly from early September 1880 until 15 October 1880. That Barry was to be the trial judge was known before the end of September. Molesworth made several applications to Barry before the commencement of the trial, but none of them involved an application that he disqualify To deprive of eligibility or render unfit; to disable or incapacitate.

To be disqualified is to be stripped of legal capacity. A wife would be disqualified as a juror in her husband's trial for murder due to the nature of their relationship.
 himself for perceived or actual bias.

The distinguished Melbourne academic, Professor Louis Waller Professor Louis Peter Waller AO (b. 1935) is an Australian jurist. He is particularly well known for his work in medical and criminal law. He was Sir Leo Cussen Professor of Law at Monash University from 1965 until 2000. , who thoroughly reviewed Ned Kelly's trial for the purposes of a seminar at Wangaratta in the 1960s, noted that no application to disqualify had been made and concluded that 'the story is probably apocryphal'.

The trial of Ned Kelly is remarkable for the lengthy exchange he had with Barry during the sentence proceedings. During this Barry made it quite clear that he agreed with the jury's verdict and condemned assertions by Ned Kelly that he was innocent. The exchange was a fiery one on the part of both men, with Barry speaking with feeling about lawlessness in the community, the lack of co-operation with the authorities by the populace of North Eastern Victoria, and arguing with Kelly about the extent of his cattle-stealing. It is significant, in my opinion, that the completely outspoken condemned man never once suggested bias in the Judge.

I have long been of the opinion that Barry misdirected the jury in Kelly's trial by, in effect, taking away from them in his charge one of the central issues in the proceeding--whether the police party had gone forth to shoot him down or arrest him. It is possible that were the trial to be reviewed by a modern Court of Appeal, it would, because of the strength of the prosecution case, apply the Proviso in S.568(i) of the Crimes Act on the basis that it considered that no substantial miscarriage of justice A legal proceeding resulting in a prejudicial out-come.

A miscarriage of justice arises when the decision of a court is inconsistent with the substantive rights of a party.
 had occurred.

In 1855, 12 diggers Diggers, members of a small English religio-economic movement (fl. 1649–50), so called because they attempted to dig (i.e., cultivate) the wastelands. They were an offshoot of the more important group of Puritan extremists known as the Levelers.  from the Eureka Stockade stood trial in Melbourne charged with high treason. Barry tried most of them with conspicuous fairness and courtesy. Professor Molony in his book Eureka describes Barry as 'a man of great urbanity and wide vision' and declares that he 'treated with gentleness and respect the diggers who came before him in 1855'.

A perusal of the Victorian Law Reports and other contemporaneous Reports shows beyond doubt that from his appointment in 1852, Barry performed a great deal of judicial work and that the quantity of that work was not adversely affected by his many other civic interests. At his appointment there were only three judges, Chief Justice a' Beckett and Mr Justice Molesworth being the other two. By the time of Barry's death in 1880, there were still only five on the bench, Mr Justice Stephen and Mr Justice Higinbotham having been added.

The Argus newspaper reported in February 1853:
   His Honour Mr Justice Barry is so earnest in doing business, that he
   commences shortly after 8.00 in the morning and ends after 6.00 in
   the evening.


The records also show that Barry did a great deal of circuit work, often appearing at the first sittings of the Supreme Court in a country town. Successive Chief Justices thought it appropriate that such a well-known judge as Barry should perform circuit work and, doubtless with their approval, he used these occasions to deliver lengthy statements for the edification ed·i·fi·ca·tion  
n.
Intellectual, moral, or spiritual improvement; enlightenment.

Noun 1. edification - uplifting enlightenment
sophistication
 of rural Victorians about the rule of law and its relationship to society.

The reports are also instructive of Barry's judicial competence. He was a black letter lawyer with strict regard for precedent. This is well illustrated by the report of a matrimonial mat·ri·mo·ny  
n. pl. mat·ri·mo·nies
The act or state of being married; marriage.



[Middle English, from Old French matrimoine, from Latin m
 case, Casey -v- Casey. (4) This was a petition by a wife for divorce or, alternatively, judicial separation, and was based on alleged grounds of cruelty and adultery. As to the cruelty, the Petitioner alleged assaults on her in 1855, 1859 and 1860. During these years the Petitioner continued to live with her respondent husband. As to the adultery, the witnesses called to prove it failed to give the necessary evidence and there remained but a suspicion of it, arising from the Respondent having made a complaint to the police that a woman had stolen his watch while he was in her company.

Barry found that the Petitioner had condoned the cruelty, citing authorities such as Oliver -v- Oliver, (5) Curtis -v- Curtis, (6) Keats -v- Keats and Montezuma, (7) D'Aguilar -v- D'Aguilar (8) and several other cases. Barry also found the evidence fell short of establishing adultery, correctly holding that an exculpatory exculpatory adj. applied to evidence which may justify or excuse an accused defendant's actions, and which will tend to show the defendant is not guilty or has no criminal intent.  statement of the Respondent, which accompanied an admission, should be taken into account. Again, he cited authorities and a leading text book. He concluded his judgement as follows:
   After a dispassionate review of the whole of the evidence, and an
   examination of the conduct of the parties, I have thought it
   necessary to pursue the investigation of the facts and the law
   affecting them through the whole case, and to express my individual
   opinion upon both. That opinion is, that although the proof is
   meagre, there is reason to believe that acts coming within the
   meaning of legal cruelty have been committed by the Respondent, but
   that, spread over so large a space of time as these acts extend to,
   it is not satisfactory that the Court should be called upon to act
   only upon that portion of the evidence of the wife which is hostile
   to her husband: that, giving the fullest value to her evidence as to
   the cruelty, it is manifest that the acts have been deemed by her
   entitled to her temporary and conditional forgiveness: that they
   have not been condoned in succession: that the condonation has not
   been revived, inasmuch as there is no sufficient proof of the
   adultery: and that, therefore, the first part of the prayer of
   petition must be disallowed. I am further of the opinion that there
   is no proof of the commission of any other act which, if proved,
   would have revived the cruelty previously condoned, and thus entitle
   the Petitioner to a Judicial Separation.

   Speaking now with the authority of the Court, it is our deliberately
   formed opinion that the obligation of the marriage tie is not to be
   disturbed on trivial grounds, or on surmise which, however probable,
   may be erroneous; and that it is not becoming to cast upon us as
   Judges a necessity for speculating on matters which ought to be
   established with, at least, the ordinary degree of solemnity. This
   Court, so recently invested with this important branch of
   jurisdiction, is not to deal so lightly with the marriage vow as to
   make such family quarrels, and unsupported accusations, as are
   deposed to here, a ground for separation of those who have taken
   each other for better and for worse. If matrimonial dissensions and
   violations of conjugal duty of the character already defined should
   exist, and are duly proved, the Court will sever the ill-assorted
   union. But if there be not such misconduct shown as the Court can
   relieve against, or if the proof he insufficient, the sufferers must
   be content to endure, in silence, the bitter consequences of what
   was, from the first, perhaps, a hastily-formed and injudicious
   alliance.


By was of contrast, Molesworth J. concluded his judgement:
   My impression would be, on these grounds, to decree judicial
   separation; but I would not be taken as clearly dissenting from the
   conclusion of my brother Judges. I am sorry to leave, unrelieved, a
   woman who appears, so far as I have means of judging, without any
   fault of hers to have been made miserable by the unkindness,
   drunkenness, insults, violence, and infidelity of her husband."


As I have written, Barry was a black letter lawyer.

Notes

(1.) J.L. Forde, The Story of the Bar of Victoria, Melbourne, Whitcombe and Tombs, 1913.

(2.) Redmond Barry, An Anglo-Irish Australian, Melbourne University Press, 1995.

(3.) Redmond Barry, A Colonial Life, Melbourne University Press, 1980.

(4.) 1861, Victorian Law Report

(5.) 1. Hagg. con. 361

(6.) 1 Sw. & Tr, 196

(7.) 1 Sw. & Tr

(8.) 1. Hagg, Eccl, 782

(9.) See note 4.
COPYRIGHT 2004 State Library of Victoria Foundation
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Author:Phillips, John H.
Publication:The La Trobe Journal
Date:Sep 22, 2004
Words:2407
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