Selden Society - Supreme Court Library Queensland
Transcription
Selden Society - Supreme Court Library Queensland
Selden Society Australian Chapter cordially invites you to Associate Professor Warren Swain on Lord Mansfield Thursday 11 June 2015 5.15pm for 5.30pm Banco Court, Level 3, Queen Elizabeth II Courts of Law 415 George Street Brisbane RSVP by 4 June 2015 [email protected] Please join us for drinks after the lecture on the Banco Court terrace William Murray, 1st Earl of Mansfield by Jean Baptiste van Loo Oil on canvas, circa 1737 749 mm x 622 mm Given by Society of Judges and Serjeants-at-Law, 1877 National Portrait Gallery (NPG 474) Lord Mansfield 11 June—5.15pm for 5.30pm Lord Mansfield (William Murray) (1705–1793) was instrumental in the development of English commercial law. Image frame is a graphic element only and does not depict the actual work as framed. He was educated at Christ Church, Oxford (1727), then practised at the Bar for 26 years (1730–1756). Like Sir Edward Coke, he held the offices of Solicitor-General (1742–1754) and Attorney-General (1754–1756). ordering a slave who had been recaptured in England to be set free. Lord Mansfield’s reputation for “characteristic aloofness from personal or popular prejudices” was tested in 1780, after his town house in Bloomsbury Square was set alight in the Gordon Riots and he was required to preside at the trial of the instigator (Lord Gordon). Gordon was acquitted. Associate Professor Warren Swain is an Associate Lord Mansfield served as the Warren Swain Chief Justice of the Court Professor of Law in the TC Beirne on Lord Mansfield of King’s Bench for 32 years School of Law, The University of (1756–1788). During this key Queensland. He was previously period of England’s ascent as a mercantile a Stipendiary Lecturer in Law at Hertford power, his judgments were instrumental College and Oxford University Law Faculty, in developing the common law to meet Lecturer in Law at the University of the growing needs of commercial practice. Birmingham and Lecturer in Law at Durham In particular, his judgments shaped the University. He is Professor elect at the Faculty law in relation to bills of exchange, marine of Law, The University of Auckland, New insurance and intellectual property — and Zealand. In 2014, he was Academic-inhe drew upon equitable concepts to create Residence at the Supreme Court Library the groundwork for the later development of Queensland. His research is concerned with doctrines of estoppel and restitution. the history of private law and intellectual More famously, in dealing with Somersett’s case (1772), Lord Mansfield was required to consider the position of slavery under the common law — history in so far as it relates to law. He is also interested in legal biography. He recently published The Law of Contract 1670–1870 (Cambridge University Press, 2015). RSVP by 4 June 2015 [email protected] Please join us for drinks after the lecture on the Banco Court terrace For enquiries call 07 3247 5434 Selden Society