Bar Association with Logo

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Bar Association with Logo BarADR Accredited Mediators as at January 2014 NAME CHAMBERS PHONE E-MAIL Andelman, Larissa Fifteenth Floor Wardell 9232 5255 [email protected] Angyal SC, Robert 6th and 7th Floors St James' Hall 9236 8660 [email protected] Bassett, Graham 20 Armstrong St, Suffolk Park 61 (04) [email protected] 1498-6158 Bates, Philip Sir Owen Dixon 9373 7433 [email protected] Beck, Jennifer Lockhart 8228 2028 [email protected] Bell SC, Adam Seven Wentworth 8224 3001 [email protected] Bell, Richard Sixteenth Floor Wardell 9231 3133 [email protected] Berecry, Grahame Edmund Barton 9220 6100 [email protected] Black, Diana Edmund Barton 9220 6100 [email protected] Bloom, Melvyn Marbury 9024 9527 [email protected] Bowne SC, Angela Blackstone 9220 9893 [email protected] Brender, Rodney Maurice Byers 9221 3812 [email protected] Bridge SC, 7th Floor Selborne 9231 1685 [email protected] Campbell Burchett, Simon Second Floor Selborne 9223 6293 [email protected] Burton SC, 5th Floor Wentworth 8815 9133 [email protected] Gregory Butler, Narelle 8th Floor Garfield Barwick 9221 9788 [email protected] Callaghan SC, Nigel Bowen 9930 7961 [email protected] Peter Callaway, Calvin Edmund Barton 9220 6100 [email protected] John (Jak) Carr, Philip 5th Floor Wentworth 9221 4233 [email protected] Colman, Gary Ninth Floor Selborne 9233 5188 [email protected] Cotter-Moroz, 8th Floor Garfield Barwick 9235 0036 [email protected] Andrea Cranitch SC, State 9233 3147 [email protected] Michael Crimmins, Michael Mosman Chambers 9969 2763 [email protected] 2 Raglan St Mosman 2088 Cummings SC, Newcastle 4929 6788 [email protected] Peter Davidson SC, Ian 8th Floor Selborne 9235 1141 [email protected] Dempsey SC, 7th Floor Selborne 9232 0770 [email protected] Mark Dilworth, Geoffrey Sir James Martin 9223 8088 [email protected] Dubler SC, Robert 12th Floor Selborne/Wentworth 9223 8504 [email protected] Dulhunty, Kim William Deane 9231 0077 [email protected] Marina Dwyer, Peter Maurice Byers 8233 0300 [email protected] Eagle, Michael Edmund Barton 9220 6100 [email protected] Ellison SC, Sixteenth Floor Wardell 9231 3133 [email protected] Lindsay Fanning, Maureen Marbury 9024 9561 [email protected] Feller SC, Daniel 11th Floor St James Hall 8226 2323 [email protected] Glissan, Paul Fourth Floor Selborne 9236 4900 [email protected] Gormly SC, Denman 9264 6899 [email protected] Jeremy Gracie, Malcolm Blackstone 9232 4293 [email protected] Gray SC, Peter Blackstone 9220 9868 [email protected] Green, Bruce Lachlan Macquarie 9635 1000 [email protected] Griffin, Patrick Seventh Floor Garfield Barwick 9224 5600 [email protected] Harper SC, Robert Queens Square 9233 7141 [email protected] Hickey, William Deane 9231 0077 [email protected] Christopher Higgins, Sigrid 8th Floor Wentworth 9231 4000 [email protected] Holz, Margaret Jack Shand 9233 7711 [email protected] Hull, Brendan 12th Floor Selborne/Wentworth 9232 4748 [email protected] Hunt, Robert 20 Euryalus Street, Mosman 9968 3662 [email protected] Hunt, Warwick Forbes 9390 7777 [email protected] Inglis, Michael Blackburn, Canberra 6162 0565 [email protected] Ito, Emily Lindfield 9880 8109 [email protected] Jackson, Neil Frederick Jordan 9229 7333 [email protected] Johnson, Ryde 9802 2015 [email protected] Katherine Kalfas SC, Simon Second Floor Wentworth 9232 1972 [email protected] Kearney, James 8th Floor Selborne 9232 7714 [email protected] Kennedy SC, Jack Shand 9233 7728 [email protected] Desmond Keogh Dr, John Third Floor Culwulla 9233 1322 [email protected] Kimber SC, State 9223 1522 [email protected] Maxwell Kite SC, Peter Frederick Jordan 9229 7312 [email protected] Knoll AM, David Ninth Floor Selborne 9233 5188 [email protected] Laughton SC, Thirteenth Floor 9233 8796 [email protected] Gregory Selborne/Wentworth Lawrence, John Edmund Barton 9220 6100 [email protected] Leggat SC, Craig Martin Place 8227 9600 [email protected] Leotta, Kerrie 8th Floor Garfield Barwick 8239 3264 [email protected] Levingston, John Queen's Square 9221 4350 [email protected] Loewenstein, 12th Floor Selborne/Wentworth 9223 2438 [email protected] Michael Lo Surdo SC, 12th Floor Selborne/Wentworth 9232 4016 [email protected] Anthony Margo SC, Robin 11th Floor St James' Hall 8226 2325 [email protected] Martin, Julian 4th Floor Wentworth 9232 2722 [email protected] McFee, Lorna Sir James Martin 9223 8088 [email protected] McGrowdie, 4th Floor Wentworth 9232 2722 [email protected] Michael McIlwaine, Garry St James Trust Building 9232 6739 [email protected] Menzies QC, Paul 12th Floor Selborne/ Wentworth 9232 5331 [email protected] Miller QC, Glen Sir James Martin 9231 3020 [email protected] Minus, Derek Mediation and Arbitration 9232 4000 [email protected] Mobellan, J. Third Floor St James Hall 92221740 [email protected] Carlos Morling QC, The Level 10, 233 Macquarie Street 9221 6273 [email protected] Hon. Trevor Morris QC, Linton Jack Shand 9233 7711 [email protected] Nash, Pamela Frederick Jordan 92297371 [email protected] Newbrun, Ian William Deane 9231 0077 [email protected] Oakley, Janet Tenth Floor St James Hall 9224 1510 [email protected] O’Dea, Phiippa Ground Floor Wentworth 9230 3237 [email protected] O'Meally AM RFD, 5th Floor Wentworth 0419226484 [email protected] The Hon. John Lawrence O'Ryan QC, The State 92231522 [email protected] Hon. Stephen Parnell, John 14 Loftus Street, Narrabeen 0402 069 673 [email protected] Peden, Dr 12th Floor Selborne/Wentworth 8029 6251 [email protected] Elisabeth Rana, Rashda Ground Floor Wentworth 9230 3205 [email protected] Reuben, Samuel Edmund Barton 9220 6100 [email protected] Rimmer, Carolyn Second Floor Selborne 9232 4285 [email protected] Ringrose, John Blackstone 9220 9800 [email protected] Robinson, Seven Wentworth 8224 3008 [email protected] Deborah Ronalds AM SC, Frederick Jordan 9229 7378 [email protected] Chris Rundle, Geoffrey Thirteenth Floor 9231 2383 [email protected] Selborne/Wentworth Segal OAM, Second Floor Selborne 92235688 [email protected] Graham Seton SC, Richard Maurice Byers 9233 8653 [email protected] Sewell, Jeffrey Eleventh Floor Garfield Barwick 9223 6810 [email protected] Sharpe, John Elizabeth Street 9336 5375 [email protected] Simpkins SC, Seven Wentworth 92353692 [email protected] Jonathan Sinclair, Fiona Queen's Square 8915 2422 [email protected] Soars, Julie Seven Wentworth 8224 3000 [email protected] Stenmark SC, Edmund Barton 9220 6100 [email protected] Alison Strathdee, Wendy Jack Shand 9233 7711 [email protected] Tancred, John 5 Rowan Street, Orange NSW 6361 7836 [email protected] 2800 Thorley, David Waradgery House, Kalangan 6386 7300 [email protected] Road, Galong NSW 2585 Turner, Graeme 12th Floor Selborne/Wentworth 9223 5117 [email protected] Chambers, 180 Phillip St, Sydney Tyndall, Leo 4th Floor St James Hall 9237 0533 [email protected] Walker, Mary 9 Wentworth Chambers 8815 9200 [email protected] Walsh QC, Edmund Barton 9220 6100 [email protected] Stephen Waugh, Gregory 12th Floor Selborne/ Wentworth 92235894 [email protected] West QC, John 7th Floor Selborne Chambers 9233 4970 [email protected] Wheelhouse SC, 6th and 7th Floors St James Hall 9236 8670 [email protected] Scot Williams, Dominic Second Floor Selborne Chambers 9233 1232 [email protected] Williams SC, William Deane Chambers 9231 0077 [email protected] Michael Wilson, Dennis Edmund Barton 92206100 [email protected] Zikmann, Robert Chalfont Chambers 9232 3414 [email protected] .
Recommended publications
  • Chapter 15 the Return of the Repressed
    Chapter 15 The Return of the Repressed XTINCTION in philosophy is not forever. Any opinion or argument, no matter how finally it seems to have been hunted Edown and refuted into oblivion, has the chance of being redis- covered by a new generation eager for novelties. In this chapter, we examine the revival of two old philosophies once thought well off the agenda: idealism and Catholic natural law philosophy. They have not been seen much in philosophy departments, but have flourished in, respectively, literature departments and the High Court of Australia. As we saw in chapter 6, David Stove wrote that idealism, the doc- trine that everything is mind-dependent, was sustained by what he identified as the ‘Worst argument in the world’: We can know things only as they are related to us/under our forms of perception and un- derstanding/in so far as they fall under our conceptual schemes, etc, so, we cannot know things as they are in themselves. In Berkeley’s version, ‘we cannot have trees-outside-the-mind in mind without them being in mind, so there cannot be trees outside the mind (or if there could be, they could not be thought of). That argument did not vanish with the 1890s. We saw in chapter 11 that John Burnheim adopted an ‘inevitably partisan’ reading of the Sydney disturbances on the grounds that philosophy ‘rests not on ultimate truths, but on a reading of our specific historical situation’ (that is, we cannot know things except through our specific historical situation, therefore we cannot know things as they are in themselves).
    [Show full text]
  • Who's That with Abrahams
    barTHE JOURNAL OF THE NSWnews BAR ASSOCIATION | SUMMER 2008/09 Who’s that with Abrahams KC? Rediscovering Rhetoric Justice Richard O’Connor rediscovered Bullfry in Shanghai | CONTENTS | 2 President’s column 6 Editor’s note 7 Letters to the editor 8 Opinion Access to court information The costs circus 12 Recent developments 24 Features 75 Legal history The Hon Justice Foster The criminal jurisdiction of the Federal The Kyeema air disaster The Hon Justice Macfarlan Court NSW Law Almanacs online The Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina The Hon Justice Ward Saving St James Church 40 Addresses His Honour Judge Michael King SC Justice Richard Edward O’Connor Rediscovering Rhetoric 104 Personalia The current state of the profession His Honour Judge Storkey VC 106 Obituaries Refl ections on the Federal Court 90 Crossword by Rapunzel Matthew Bracks 55 Practice 91 Retirements 107 Book reviews The Keble Advocacy Course 95 Appointments 113 Muse Before the duty judge in Equity Chief Justice French Calderbank offers The Hon Justice Nye Perram Bullfry in Shanghai Appearing in the Commercial List The Hon Justice Jagot 115 Bar sports barTHE JOURNAL OF THE NSWnews BAR ASSOCIATION | SUMMER 2008-09 Bar News Editorial Committee Cover the New South Wales Bar Andrew Bell SC (editor) Leonard Abrahams KC and Clark Gable. Association. Keith Chapple SC Photo: Courtesy of Anthony Abrahams. Contributions are welcome and Gregory Nell SC should be addressed to the editor, Design and production Arthur Moses SC Andrew Bell SC Jeremy Stoljar SC Weavers Design Group Eleventh Floor Chris O’Donnell www.weavers.com.au Wentworth Chambers Duncan Graham Carol Webster Advertising 180 Phillip Street, Richard Beasley To advertise in Bar News visit Sydney 2000.
    [Show full text]
  • The Role of the Governor-General
    Chapter Eight The Role of the Governor-General Sir David Smith, KCVO, AO My brief is to speak about the role of the Governor-General, as we know that office today. I shall speak about the history of the office, about the duties of the office, and about current proposals to alter the Australian Constitution by changing its provisions relating to the office. Foremost among the reasons given for constitutional change is the claim that the republic will give us an Australian Head of State. This claim is as mischievous as it is dishonest. Its success is dependent on the notorious ignorance of the vast majority of Australians about their Constitution. 1 The truth is that Australia has two Heads of State. The Queen is our symbolic Head of State, the Governor-General is our constitutional Head of State, and we have had Australians in the office of Governor-General since Lord Casey's appointment in 1965. The claim that the Governor-General is our constitutional Head of State is not some bizarre theory dreamed up for the purposes of the current debate, for it has been so since the beginning of federation, and there is much supporting evidence, both anecdotal and legal. A Canadian Governor-General, Lord Dufferin, described a Governor-General as a constitutional Head of State in a speech given in 1873. 2 Even Paul Keating referred to the Governor-General as our Head of State in the very speech in which he announced in Parliament on 7 June, 1995 his Government's proposals for the republic.
    [Show full text]
  • Justice Ronald Sackville*
    AUSTRALIAN LAWYERS AND SOCIAL CHANGE (AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL UNIVERSITY) WELCOMING ADDRESS by: Justice Ronald Sackville* National Museum of Australia, Canberra 22 – 24 September 2004 *Judge, Federal Court of Australia It is my great honour, as one of the few surviving participants in the 1974 Australian Lawyers and Social Change Conference, to welcome you to this gathering on the same theme. The two conferences, although thirty years apart, share characteristics in common, other than their name. One is a stellar line-up of presenters and commentators. (I can plausibly deny any implicit element of self-congratulation in that comment, since a re-reading of Australian Lawyers and Social Change 1, which published the papers and commentaries from the 1974 Conference, confirms that I was neither a presenter nor a commentator, but merely a participant in the discussion, playing the role of a youthful serial pest.) Consider some of those making presentations at the 1974 Conference. The opening paper, ‘ The Most Dangerous Branch? The High Court and the Constitution in a Changing Society’ 2 was delivered by Gareth Evans, then a not so humble senior lecturer in law. It is true that in 1974 he was well on the path that led to the glittering prize of high political office, but he still had only one Gareth to his name. The first commentator on Gareth Evans’ plea for a more policy oriented constitutional jurisprudence in the High Court was one William Deane QC, who appeared to accept cheerfully Gareth Evans’ description of practising lawyers as an ‘essentially narrow profession’. 3 Mr Deane, however, was quite unable to accept Gareth Evans’ regret that one could not find in the pages of the Commonwealth Law Reports ‘the racy dogmatism that is so characteristic of the United States Supreme Court’.
    [Show full text]
  • Dialogue Vol. 22, 2/2003
    he Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia was established in 1971. T Previously, some of the functions were carried out through the Social Science Research Council of Australia, established in 1942. Elected to the Academy for distinguished contributions to the social sciences, the 382 Fellows of the Academy offer expertise in the fields of accounting, anthropology, demography, economics, economic history, education, geography, history, law, linguistics, philosophy, political science, psychology, social medicine, sociology and statistics. The Academy’s objectives are: · to promote excellence in and encourage the advancement of the social sciences in Australia; · to act as a coordinating group for the promotion of research and teaching in the social sciences; · to foster excellence in research and to subsidise the publication of studies in the social sciences; · to encourage and assist in the formation of other national associations or institutions for the promotion of the social sciences or any branch of them; · to promote international scholarly cooperation and to act as an Australian national member of international organisations concerned with the social sciences; · to act as consultant and adviser in regard to the social sciences; and, · to comment where appropriate on national needs and priorities in the area of the social sciences. These objectives are fulfilled through a program of activities, research projects, independent advice to government and the community, publication and cooperation with fellow institutions both within
    [Show full text]
  • Judges and Retirement Ages
    JUDGES AND RETIREMENT AGES ALYSIA B LACKHAM* All Commonwealth, state and territory judges in Australia are subject to mandatory retirement ages. While the 1977 referendum, which introduced judicial retirement ages for the Australian federal judiciary, commanded broad public support, this article argues that the aims of judicial retirement ages are no longer valid in a modern society. Judicial retirement ages may be causing undue expense to the public purse and depriving the judiciary of skilled adjudicators. They are also contrary to contemporary notions of age equality. Therefore, demographic change warrants a reconsideration of s 72 of the Constitution and other statutes setting judicial retirement ages. This article sets out three alternatives to the current system of judicial retirement ages. It concludes that the best option is to remove age-based limitations on judicial tenure. CONTENTS I Introduction .............................................................................................................. 739 II Judicial Retirement Ages in Australia ................................................................... 740 A Federal Judiciary .......................................................................................... 740 B Australian States and Territories ............................................................... 745 III Criticism of Judicial Retirement Ages ................................................................... 752 A Critiques of Arguments in Favour of Retirement Ages ........................
    [Show full text]
  • Judicial Farewell
    EMBARGOED UNTIL 1PM (EST) MONDAY 2 FEBRUARY 2009 HIGH COURT OF AUSTRALIA JUDICIAL FAREWELL THE HON JUSTICE MICHAEL KIRBY AC CMG JUSTICE OF THE HIGH COURT OF AUSTRALIA Attorney-General, The Hon Robert McClelland MP; President of the Australian Bar Association, Mr Thomas Bathurst, QC; President of the Law Council of Australia, Mr John Corcoran; President of my home Bar, the Bar Association of New South Wales, Ms Anna Katzmann SC; The Hon T E F Hughes, AO, QC; Judicial, Academic and other Colleagues; Family and Friends: In this room, where independent judges uphold the law and the Constitution, I start by honouring the people of Australia, in all of their diversity, most of them happily unaware of what we do here today. Fortunate is a land that lives in confidence under the rule of law, with elected parliaments, uncorrupted officials and independent judges. I honour the indigenous peoples of Australia. So long neglected, it is here, in this very room, before my time, that Mabo1 was decided ______________________ 1 Mabo v Queensland [No 2] (1992) 175 CLR 1. See also Wik Peoples v Queensland (1996) 187 CLR 1. 2 demanding that we enter into a new relationship. I have tried to be faithful to my understanding of that decision2. I honour the Parliament. I am grateful that busy members of Parliament, past and present, from all major parties have done me the honour of coming here today. I honour you, Attorney-General. Not just for the high office you hold. But for good things that you have recently done.
    [Show full text]
  • Proceedings of the Twentieth Conference of the Samuel Griffith
    Chapter Eight “Supreme Summit Smashes Creaky Constitution”: Pravda Professor David Flint, AM Th is satirical address was inspired by the 2020 Summit, and much of what appears here is based on news reports about the Summit. Th e most reported decision at the Summit was the support of its Governance panel for some unspecifi ed republic. Th is was decided by a vote of 98:1, with one abstention. Th is vote was taken with almost no discussion, no research, and no details of what was being proposed. Th e decision was then reported as one to hold a referendum preceded by a fi rst stage in which links with the UK would be ended. As links had been ended years before, the announcement was ridiculed in reports in the media. Ten days later the decision was changed surreptitiously, to read that the fi rst stage was to be a plebiscite, and not two – which is favoured by one republican faction, but strongly opposed by another. In almost every respect – selection, appointment, transparency and fairness, respect for privacy, management, process, the procedure for arriving at, recording and reporting decisions – the Summit not only compares unfavourably with the Conventions which drafted the Australian Constitution, but also with the 1998 Convention from which the republican model that was the basis of the 1999 referendum emerged. Never before in the history of this nation has the government of the Commonwealth presided over such a travesty. As one ardent republican at the Summit, Professor Robert Manne put it, it came to resemble a Mad Hatter’s Party.
    [Show full text]
  • Hit and Myth in the Law Courts
    Dinner Address Hit and Myth in the Law Courts S E K Hulme, AM, QC Copyright 1994 by The Samuel Griffith Society. All rights reserved. Not unexpectedly, in this company, I will talk tonight about only one court; the one on your left as you cross the bridge over the lake. I want to do two things. I want firstly to consider a belief and a practice and a proposal concerning the High Court, in terms of the Court as it is, rather than in terms of the Court as it was. In doing that I want to say something of who used to come to the Court, and how; and who come to the Court now, and how. And secondly I want to share with you some reflections on statements made in recent months by the Chief Justice of the High Court. Where High Court Judges Come From, and Certain Implications of That I turn to the belief and the practice and the proposal I mentioned. I remind you of three things. The first is that one still finds supposedly intelligent commentators making disapproving references to the practical monopoly which the practising Bar has over appointments to the High Court, and suggesting that the field of appointees ought to be extended to include solicitors and academics. The second is that, in line with the constitutional principle that a judge ought to have nothing to fear and nothing to hope for from the government which appointed him, there long existed a general practice of not promoting judges, within a system of courts run by the same government, either from court to court, or within a court, as by promotion to Chief Justice.
    [Show full text]
  • The Constitution Makers
    Papers on Parliament No. 30 November 1997 The Constitution Makers _________________________________ Published and Printed by the Department of the Senate Parliament House, Canberra ISSN 1031–976X Published 1997 Papers on Parliament is edited and managed by the Research Section, Department of the Senate. Editors of this issue: Kathleen Dermody and Kay Walsh. All inquiries should be made to: The Director of Research Procedure Office Department of the Senate Parliament House CANBERRA ACT 2600 Telephone: (06) 277 3078 ISSN 1031–976X Cover design: Conroy + Donovan, Canberra Cover illustration: The federal badge, Town and Country Journal, 28 May 1898, p. 14. Contents 1. Towards Federation: the Role of the Smaller Colonies 1 The Hon. John Bannon 2. A Federal Commonwealth, an Australian Citizenship 19 Professor Stuart Macintyre 3. The Art of Consensus: Edmund Barton and the 1897 Federal Convention 33 Professor Geoffrey Bolton 4. Sir Richard Chaffey Baker—the Senate’s First Republican 49 Dr Mark McKenna 5. The High Court and the Founders: an Unfaithful Servant 63 Professor Greg Craven 6. The 1897 Federal Convention Election: a Success or Failure? 93 Dr Kathleen Dermody 7. Federation Through the Eyes of a South Australian Model Parliament 121 Derek Drinkwater iii Towards Federation: the Role of the Smaller Colonies Towards Federation: the Role of the Smaller Colonies* John Bannon s we approach the centenary of the establishment of our nation a number of fundamental Aquestions, not the least of which is whether we should become a republic, are under active debate. But after nearly one hundred years of experience there are some who believe that the most important question is whether our federal system is working and what changes if any should be made to it.
    [Show full text]
  • The Hon Justice Mary Genevieve Gaudron
    The Hon Justice Mary Genevieve Gaudron The degree of Doctor of Laws (honoris causa) was conferred upon High Court judge the Hon Justice Mary Genevieve Gaudron at a Law ceremony held on 29 October 1999. Justice Gaudron also gave the occasional address at the ceremony. The Hon Justice Mary Genevieve Gaudron, Deputy Chancellor Daphne Kok and Justice Michael Kirby, photo, Tracey Schramm, 'The University of Sydney News', University of Sydney Archives. Citation Chancellor I have the honour to present the Honourable Justice Mary Genevieve Gaudron for admission to the degree of Doctor of Laws (honoris causa). Justice Gaudron has been a judge of the High Court of Australia since her appointment in 1987 at the age of 43. She was the first woman to be appointed to this supreme judicial office, and remains the only woman in Australia to have held such a position. Her Honour was educated at St Ursula's College, Armidale, and then at the University of Sydney, where she graduated in 1966 with first-class honours and the university medal in law. Later, while at the Bar during the 1970s, she served as lecturer in the Law of Succession at the University of Sydney. Her Honour was admitted to the NSW Bar in 1968 and commenced her practice sharing chambers with Janet Coombs, the first woman to practise at the NSW Bar. Justice Gaudron had an extensive practice, with a special interest in industrial law and defamation (though she also undertook a number of civil rights cases). Perhaps the two cases for which she is most widely known are her success in the High Court appeal in the defamation case O'Shaughnessy v Mirror Newspapers (1970) and her pivotal role appearing for the Commonwealth in the 2nd (1972) equal pay case.
    [Show full text]
  • 131·~ Ceremonial Sitting
    -*. HIGH COURT OF AUSTRALIA 131'~131·~ CEREMONIAL SITTING ON THE OCCASION OF THE SWEARING-IN OF THE HONOURABLE MICHAEL DONALD KIRBY AC CMG AS A JUSTICE OF THE mGH COURT OF AUSTRALIA AT CANBERRA ON . TUESDAY, 6 FEBRUARY,1996,FEBRUARY,I996, AT 10.17 AM Contm: '.< ' . BRENNANCJ ... DAWSON] TOOHEYJ .GAUDRONJGAUDRONJ MeHUGH]McHUGH] GUMMOWJ In addition to the me~bers ortheoCthe Court the following dignitaries were present on the Bench: The Honourable Sir William Deane, AC, KBE, fonner Justice of the Court . The Honourable Sir Anthony Mason, AC, KBE, immediate past Chief Justice of the Court TheRt Honourable Sir Harry Gibbs, GeMG,GCMG, AC, KBE, fonner Chief Justice of the Court Seated behind the Bench were the following dignitaries: lheThe Rt Honourable Sir Robin Cooke, KBE The·Honourable Sir John Muria, Chief Justice of the Solomon Islands The Honourable M.E.J. Black, Chief Justice ofthe Federal Court of Australia 2 The Honourable A. Nicholson, AO, RFD, Chief Justice of the Family Court ofAustralia The Honourable M. Wilcox, Chief Justice of the Industrial Relations Court of Australia The Honourable D.K. Malcolm, AC, Chief Justice of the Supreme· Court of Western Australia The Honourable A.M. Gleeson, AC, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of New South Wales The Honourable J.H. Phillips, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Victoria The Honourable J.J. Doyle, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of South Australia The Honourable J.A. Miles, AO, ChiefJustice of the Supreme Court of the Australian Capital Territory At the Bar Table the foUowing persons were present: Mr M.
    [Show full text]