Minutes Template

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Minutes Template PARMLEY, MAYOR COURT OF ALDERMEN Thursday, 9 March 2017 PRESENT Alderman Ian Luder Alderman Alison Gowman Sheriff & Alderman Peter Estlin Alderman Sir Michael Bear Alderman David Graves Alderman Robert Howard Alderman Sir David Wootton Alderman Timothy Hailes Alderman Alastair King Alderman Sir Roger Gifford Alderman Professor Michael Mainelli Alderman Gregory Jones QC Alderman Charles Bowman Resignations, Vote of Thanks to Julian Henry Malins QC: Retirements and Memorials etc. Resolved unanimously – That in taking their leave of Julian Henry Malins QC upon his retirement as Alderman for the Ward of Farringdon Without (South Side), this Vote of Court desires to place on record its most sincere appreciation of the service that he Thanks, Julian Malins has given to the City Corporation and, in particular, to this Court. Julian was elected as an Alderman for the Ward of Farringdon Without (South Side) in May 2013, having served as a Common Councilman for the Ward since 1981. Educated at Brasenose College, Oxford and the College of Law, Julian was subsequently called to the Bar of England and Wales in 1972 by the Middle Temple and thereafter to other Bars including the Cayman Islands and British Virgin Islands. Working as an English Commercial Barrister, Julian was appointed a Queens' Counsel in 1991. Aside from his legal expertise, Julian was a notorious sports fan with a particular passion for boxing and rugby. He is also well known for his literary interests, as reflected by the many articles he has had published in legal journals as well as his first novel, The Serpent's Head, which was published in 2012. In addition to his service on a number of City of London Corporation Committees; including the Standards Committee, Culture, Heritage and Libraries Committee and the Board of Governors of the Museum of London, Julian has remained closely involved in Ward activities throughout his civic career. He has also been an active and enthusiastic member of the Livery. On taking their leave, his colleagues would like to express to Julian their thanks and good wishes for the future. 9 MARCH 2017 2 Election of an The Comptroller & City Solicitor reported that at a Wardmote held on 8th February Alderman for the Ward of 2017 for the election of an Alderman for the Ward of Farringdon Without, Gregory Farringdon Percy Jones QC was duly elected as Alderman of the Ward. Without Received. Presentation, Alderman Gregory Percy Jones QC made and subscribed the declaration for the Alderman due execution of the Office and the Oath of Allegiance. Gregory Percy Jones QC BARRADELL. .
Recommended publications
  • Student Days at the Inns of Court
    STUDENT DAYS AT THE INNS OF COURT.* Fortescue tells us that when King John fixed the Court of Common Pleas at Westminster, the professors of the municipal law who heretofore had been scattered about the kingdom formed themselves into an aggregate body "wholly addicted to the study of the law." This body, having been excluded from Oxford and Cambridge where the civil and canon laws alone were taught, found it necessary to establish a university of its own. This it did by purchasing at various times certain houses between the City of Westminster, where the King's courts were held, and the City of London, where they could obtain their provisions. The nearest of these institutions to the City of London was the Temple. Passing through Ludgate, one came to the bridge over the Fleet Brook and continued down Fleet Street a short distance to Temple Bar where were the Middle, Inner and Outer Temples. The grounds of the Temples reached to the bank of the Thames and the barges of royalty were not infrequently seen drawn up to the landing, when kings and queens would honor the Inns with their presence at some of the elaborate revels. For at Westminster was also the Royal Palace and the Abbey, and the Thames was an easy highway from the market houses and busi- ness offices of London to the royal city of Westminster. Passage on land was a far different matter and at first only the clergy dared risk living beyond the gates, and then only in strongly-walled dwellings. St.
    [Show full text]
  • Anglo-Jewry's Experience of Secondary Education
    Anglo-Jewry’s Experience of Secondary Education from the 1830s until 1920 Emma Tanya Harris A thesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements For award of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Department of Hebrew and Jewish Studies University College London London 2007 1 UMI Number: U592088 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Dissertation Publishing UMI U592088 Published by ProQuest LLC 2013. Copyright in the Dissertation held by the Author. Microform Edition © ProQuest LLC. All rights reserved. This work is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States Code. ProQuest LLC 789 East Eisenhower Parkway P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, Ml 48106-1346 Abstract of Thesis This thesis examines the birth of secondary education for Jews in England, focusing on the middle classes as defined in the text. This study explores various types of secondary education that are categorised under one of two generic terms - Jewish secondary education or secondary education for Jews. The former describes institutions, offered by individual Jews, which provided a blend of religious and/or secular education. The latter focuses on non-Jewish schools which accepted Jews (and some which did not but were, nevertheless, attended by Jews). Whilst this work emphasises London and its environs, other areas of Jewish residence, both major and minor, are also investigated.
    [Show full text]
  • Edmund Plowden, Master Treasurer of the Middle Temple
    The Catholic Lawyer Volume 3 Number 1 Volume 3, January 1957, Number 1 Article 7 Edmund Plowden, Master Treasurer of the Middle Temple Richard O'Sullivan Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarship.law.stjohns.edu/tcl Part of the Catholic Studies Commons This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Journals at St. John's Law Scholarship Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Catholic Lawyer by an authorized editor of St. John's Law Scholarship Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. EDMUND PLOWDEN' MASTER TREASURER OF THE MIDDLE TEMPLE (1561-1570) RICHARD O'SULLIVAN D ENUO SURREXIT DOMUS: the Latin inscription high on the outside wall of this stately building announces and records the fact that in the year 1949, under the hand of our Royal Treasurer, Elizabeth the Queen, the Hall of the Middle Temple rose again and became once more the centre of our professional life and aspiration. To those who early in the war had seen the destruction of these walls and the shattering of the screen and the disappearance of the Minstrels' Gallery; and to those who saw the timbers of the roof ablaze upon a certain -midnight in March 1944, the restoration of Domus must seem something of a miracle. All these things naturally link our thought with the work and the memory of Edmund Plowden who, in the reign of an earlier Queen Elizabeth, devoted his years as Treasurer and as Master of the House to the building of this noble Hall.
    [Show full text]
  • 734 Supplement to the London Gazette, February 25, 1857
    734 SUPPLEMENT TO THE LONDON GAZETTE, FEBRUARY 25, 1857. NAME. RESIDENCE. OCCUPATION. Webber, Mary Hanover Cottage, Southampton-street, Widow Camberwell Singleton, Sarah Hanover Cottage, Southampton-street, Widow Camherwell Wedd, Susanna Shuter 8, Canonbury Park North, Islington Spinster Welch, Charles Woking, Surrey Welch, Robert Gregory Swindon, near Cheltenham Welch, Rev. Wm. Frederick Hertingfordbury, Herts Andrews, Edward 17, Radnor-place, Hyde Park, Middlesex Welch, Rev. Wm. Frederick .Hertingfordbury, Hertford Bolton, Rev. James Saffron Walden, Essex Wellings, Anne M. Royal Heath Villa, Sandown, Isle of Spinster Wight Wells, William White Lion Wharf, Thames-street West, Mary (deceased) 5, Rutland-gate Spinster Weston, Emma Machynlleth, North Wales * Q Spinster Weston, William White Hart-court, Lombard-street Wetton, George N. Northampton Wheeler, Martha 3, Union-ro\v, Vicarage-lane, West Ham Spinster Wheelhouse, George Deptford Whitaker, Sarah H. 23, Dorset-place, Dorset-square Widow White, Elizabeth Kew, Surrey Widow White, Isabella 3, Victoria-terrace, Lower Marine-terrace, Widow Margate, Kent White, William Inman Cheshunt Ringrose, John Potter's Bar Manning, Henry 251, High Holborn White, John 13, Denbigh-street, Belgrave-road, Pimlico White, Peter 42, Grove-place, Brompton Whiteley, George 3, Middle Temple-lane Vaughan, Petty Fenchurch-street Whiteley, Ann 7, Old Cavendish-street, Oxford-street Widow Whiteley, George 3, Middle Temple-lane Whitfield, Ann 10, Canonbury-terrace, Islington Spinster Whiting, Charles. Beaufort House,
    [Show full text]
  • Download Walking People at Your Service London
    WALKING PEOPLE AT YOUR SERVICE IN THE CITY OF LONDON In association with WALKING ACCORDING TO A 2004 STUDY, WALKING IS GOOD COMMUTERS CAN EXPERIENCE FOR BUSINESS HAPPIER, MORE GREATER STRESS THAN FIGHTER PRODUCTIVE PILOTS GOING INTO BATTLE WORKFORCE We are Living Streets, the UK charity for everyday walking. For more than 85 years we’ve been a beacon for this simple act. In our early days our campaigning led to the UK’s first zebra crossings and speed limits. 94% SAID THAT Now our campaigns, projects and services deliver real ‘GREEN EXERCISE’ 109 change to overcome barriers to walking and LIKE WALKING JOURNEYS BETWEEN CENTRAL our groundbreaking initiatives encourage IMPROVED THEIR LONDON UNDERGROUND STATIONS MENTAL HEALTH ARE ACTUALLY QUICKER ON FOOT millions of people to walk. Walking is an integral part of all our lives and it can provide a simple, low cost solution to the PHYSICAL ACTIVITY PROGRAMMES increasing levels of long-term health conditions AT WORK HAVE BEEN FOUND TO caused by physical inactivity. HALF REDUCE ABSENTEEISM BY UP TO Proven to have positive effects on both mental and OF LONDON CAR JOURNEYS ARE JUST physical health, walking can help reduce absenteeism OVER 1 MILE, A 25 MINUTE WALK 20% and staff turnover and increase productivity levels. With more than 20 years’ experience of getting people walking, we know what works. We have a range of 10,000 services to help you deliver your workplace wellbeing 1 MILE RECOMMENDED WALKING activities which can be tailored to fit your needs. NUMBER OF DAILY 1 MILE BURNS Think of us as the friendly experts in your area who are STEPS UP TO 100 looking forward to helping your workplace become CALORIES happier, healthier and more productive.
    [Show full text]
  • Middle Temple Members' Guide
    CE 4140 Booklet make-up v6:Layout 1 9/10/14 4:00 PM Page 1 MIDDLE TEMPLE MEMBERS’ GUIDE 2014/15 CE 4140 Booklet make-up v6:Layout 1 9/10/14 4:00 PM Page 2 THE TEMPLE WELCOME INNER TEMPLE LANE FLEET STREET Contacts Welcome to this third edition of the 1 BURNTON BUILDINGS GOLDSMITH BUILDING Middle Temple Members’ Guide, which 1A -1B 2 4 MIDDLE TEMPLE LANE i General Enquiries we have created to give you an overview 3 The Treasury Office of the services and facilities available to HARE COURT Ashley Building you as a Member, and to help you make TEMPLE CHURCH Middle Temple Lane the very most of what the Inn has to offer. London 4 BRICK CLOISTERS COURT Whether your interests lie in sponsoring 4A ESSEXi COURT5 ESSEX EC4Y 9BT PUMP COURT 9 DEVEREUXi COURT COURT T: 020 7427 4800 a student, hosting an event in our historic ESSEX COURT BRICK COURT CAR PARK buildings, dining with us, staying in our INNER TEMPLE F: 020 7427 4801 HALL PUMP COURT E: [email protected] overnight accommodation, joining our i 1 BRICK ELM COURT W: www.middletemple.org.uk fundraising programmes or one of our COURT LAMB 1 ESSEX BUILDING societies, or just obtaining contact details NEW COURT DEVEREUX CHAMBERSCOURT Estates for our departments, we hope you will find CROWN OFFICE ROW FOUNTAIN COURT T: 020 7427 4840 this Guide useful. CARPMAEL BUILDING i TUDOR STREET GATE E: [email protected] 35 ESSEX ST MIDDLE TEMPLE HALL If you are yet to become a Member, do FOUNTAIN COURT PLOWDEN Events use this Guide to get a sense of what the BUILDINGS GARDEN COURT T: 020 7427 4820 Inn offers you.
    [Show full text]
  • The Beginning, Flourishing and Decline of the Inns of Court: the Consolidation of the English Legal Profession After 1400
    Vanderbilt Law Review Volume 10 Issue 1 Issue 1 - December 1956 Article 3 12-1956 The Beginning, Flourishing and Decline of the Inns of Court: The Consolidation of the English Legal Profession after 1400 Anton Hermann Chroust Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarship.law.vanderbilt.edu/vlr Part of the Legal Profession Commons Recommended Citation Anton Hermann Chroust, The Beginning, Flourishing and Decline of the Inns of Court: The Consolidation of the English Legal Profession after 1400, 10 Vanderbilt Law Review 79 (1956) Available at: https://scholarship.law.vanderbilt.edu/vlr/vol10/iss1/3 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Scholarship@Vanderbilt Law. It has been accepted for inclusion in Vanderbilt Law Review by an authorized editor of Scholarship@Vanderbilt Law. For more information, please contact [email protected]. THE BEGINNING, FLOURISHING AND DECLINE OF THE INNS OF COURT: THE CONSOLIDATION OF THE ENGLISH LEGAL PROFESSION AFTER 1400 ANTON-HERMANN CHROUST* Wherever the common law is studied and practiced [the Inns of Court] must be regarded as the original fountainhead of the law, toward which the true lawyer must feel as a Jew does toward Jerusalem and a Mus- sulman towards Mecca. The four Inns of Court-Lincoln's Inn, Gray's Inn, the Middle Tem- ple and the Inner Temple-may well be called one single legal univer- sity composed of four relatively independent colleges. In their long and illustrious history these Inns have discharged important func- tions in the domains of legal education and professional discipline. As the depository of splendid professional traditions which date back to the Middle Ages, they were for a long time the guardian as well as the gateway to the higher English Bar.
    [Show full text]
  • The Ancient and Honourable Society of the Bears Title
    Manuscript Shelfmark: MS146 Corporate Author: The Ancient and Honourable Society of the Bears Title: [Records of the Society : 1738-1823] Imprint: 1738-1823 Physical Description: 5 v., bound : 24 cm General Note: "The president having died before any steps were taken for depositing the records as above directed, it was resolved that the same should be deposited in the Middle Temple Library by W. S. Casberd, Master of that library for the time being" - last leaf. Acquisitions Note: Presented by R.M. Casberd 9th June 1826 according to the bookplate. Binding: Bound in calf, and boxed in a wooden box [Below section is crossed out] Pipe of Port 51 [Dolid?] 7 Bottles – 27th Sept 1780 Do Do 17th Feby 1781 Both pd for by Greenly Septr 5th 1701 Pipe of Port [Dolid?] Bottles 1784 Novr. 29. Pipe of Port sent in 1785. June 25. Do 1786. June 11. Do Subscription to the Bank Novm 1766 Mr Yorke Mr Murphy Mr Jones Mr Rooke Mr Jennings Mr Hotham Mr Pardoe Mr Rambly Mr Hill Mr Wilkinson Mr Phipps Mr Trenthand Mr Banks Mr Wallace Mr Ashhurst Mr John RuSsell Mr Stowe Mr Spooner Mr Lee Mr Wilson Mr Cay Mr Pepys Mr Rickinson Dec 3 1766 This day Giles Rooke Esq having been before proposed to be a member of this antient and Honourable Society and was upon Ballot duly elected a member Mr. Treasurer Mr. Champion Mr. John Russell Mr. Yorke Mr. Stowe Mr. Pepys Mr. Jennings Mr. Rickenson Dec 1766 This day Arthur Murphy Esq having before been proposed to be a member of this antient & Honourable Society and was upon Ballot duly Elected a member Mr Treasurer Mr Champion Mr John Russell Mr.
    [Show full text]
  • Surveyor the Honourable Society of the Middle Temple
    Surveyor The Honourable Society of the Middle Temple - City of London Permanent Salary £55,000 plus excellent benefits The Middle Temple The Middle Temple is one of the four Inns of Court which have the exclusive right to call men and women, who have completed the necessary academic qualifications, to the Bar of England and Wales. This entitles them, after a period of pupillage (vocational training) to practice as Barristers. As well as calling men and women to the bar, Middle Temple is a members’ organisation for barristers and provides them with various services and amenities. Middle Temple also owns and manages a substantial heritage estate including an Elizabethan Great Hall, the historic Temple Church (owned jointly with the Inner Temple) and various surrounding buildings housing barristers’ chambers from which the Inn derives the majority of its income. The role The Inn is looking to recruit a Surveyor to assist the Inn’s Director of Estates with the day-to-day operation of the Inn’s estate with particular emphasis on projects covering repair, refurbishment and improvement of the Inn’s numerous properties. The successful candidate will have full membership of an appropriate professional body (e.g. RICS) and/or equivalent qualifications (e.g. MRICS) with a minimum of 5 years’ PQE. You will have experience working with historic buildings, successfully delivering major works programs and leading large multi-disciplinary teams. You will be a strong project manager with solid IT skills and an excellent negotiator with a good knowledge of regulatory and health and safety legislation. You will be experienced in a range of procurement methods and the management of contracts from inception through to completion.
    [Show full text]
  • The Brazen Nose
    The Brazen Nose Volume 52 2017-2018 The Brazen Nose 2017–2018 Printed by: The Holywell Press Limited, www.holywellpress.com CONTENTS Records Articles Editor’s Notes ..................................5 Professor Nicholas Kurti: Senior Members ...............................8 An Appreciaton by John Bowers QC, Class Lists .......................................18 Principal ..........................................88 Graduate Degrees...........................23 E S Radcliffe 1798 by Matriculations ................................28 Dr Llewelyn Morgan .........................91 College Prizes ................................32 The Greenland Library Opening Elections to Scholarships and Speech by Philip Pullman .................95 Exhibitions.....................................36 The Greenland Library Opening College Blues .................................42 Speech by John Bowers QC, Principal ..........................................98 Reports BNC Sixty-Five Years On JCR Report ...................................44 by Dr Carole Bourne-Taylor ............100 HCR Report .................................46 A Response to John Weeks’ Careers Report ..............................51 Fifty Years Ago in Vol. 51 Library and Archives Report .........52 by Brian Cook ...............................101 Presentations to the Library ...........56 Memories of BNC by Brian Judd 3...10 Chapel Report ...............................60 Paper Cuts: A Memoir by Music Report .................................64 Stephen Bernard: A Review The King’s Hall Trust for
    [Show full text]
  • Michaelmas 2012
    The Middle Templar The Honourable Society of the Middle Temple Issue 52 Michaelmas 2012 Middle Temple Officers 2012 Introduction Treasurer The Rt Hon The Lord Clarke of Stone-cum-Ebony After a year in post as Under Treasurer, it strikes me that two of the key qualities that Deputy Treasurer characterise Middle Temple are its open- Christopher Symons QC mindedness and its adaptability. This issue of The Middle Templar demonstrates these Deputy Treasurer Elect qualities in abundance: in 2012, the Library The Rt Hon The Lord Judge, hosted a Victorian banquet; Hall became a Lord Chief Justice theatre in the round; and Fountain Court was transformed into a Belgian Cycling Lent Reader Paradise. Like other ancient organisations – and indeed the profession Marilynne Morgan CB we represent – we will survive and thrive if we are able to adapt to face new challenges, and we have certainly shown this year that we Autumn Reader can metamorphose with the requirements of the day. Michael Crystal QC The Inn's willingness to adapt has shown itself of late not only by the Director of transformation of its physical space, but also by its ability to be self- Middle Temple Advocacy critical and open to new ways of thinking. The current review of our Derek Wood CBE QC governance, with its proposals to sharpen our focus and put greater emphasis on our core purposes, effective decision-making and Master of the Archive planning for the future, provides a good example of this. Michael Ashe QC Another prompt for serious reflection has been the sweeping review Masters of the Garden of legal education and training, currently being carried out by the legal regulators of England and Wales.
    [Show full text]
  • Temple Church, Temple Inn, and Templeman
    Tulsa Law Review Volume 25 Issue 2 Winter 1989 Temple Church, Temple Inn, and Templeman Lord Templeman Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.law.utulsa.edu/tlr Part of the Law Commons Recommended Citation Lord Templeman, Temple Church, Temple Inn, and Templeman , 25 Tulsa L. J. 349 (2013). Available at: https://digitalcommons.law.utulsa.edu/tlr/vol25/iss2/6 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by TU Law Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Tulsa Law Review by an authorized editor of TU Law Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Templeman: Temple Church, Temple Inn, and Templeman FORUM TEMPLE CHURCH, TEMPLE INN, AND TEMPLEMAN* The Right Honourable Lord Templemant The origin of the English common law lies in the fact, which persists at the present day, that the English are incapable of learning a foreign language. Contrary to popular belief, the English have been conquered on three occasions. They were conquered by the Romans who intro- duced Roman law; but, as the English never learned to speak Latin, they never became proficient in Roman law. Next, the English were con- quered by the Normans who introduced the continental civil law; but, as the English never learned to speak French, they never became proficient in the civil law. Finally, the English were conquered by the Americans; but, as the English never learned to speak the language of the United States, they have been unable to understand either the Bill of Rights or the Restatement. So the English were driven to invent their own law.
    [Show full text]