- Alan Taylor (jurist)
Infobox Judge
name = Sir Alan Taylor
caption =
order =
office = Puisne Justice of the High Court of Australia
term_start = 3 September 1952
term_end = 3 August 1969
appointer =Robert Menzies
predecessor = Sir Owen Dixon
successor = Sir Cyril Walsh
birth_date = 25 November 1901
birth_place = Newcastle,New South Wales Australia
death_date = 3 August 1969
death_place =Sir Alan Russell Taylor (25 November 1901 – 3 August 1969) KC KBE PC,
Australia n judge, was a Justice of theHigh Court of Australia .Taylor was born in 1901 in the city of Newcastle,
New South Wales . Brought up in anAnglican family, Taylor initially wanted to join the church, but obtained a job as a public servant while waiting to study to be a priest, and was eventually employed in the office of theSolicitor-General of Australia , where he developed an interest in law.cite book | last=Fricke | first=Graham | title=Judges of the High Court | year=1986 | publisher=Century Hutchison Australia | location=Melbourne | id=ISBN 0-09-157150-2 | chapter=Alan Taylor: Down-to-earth Man]Taylor studied at the
University of Sydney , graduating with a Bachelor of Laws degree, with honours, in 1926. Later that year, Taylor was admitted to theNew South Wales Bar . In 1933, he married Ceinwen Williams, with whom he would later have a son and a daughter.From 1933 to 1938, was a Challis Lecturer in the law school at the University of Sydney, teaching equity and company law. He was made a
King's Counsel in 1943, and began to have an increasing number of appearances before the High Court. From 1947 to 1948, Taylor represented the banks in the famous Bank Nationalisation case, as part of a team led by futureChief Justice of Australia Garfield Barwick , also including future High Court colleagueFrank Kitto . From 1948 to 1949, Taylor was President of the New South Wales Bar Association.Taylor was made a Judge of the
Supreme Court of New South Wales in 1952, and later that year, on 3 September, he was appointed to the bench of the High Court. He was appointed following the retirement of John Latham and the elevation ofOwen Dixon as Chief Justice earlier in the year. According to David Marr, Taylor was never as close to Dixon as some of the other justices, such as Kitto or Fullagar, and had a blunter judicial style than Dixon.cite book | first=David | last=Marr | authorlink=David Marr (journalist) | year=1980 | title=Barwick | edition=1st edition | publisher=Allen & Unwin | location=Sydney | id= ISBN 0-86861-058-5] Dixon was succeeded in 1964 by Garfield Barwick. Taylor had worked with him on a number of cases, including the Banks case, and they shared some common views onAustralian constitutional law , as well as having a similar judicial style. Although Taylor worked better with Barwick than with Dixon, all of his colleagues agreed that he was a hard-working and congenial judge.Taylor was made a Knight of the British Empire in 1955, and was appointed to the Privy Council in 1963. At the invitation of the
Lord Chancellor , Baron Gardiner, Taylor spent three months in 1967 inLondon hearing Privy Council appeals.In May 1968, Taylor suffered a heart attack, but after a short break he returned to full duties on the High Court. Barwick later said that although the heart attack certainly affected Taylor physically, he was just as dedicated to his work as he had previously been. Taylor continued to serve on the High Court until his death until August 1969, when he died suddenly one Sunday morning. In a tribute puclished in the
Commonwealth Law Reports , Barwick said of Taylor that he was:"...wise in conference, confident and practical in decision and gentle in dissent... [what] is uppermost in our minds is the warmth of his friendship, his unfailing good humour, and his ready turn of wit and phrase on all occasions, making our daily association with him pleasant and memorable... The Court has lost a great judge, each of us here has lost a close friend."cite journal | author=Garfield Barwick | authorlink=Garfield Barwick | title=Tribute to Alan Taylor | journal=
Commonwealth Law Reports | year=1968 | volume=118 | pages=VI–VII]References
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