- Edward Dundas Holroyd
Sir Edward Dundas Holroyd, QC (
25 January 1828 –5 January 1916 ) was ajudge , active inAustralia .Edward Dundas Holyroyd was the son of Edward Holroyd, senior commissioner of the London bankruptcy court, and grandson of Sir George Sowley Holroyd, an English judge. He was educated at
Winchester College , where he won the medals for Latin and English essays, and in 1846 went toTrinity College, Cambridge . He graduated B.A. in 1851, M.A. in 1854, and was called to the bar atGray's Inn in June 1855. He practised inLondon and also contributed to the press, but decided to go to Australia, and arrived inMelbourne in 1859. He made a great reputation as abarrister in equity and mining suits, and in 1872 was offered a seat on the bench of thesupreme court . He refused this, became aQueen's Counsel in 1879, and on19 August 1881 became a puisne judge of theSupreme Court of Victoria , a position he held until9 May 1906 .Holroyd at first took only equity cases, but later proved to be also an excellent judge in the criminal court. He would not allow himself to be ruffled, and it is related that once when he had sentenced a prisoner named Butler for highway robbery, the man, almost foaming at the mouth, heaped curses on the judge. Holroyd calmly said, "Nothing that you can say prisoner can induce me to add one day more to your sentence. I cannot tell you how I despise you." He became the senior judge, and in the absence of Sir John Madden sometimes acted as chief justice. He retired in 1906 and died at Melbourne on
5 January 1916 . He married in 1862 Anna Maria Hoyles, daughter of Henry Compton, and was survived by two sons and three daughters. He took little part in public discussions, except on the question of federation. He was for some time president of theImperial Federation League of Victoria, and also of the Athenaeum and Savage Clubs. He was knighted in 1903.Holroyd was below medium height and slender, a good boxer in his youth, a good
tennis player, and even when over 60 thought little of a 20-mile (32 km) walk. He had a great sense of humour, was a good after-dinner speaker, and could enliven the dreariest argument on some point of law with a humorous interjection. He was an eminently fair judge, particularly patient with a man conducting his own defence, or a barrister struggling with a poor case. On the other hand his patient noting of witnesses' answers rather cramped the style of barristers who would have preferred to deliver volleys of questions at the witness—but probably this made for justice too. His judgments, usually written, were models of clear English, and they were seldom appealed against.References
*Dictionary of Australian Biography|First=Edward Dundas|Last=Holroyd|Link=http://gutenberg.net.au/dictbiog/0-dict-biogHi-Hu.html#holroyd1
ee also
*
Judiciary of Australia
*List of Judges of the Supreme Court of Victoria
* Victorian Bar AssociationExternal links
* [http://www.supremecourt.vic.gov.au Supreme Court of Victoria Website]
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