- John Walter Huddleston
Sir John Walter Huddleston (
8 September ,1815 -5 December ,1890 ) was an Englishjudge , formerly acriminal law yer who had established an eminent reputation in various "causes célèbres ".As a judge of the
Exchequer of pleas he was styled Baron Huddleston, in writing, Huddleston B. Soon after his appointment, the Exchequer was absorbed into theHigh Court of Justice and the style abolished. He sometimes referred to himself as "the last of the Barons."Rigg (2004)]Life
Huddleston was the eldest son of Thomas, a
Merchant Navy officer and Alethea "née" Hichens. He was born and educated inDublin , ultimately attending Trinity College. Though he did not graduate, he worked for a while at a public school before enteringGray's Inn in 1836 to train as abarrister . He wascalled to the bar in 1839.Initially practising on the
Oxford circuit specialising inpoor law cases, he developed his criminal practice at theMiddlesex quarter sessions and at theOld Bailey , notably in theprosecution of William Palmer. He defendedWilliam Cuffay thechartist in 1848, and secured the acquittal ofMercy Catherine Newton , on her third trial formatricide , in 1859.Rigg (1891)] He became aQC in 1857 and abencher of Gray's Inn, being Treasurer in 1859 and 1868.Huddleston made several unsuccessful attempts to enter
politics , ultimately being elected as ConservativeMember of Parliament for Canterbury in 1865. He lost his seat in 1868 but won again in Norwich in 1874.Huddleston was
Judge Advocate of the Fleet from 1865 to 1875 when he was made aserjeant-at-law , a judge of theCourt of Common Pleas and knighted. He was almost immediately transferred to the Exchequer which itself, almost immediately, became the Exchequer Division of the High Court. Huddleston's reputation as a judge never matched his standing as an advocate. As a judge, he was opinionated and unafraid to exert a strong influence on juries. He was reputed to wear colour-codedglove s to court: black formurder , lavender forbreach of promise of marriage and white for more conventional cases. [Simpson (1984) "p."196]In 1884 Huddleston was judge at
first instance in the leading maritime case of "R v. Dudley and Stephens " involving murder,cannabilism and the defence ofnecessity . He was further central to enginneering the judicially approved guiltyverdict against the instincts of the jury. [Simpson (1984) "pp"195-223]He suffered from chronic ill health during the last decade of his life before he died in
South Kensington . He was cremated atBrookwood Cemetery ,Woking .Private life
In 1872 he married Diana de Vere Beauclerk (1842–1905), daughter of
William Beauclerk, 9th Duke of St Albans . Huddleston enjoyedtheatre andhorse racing . He was well read and fluent in French, giving an oration at the funeral ofPierre Antoine Berryer .Notes
Bibliography
*Obituary - "
The Times " 6, 9 & 12 December 1890----
*Rigg, J. M. (1891) " [http://books.google.com/books?id=B-3V9-9uBs4C&pg=PP2&sig=o-BfsTQbvO658o3iGrB0TT3w-gA#PPA144,M1 Huddleston, Sir John Walter (1815–1890)] , in Lee, S. "Dictionary of National Biography ", vol.28, "p."144 (Google Books )
*— rev. Metcalfe, E. (2004) " [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/14027 Huddleston, Sir John Walter (1815–1890)] ", "Oxford Dictionary of National Biography ", Oxford University Press, accessed 4 July 2007 ODNBsub
*cite book | title=Cannibalism and the Common Law: The Story of the Tragic Last Voyage of the Mignonette and the Strange Legal Proceedings to Which It Gave Rise | author=Simpson, A. W. B. | publisher=University of Chicago Press | location=Chicago | year=1984 | id=ISBN 9780226759425
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