Clement Bailhache

Clement Bailhache
Sir Clement Bailhache.

Sir Clement Meacher Bailhache (2 November 1856 – 8 September 1924) was an English commercial lawyer and judge.

Born Leeds, the eldest son of parents of Huguenot descent, his father, Rev Clement Bailache was a Baptist minister, secretary of the Baptist Missionary Society, his mother, Emma Meacher. He was educated at the City of London School and studied law at the University of London, graduating in 1877.[1]

He initially practised as a solicitor in Newport, Monmouthshire, marrying Fanny Elizabeth Liebstein in 1881. The couple had a son and two daughters. However, it soon became clear that Bailhache possessed considerable skills as an advocate, skills under used as a provincial attorney. To pursue a career as a barrister, he entered the Middle Temple and was called to the bar in 1912. He practised in commercial law on the south Wales circuit, his existing network in the legal profession enabling him to advance rapidly. He soon attracted the attention of The City and he became in demand in London in the newly established Commercial Court.[1]

Bailhache was made KC in 1908 and appeared in a Commercial Court graced by the advocacy of Thomas Edward Scrutton and John Hamilton. However, his two senior colleagues soon became High Court judges and Bailhache inherited an extensive practice. He had a great mastery of complex facts and law, and was concise in summarising them.[1] "Few leaders at the bar have said so little or said it so well."[2]

With the growth of commercial litigation in the early twentieth century, by 1912 the Commercial Court was in need of more judges and Bailhache was elevated to a judge of the High Court with the customary knighthood. As a judge, he worked through his list briskly, often paying insufficient attention to the arguments of counsel and often, in consequence, giving rise to successful appeals. He was clear in his judgments though disliked having to reserve judgment. In 1916 he chaired a committee of enquiry into the Royal Flying Corps but did little other enquiry work.[1]

He maintained his Baptist faith throughout his life and was a committed teetotaller. He was an enthusiastic pipe smoker, even during formal dinners. He died from a cerebral haemorrhage at Aldeburgh, Suffolk.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Mathew (2004)
  2. ^ The Times, 9 Sept 1924

Bibliography

  • Obituaries
    • The Times, 9 Sept 1924
    • Law Journal, 13 Sept 1924, 581

  • Mathew, T. (2004) "Bailhache, Sir Clement Meacher (1856–1924)", rev. Hugh Mooney, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, accessed 2 Aug 2007 (subscription required)

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