- Henry Arthur Pears Fisher
Sir Henry "Harry" Fisher (1918--2005) was a
High Court Judge and President ofWolfson College, Oxford .He was the eldest of six sons of
Geoffrey Fisher , at the time of Harry's birth the headmaster of Repton, laterBishop of Chester and of London, andArchbishop of Canterbury .Harry went to school at Marlborough and went on toChrist Church, Oxford where in 1938 he obtained a First in Classical Honour Moderations. His Lit Hum studies were curtailed by the war, and after a year and a half he took a War Degree (unclassified).In 1940 Fisher joined the Leicester Regiment and remained with it until 1946.He was posted to
India and served also in Burma and Malaya.He left the army in 1946 with the rank of lieutenant-colonel, having beenmentioned in despatches .He read for the Bar and was called by the
Inner Temple in 1946. In the same year he entered the Prize Fellowship examination at All Souls, applying as a candidate in Law, even though he had not read for a Law degree.He was elected in November 1946 and began a long connection with the college in various categories of fellowship.Between 1961 and 1966 he held the office of Estates Bursar, at a time when he was working as a silk and regularly appearing in court and giving advice.Fisher was a junior counsel from 1946 to 1960, in which year he took silk.After service on the
Bar Council he was Chairman of the Bar from 1966 to 1968.At the beginning of 1968 Harry Fisher accepted appointment as aHigh Court Judge in the Queen's Bench division.In July 1968 he was the junior member in a Court of Appeal decision that quashed the conviction forobscenity entered against the publishers of "Last Exit to Brooklyn ". This case sounded the death knell for prosecutions on the grounds ofobscenity of books withliterary merit .Much of his time on the bench was spent out of London trying criminal cases, and living in judges' lodgings.Missing the intellectual challenge of arguing complex cases he concluded that he had made a mistake and resigned fromhis judicial appointment in 1970. He moved to the City becoming a director of J. Henry Schroder Wagg & Co under the chairmanship of his friend
Gordon Richardson (laterGovernor of the Bank of England ).From 1981 to 1987 he was Chairman of the Appeal Committee of the Take-over Panel, and founder chairman of Imro (the Investment Management Reguulatory Organisation).In 1973 he became a member of the Governing Body of Imperial College, and from 1975 to 1988 was its chairman.In 1975 he was elected President of
Wolfson College, Oxford , on the retirement of its founding president,Isiah Berlin .It was this position which Harry Fisher put first in his Who's Who entry.He presided over Wolfson's move from temporary premises to its newly completed buildings on the banks of the Cherwell.During his time at Wolfson he took and completed anOpen University degree in mathematics.He was chairman of the
Howard League for Penal Reform from 1983 to 1991.During this time he was frequently called upon to undertake the chairmanship of difficult enquiries.In the Confait inquiry (1975-77) Fisher was asked by
the Crown to examine a gravely flawed prosecution which had resulted in the conviction of three young men for arson, murder and manslaughter.On a reference by theHome Secretary , the Court of Appeal presided over by Lord Scarman had quashed all the convictions.in the ensuing investigation Fisher concluded that there had been a blatant disregard of theJudges' Rules (although his report controversially supported some of the quashed convictions).His report recommended radical changes to the system and led directly to the appointment of the Philipps Commission and thence to the enactment of thePolice and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 and the Prosecution of Offences Act 1985.The following year theCrown Prosecution Service was established.In 1979 Fisher was asked by
Lloyd's of London to conduct an inquiry into self-regulation at the institution. The following year his report recommended the adoption of a new constitution which he had drafted, including the creation of a new governing council and effective disciplinary procedures. It brought in protection for council members from claims for negligence: liability was made to depend on bad faith.=Sources=
* [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4158/is_20050414/ai_n13613333 Obituary] in the
The Independent , by Patrick Neill* [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4158/is_20050507/ai_n14617008 Commentary on obituary] by
Louis Blom-Cooper
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