Honorific-Prefix: | The Honourable |
Dame Ellen France | |
Office: | Justice of the Supreme Court |
Term Start: | 22 July 2016 |
Predecessor: | Sir John McGrath |
Order1: | President of the Court of Appeal |
Term Start1: | 2014 |
Term End1: | 2016 |
Predecessor1: | Sir Mark O'Regan |
Successor1: | Stephen Kós |
Birth Name: | Ellen Dolour Larkin |
Spouse: | Simon France |
Alma Mater: | University of Auckland Queen's University |
Dame Ellen Dolour France (née Larkin; born 1956) is a New Zealand jurist. She is currently a justice of the Supreme Court, and was previously the president of the Court of Appeal.
Ellen Dolour Larkin was born to parents who were both teachers. She graduated LLB from the University of Auckland in 1981, and obtained her masters from Queen's University in Ontario, Canada, in 1983.[1] From 1982, she worked as a solicitor for the Auckland practice of Subritzky, Tetley Jones & Way.[1]
From 1984, France was a legal adviser in the Department of Justice Law Reform Division, followed by work for the Crown Law Office.[2]
In 2002, France was appointed to the High Court in Auckland. She received her appointment as a judge to the Court of Appeal in June 2006.[1] She was appointed president of the Court of Appeal of New Zealand with effect from 1 September 2014, succeeding Sir Mark O'Regan.[1] She made history in August 2015 when the Appeal Court bench was made up by three women when she sat with Justice Christine French and Justice Helen Winkelmann.[3]
In the 2016 Queen's Birthday Honours, France was appointed a Dame Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit, for services to the judiciary.[4]
France's late husband, Simon France, was a judge of the Court of Appeal until just prior to his death in 2023.[5] They met in their first year at Auckland University Law School in the late 1970s.[6] [7]