Joseph Brown (barrister) explained

Joseph Brown
Honorific Suffix:CB KC
Other Names:Joe Brown.,[1] Joey Brown[2]
Birth Date:4 April 1809
Birth Place:Walworth, Newington
Death Place:London
Occupation:Barrister
Spouse:Mary Smith

Joseph Brown CB KC (4 April 1809  - 9 June 1902) was an English barrister and bencher of Middle Temple. He held the positions of both Lent Reader (1869) and Treasurer (1878) of the Temple, and also served as the Chairman of the Incorporated Council of Law Reporting.[3] At his death at the age of 93, he was the oldest living King's Counsel, and the third-longest serving.[4]

Biography

Early life

Joseph Brown was born in Walworth, the son of a wine merchant - also named Joseph - who was the cousin of Timothy Brown.[5] He was educated at a grammar school in Camberwell, and thereafter at a private school in Wimbledon.[6] At the age of eighteen, he began his career with Armstrong & Co., a firm of West India merchants.[7]

Legal career

In 1829, he began to study law under Peter Turner, a London solicitor. Brown was admitted to the Middle Temple in January 1832. He initially studied as a special pleader under William Watson, and then Sir John Bayley; becoming a pleader under the bar in 1834. He was called to the bar on 7 November 1845 and became a Queen's Counsel in 1865. That same year, he was instrumental in the preparation and publication of the Law Reports. He represented Middle Temple on the Incorporated Council of Law Reporting, eventually chairing the council from 1875 to 1892. In 1878, he held to position of Treasurer of the Middle Temple. As part of his role, in December of that year he proposed an address to be sent to Queen Victoria on the death of her daughter, Princess Alice.[8] In 1880, he gave evidence to a Committee of the House of Commons on the bill which would eventually become the Employers' Liability Act 1880.[9] On his retirement, he was created a CB in the 1892 Birthday Honours.

Notable Cases Argued

Marriage and children

Brown married Mary Smith (1808–1891), of Winchcombe on 24 August 1840. They had three sons and two daughters together:

Death

Joseph died at his residence in Regent's Park, London, on 9 June 1902.

Published works

Recognition

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: 1902-06-14. Obituary - Mr. Joseph Brown C.B., The Oldest King's Counsel . Cheltenham Chronicle.
  2. News: 1902-06-11. Personal Gossip . Gloucester Citizen.
  3. Web site: 1937 . The Middle Temple Bench Book . 2023-07-10 . Bench Book - Middle Temple.
  4. News: 1902-06-14. Obituary - Mr. Joseph Brown C.B., The Oldest King's Counsel . Cheltenham Chronicle.
  5. Book: Marrache, Abraham S. . Timothy 'Equality' Brown: A Radical Regency Life . Pomegranate Press . 2017 . 9781907242649.
  6. News: 1902-06-10 . Obituary - Joseph Brown . 12 . The Times.
  7. 10.1093/ref:odnb/32113. Brown, Joseph (1809–1902).
  8. Web site: 1880 . Minutes of Parliament (1872 - 1880) . 2023-07-19 . Minutes of Parliament - Middle Temple.
  9. Employers' Liability Bill (No 199) Second Reading. Parliament of the United Kingdom. House of Lords. 253. 1880-08-24. Roundell Palmer, 1st Baron Selborne. The Lord Chancellor. 1967. 1968.
  10. News: 1858-02-20 . Trial of the Royal British Bank Directors . 170 . . 2023-07-19.
  11. Schibsby v Westenholz and the recognition and enforcement of judgments in England . Law Quarterly Review . Dickinson . A. . 2018-07-09 . July . 134.
  12. Web site: March 2013 . Linklaters - Passing the Flame .
  13. Book: Slinn, Judy . Linklaters and Paines: The First One Hundred and Fifty Years . FT Law & Tax . 978-0851213972 . 1988-02-01.
  14. Book: Kelly's Handbook to the Titled, Landed and Official Classes . 1888.
  15. Obituary - Oswald Brown, 1848-1906 . Minutes of the Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers . 1906 . 166 . 1906 . 378–379 . 10.1680/imotp.1906.16723 . 2023-07-19. free .
  16. Web site: Page 197 Issue 7513, 24 February 1865 Edinburgh Gazette The Gazette . 2023-07-19 . www.thegazette.co.uk.
  17. Web site: Page 3138 Issue 26291, 25 May 1892 London Gazette The Gazette . 2023-07-19 . www.thegazette.co.uk.