Kevin Dixon (attorney general) explained

Kevin Dixon
Office:Judge of the High Court
Term Start:1 May 1946
Term End:7 June 1959
Nominator:Government of Ireland
Appointer:Seán T. O'Kelly
Order1:8th
Office1:Attorney General of Ireland
Taoiseach1:Éamon de Valera
Term Start1:10 October 1942
Term End1:30 April 1946
Predecessor1:Kevin Haugh
Successor1:Cearbhall Ó Dálaigh
Birth Date:22 October 1902
Birth Place:Dublin, Ireland
Death Place:Dublin, Ireland
Nationality:Irish
Party:Fianna Fáil
Spouse:Mary McEoin
Children:3
Education:Belvedere College
Alma Mater:University College Dublin

Kevin Dixon (22 October 1902 – 7 June 1959) was an Irish barrister and judge who served as a Judge of the High Court from 1946 to 1959 and Attorney General of Ireland from 1942 to 1946.

He was born in Dublin and educated at Belvedere College and University College Dublin. He was called to the bar in 1926 and became a Senior Counsel in 1940. He served as Attorney General of Ireland from 1942 to 1946[1] when he was appointed a judge of the High Court where he served until his death in 1959.

He was generally considered the best Irish Chancery judge of his time with a particular knowledge of trade union law and the law of charities. Despite the inevitably dry subject matter of many of his judgements, some of them display a considerable sense of humour.[2] He was the High Court judge in the celebrated Constitutional test case O'Byrne v Minister for Finance[3] on the interpretation of the guarantee that a judge's salary shall not be reduced, a subject which remains controversial today. Dixon's ruling that notwithstanding the guarantee judges are liable to pay income tax was upheld by a majority of the Supreme Court. It was generally agreed that only his premature death prevented his promotion to the Supreme Court of Ireland.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Gallery of previous Attorneys General - 1940 to 1954 . 2010 . Office of the Attorney General . 7 November 2010 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110519080204/http://www.attorneygeneral.ie/ago/gallery4.html . 19 May 2011 .
  2. For example his view in Roundabout Ltd. v Beirne [1959]I.R.435 that the Courts do not object to legal subterfuges as long as they are successful.
  3. 1959