Fergus Morton, Baron Morton of Henryton explained

Honorific Prefix:The Right Honourable
The Lord Morton of Henryton
Honorific Suffix:MC PC
Office:Lord of Appeal in Ordinary
Termstart:18 April 1947
Termend:5 April 1959
Successor:The Lord Jenkins
Office1:Lord Justice of Appeal
Termstart1:11 October 1944
Termend1:18 April 1947
Office2:Justice of the High Court
Termstart2:5 January 1938
Termend2:11 October 1944
Predecessor2:Sir Albert Clauson
Birth Name:Fergus Dunlop Morton
Birth Place:Kelvinside, Glasgow
Birth Date:17 October 1887
Death Place:Cookham, Berkshire
Alma Mater:St John's College, Cambridge
Predecessor1:Sir Fairfax Luxmoore
Successor2:Sir Charles Romer

Fergus Dunlop Morton, Baron Morton of Henryton, MC, PC (17 October 1887  - 18 July 1973)[1] was a British barrister and judge who was a Lord of Appeal in Ordinary from 1947 to 1959. The son of a Scottish stockbroker, Morton was educated in Scotland and England, before being called to the English bar. After serving with the British Army in the First World War, during which he won the Military Cross, he developed a successful Chancery practice. He was appointed to the High Court in 1938, promoted to the Court of Appeal in 1944, and to the House of Lords in 1947, retiring from judicial service in 1959.

Background and education

Born in Glasgow, Morton was the youngest child and one of three sons of George Morton and Janet, née Wilson.[2] His father, from a farming family, left school aged thirteen and acquired a considerable fortune as a stockbroker. He was educated at Kelvinside Academy and then went to St John's College, Cambridge with an open scholarship in classics. Morton narrowly missed first class honours in part one of the classical tripos in 1909 owing to illness, before taking first class honours in part two of the law tripos in 1910, topping the class list.

Legal career

After a year with a firm of solicitors, Morton was called to the English bar by the Inner Temple in 1912, also joining Lincoln's Inn in 1914. He was first the pupil of the conveyancer A. L. Ellis, then of leading Chancery junior Dighton Pollock.

On the outbreak of the First World War in 1914, he was commissioned as lieutenant into the Highland Light Infantry. He saw action in German East Africa, and was promoted to captain in 1915. In July 1918, he was awarded the Military Cross. Both of his brothers were killed in the war.

From 1918 - 19, Morton was attached to the War Office, before resuming his career at the Chancery bar.[3] His practice grew rapidly, and he became a King's Counsel in 1929. In 1932 he was elected a bencher of Lincoln's Inn (serving as treasurer in 1953).

Judicial career

Morton was appointed to the High Court of Justice in 1938, receiving the customary knighthood, and was assigned to the Chancery Division. From 1941, he chaired the Black List Committee for the following five years.[4] He was appointed a Lord Justice of Appeal in 1944 and on this occasion was sworn of the Privy Council.[5] Three years thereafter the number of the Lords of Appeal in Ordinary was increased to nine and one of the new seats was assigned to Morton. He obtained the traditional life peerage, taking the title Baron Morton of Henryton, of Henryton, in the County of Ayr.

Morton joined the Council of Legal Education in 1949, which he left after four years.[4] In 1950 he sat in the Committee on the Law of Intestate Succession (named the Morton Committee)[6] and in the subsequent year he became chairman of the Royal Commission on Marriage and Divorce (named the Morton Commission).[7] Lincoln's Inn selected him its treasurer in 1953.[4] He retired as Lord of Appeal in 1959.[8]

Honours

In 1940, he was nominated an honorary fellow by his former college and in 1951 received Honorary Doctorates of Law by the University of Cambridge as well as the University of Glasgow. Cambridge's Senate elected Morton a Deputy High Steward in 1954. Two years later, the University of St Andrews and in 1957 the University of Sydney conferred additional doctorates upon him.[9] Both the American Bar Association and the Canadian Bar Association made Morton honorary members. He became also an honorary member of the Faculty of Advocates.

Notable decisions

Family

Morton married Margaret Greenlees, elder daughter of James Begg; they had a daughter.[4] He died aged 85 in 1973.[3]

Arms

Escutcheon:Argent on a Chevron engrailed Azure between three Roses Gules barbed and seeded proper as many Mill-Rinds Or
Crest:An Eagle wings addorsed Sable gorged with a Collar flory-counterflory and resting the dexter claw on a Mill-Rind Or
Motto:Mort on se reveille

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Peerage – Monteagle to Mottistone . https://web.archive.org/web/20080608050720/http://www.leighrayment.com/peers/peersM5.htm . 8 June 2008 . Leigh Rayment . usurped . 30 December 2009 .
  2. Dod (1954), p. 168
  3. Cretney (2003), p. 801
  4. Who's Who (1963), p. 2171
  5. Dod (1949), p. 158
  6. Cretney (2003), p. 482
  7. Web site: Working Paper No. 5 . Law Reform Commission of Ireland . 30 December 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090929035302/http://www.lawreform.ie/publications/data/volume1/lrc_7.html . 29 September 2009 .
  8. Stevens (1978), p. 374
  9. Web site: Honorary awards. University of Sydney. 30 December 2009.