Peter Grain (judge) explained

See also: Peter Grain (artist).

Honorific-Prefix:Sir
Peter Grain
Office:Judge, British Supreme Court for Egypt
Term Start:1919
Term End:1921
Office2:Assistant Judge, British Supreme Court for China
Term Start2:1921
Term End2:1927
Predecessor2:Skinner Turner
Successor2:Gilbert Walter King
Office3:Judge, British High Court of Weihaiwei
Term Start3:1925
Term End3:1930
Predecessor3:Hiram Parkes Wilkinson
Successor3:Court abolished
Office4:Chief Judge, British Supreme Court for China
Term Start4:1927
Term End4:1933
Predecessor4:Skinner Turner
Successor4:Allan Mossop
Birth Date:1864 9, df=yes
Death Place:Farnham Common, England

Sir Peter Grain (1864  - 1947) was a British judge who served in Zanzibar, Egypt, Constantinople and China. He was the Chief Judge of the British Supreme Court for China from 1927 to 1933 and also judge of the High Court of Weihaiwei from 1926 to 1930.

Early life

Grain was born on September 25, 1864. He was the son of John Peter Grain, a well-known criminal barrister in London. He was called to the bar of the Middle Temple in January 1897.[1]

Career

Grain practiced in the criminal courts in London, sometimes as his father's junior, in England for 10 years. He was a member of the Bar Council from 1902 until 1906. In 1906, at the age of 40 or 41, Grain commenced a career with the Foreign Office Judicial Service in Zanzibar.

In 1906, he was made Resident Magistrate at Zanzibar, and the same year he was promoted to be Assistant Judge and a Judge of the Court of Appeal for East Africa. For a time he left the Bench to become Legal Member of Council and Attorney-General to the Government of Zanzibar, and he was for a short time, from August 1907 to April 1908 Acting First Minister there. He was awarded the Zanzibar Order of the Alijah, 1st class.[2]

In 1910, he was made Assistant Judge of the British Supreme Consular Court at Constantinople; then Acting Judge in 1911. During World War I he was the Special Judge in Egypt for the trial of German and Austrian subjects and he was also Judge of the Prize Court there. In 1915, he became Assistant Judge (and Acting Judge between 1917 and 1918) of the British Supreme Court for Egypt. He was appointed as Judge of the British Supreme Court for Egypt in 1919.[3] In 1921, Grain was appointed Assistant Judge of the British Supreme Court for China in Shanghai. In 1926 he was concurrently appointed judge of the High Court of Weihaiwei.[4]

In 1927, he was promoted to Chief Judge of the British Supreme Court for China on the retirement of Sir Skinner Turner[5] and was knighted in February 1928.[6] Gilbert Walter King succeeded him as Assistant Judge. He continued to serve a judge in Weihaiwei until the territory was returned Chinese rule on 1 October 1930.

Retirement and death

Grain retired in 1933 and was succeeded by Allan Mossop. He returned to England and died on 6 May 1947, at Farnham Common, Buckinghamshire at the age of 82.[7]

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Obituary, The Times, 7 May 1947.
  2. Obituary, The Times, 7 May 1947.
  3. Grain's obituary, The Times, May 7, 1947
  4. Edinburgh Gazette, 5 January 1926, p. 29
  5. Obituary, The Times, 7 May 1947.
  6. London Gazette, 24 February 1928, p. 1291
  7. Obituary, The Times, May 7, 1947