Horace Hearne
Sir Hector Horace Hearne (23 February 1892 – 31 December 1962) was an English barrister and judge.
Hearne was born in 1892, the son of Samuel Hearne and Edith (née Butterfield). He joined the Colonial Service as an Assistant District Commissioner, in Uganda in 1916.
Career[]
He was Appeal Justice, the West African Court of Appeal (1954–1955), Chief Justice of Kenya (1951–1954), Chief Justice of Jamaica (1945-1950/1951), puisne judge, Ceylon (1937–1944), puisne judge, Tanganyika Territory (1934-1936/1937) and a non-practising barrister.
He was called to the Bar by Lincoln's Inn on 24 June 1925, never practising as a barrister, although he first appeared in the Law List in 1926.
After holding the appointments of first class magistrate, district magistrate, senior magistrate and acting puisne judge, Hearne was appointed as a puisne judge (High Court judge), Tanganyika Territory (East Africa) in 1933/1934, where he acted as Chief Justice in 1935 and 1936.
In 1936/1937, he was appointed a puisne judge in Ceylon, and sat in the Supreme Court in Colombo. He stayed there for most of the Second World War.
As a puisne judge of the Supreme Court of Ceylon, the judgments of Mr Justice Hearne were subject to at least two appeals to the Privy Council in London. The reported cases appear in the English law reports. They are: Abdul Hameed Sitti Kadija v De Saram [1946] AC 208 and Vander Poorten v Settlement Officer [1946] AC 271. The former case concerned construction of a will; the latter concerned the Waste Lands Ordinance, No 1 of 1897, ss 18, 20. The second case is probably of historical interest only; the first may conceivably still be a relevant authority (i.e. part of English caselaw). In the first case, Hearne J (as he is cited in the law reports) was one of the majority in the Supreme Court which made the decision which was appealed to the Privy Council. A fellow High Court Judge dissented; and the Privy Council upheld the dissenter, thus finding that Hearne J and his colleagues were in error. The second appeal was also allowed, another finding that Hearne J and his colleagues had erred.
He became Chief Justice and Keeper of the Records in Jamaica, British West Indies, and sat in the Supreme Court, Kingston between 1945 and 1950/1951.
Hearne was created a Knight in 1946, for services to the Crown during the Mau Mau Uprising and was known thereafter as Sir Hector. [1] Unlike a number of his fellow judges, he was never made King's (or Queen's) Counsel. He was an honorary judge in the Queen's Bench division.
In 1951, Hearne became Chief Justice in Kenya and sat in the Supreme Court, Nairobi.[2]
Hearne was escorting the Princess Elizabeth to a dinner at the Tree Tops Safari Hotel in Kenya on the night her father, King George VI, died and she became Queen Elizabeth II. She returned immediately to the UK, escorted by Hearne.
Horace held the position of Chief Justice in Kenya until 1954 when he became an appeal justice of the West African Court of Appeal, a position he held between 1954 and 1955. He was Acting President of the West African Court of Appeal in 1958.
Horace's speciality was Roman Law. Horace's last entry in the Law List as a barrister was 1963. (It is indicated at the head of the list for that year that non-subscribing barristers will not be included in the list except by application).
Personal life[]
He married Winifred Combridge (died 1959), and they had two sons. He died on 31 December 1962 at the age of 70.
References[]
- ^ "No. 37407". The London Gazette. 28 December 1945. p. 4.
- ^ Mitchell, P.E. (29 May 1951). "Government Notice No 593". The Official Gazette of the Colony and Protectorate of Kenya. Vol. 53, no. 27. Nairobi. p. 1. Retrieved 22 June 2016.
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- "Who Was Who 1961-1970"
- "Law Lists", 1926–1963
- 1892 births
- 1962 deaths
- Knights Bachelor
- British people of the Mau Mau Uprising
- Colony of Jamaica judges
- Chief Justices of Jamaica
- Chief Justices of Kenya
- British Kenya judges
- Puisne Justices of the Supreme Court of Ceylon
- Tanganyika (territory) judges
- West African Court of Appeal judges
- British Kenya people