Today's Birthdays

one click shows all of today's celebrity birthdays

Browse All Birthdays

43,625    Actors
27,931    Actresses
4,867    Composers
7,058    Directors
842    Footballers
221    Racing drivers
925    Singers
9,111    Writers

Get FamousLikeMe on your website
One line of code gets FamousLikeMe on your website. Find out more.

Subscribe to Daily updates


Add to Google

privacy policy



Famous Like Me > Actor > K > Michael Kirby

Profile of Michael Kirby on Famous Like Me

 
Name: Michael Kirby  
   
Also Know As:
   
Date of Birth: 20th February 1925
   
Place of Birth: Sydney, Nova Scotia, Canada
   
Profession: Actor
 
 
From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia

This article is about Australian High Court judge Michael Kirby. For the article on the Canadian Senator of the same name see Michael J. L. Kirby.

Justice Michael Kirby

Michael Donald Kirby (1939- ) AC CMG is a Justice of the High Court of Australia; the highest court in the Australian court hierarchy.

Usage note: As a High Court justice, Kirby is known as 'Justice Kirby', commonly abbreviated in documents as 'Kirby J'.

Education

Kirby attended Fort Street High School in Sydney, and received LLM, BA and BEc from the University of Sydney.

Working life

Kirby was admitted to the New South Wales Bar (earned the right to practice as a barrister) in 1967. His first quasi-judicial appointment was the Australian Conciliation and Arbitration Commission, a body that adjudicates labour disputes, in 1975.

From 1983 to 1984, he was a judge in the Federal Court of Australia and the youngest person ever appointed as a Federal judge, before an appointment as President of the New South Wales Court of Appeal, the highest court in that state's legal system. He was appointed to the High Court of Australia in February 1996.

He has served on many other boards and committees, notably the Australian Law Reform Commission and the CSIRO. He is Patron of the Friends of Libraries Australia (FOLA).

Honours

He received Australia's highest civil honour when he was made a Companion of the Order of Australia (AC) in 1991. He is also a Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George (CMG).

Legal record

Justice Kirby is regarded as the inheritor of the Mason Court's "progressive tradition". His Judgements are regarded as liberal in their approach as well as exhibiting compassion and thoughtfulness. He is vocal on a number of issues, particularly homosexuality.

In 2004 he delivered a dissenting opinion on nearly 40% of the judgments in which he participated, almost twice as many as any of his High Court colleagues; in constitutional cases, his rate of dissent was more than 50%. Legal researchers Andrew Lynch and George Williams observed that "even allowing for 2004 as a year in which Kirby J had a particularly high level of explicit disagreement with a majority of his colleagues, it is neither premature nor unfair to say that in the frequency of his dissent, his Honour has long since eclipsed any other Justice in the history of the Court... [Kirby] has broken away to claim a position of outsider on the Court which seems unlikely to pass with future years."

He is also renowned for the depth of research into past cases that goes into his judgments.

Social activism

Kirby publicly supported the "no" case in a prominent role with Australians for a Constitutional Monarchy in the 1999 Republican referendum - see republicanism in Australia for more information - a position perhaps superficially at odds with his "progressive" views on many other issues.

Kirby is regarded as an eloquent and powerful orator, having given a vast number of speeches over his career on a diverse range of topics. In November 2003, at the University of Exeter, Kirby delivered two lectures on the subject of judicial activism. Rejecting the doctrine of strict constructionism, Kirby declared that "Clearly it would be wrong for a judge to set out in pursuit of a personal policy agenda and hang the law. Yet it would also be wrong, and futile, for a judge to pretend that the solutions to all of the complex problems of the law today, unresolved by incontestably clear and applicable texts, can be answered by the application of nothing more than purely verbal reasoning and strict logic to words written by judges in earlier times about the problems they then faced."

These lectures sparked a debate in the Australian media, echoing an ongoing debate in the USA, as to whether judges have the right to interpret the law in the light of its intent and considerations of natural law or simply follow it to the letter, leaving questions of its intent and underlying principles to elected representatives.

Homosexuality

Kirby is open about his homosexuality, having outed himself by mentioning his long-time male partner Johan van Vloten in Australia's Who's Who. He has on occasion spoken publicly about his views on the recognition of homosexual partnerships.

This openness has on occasion drawn criticism. Kirby's Who's Who entry indicates that his relationship with van Vloten began well before 1984, the year that homosexuality was legalised in New South Wales. His critics have queried whether a man who (apparently) disobeyed the law as it then existed should be serving as a judge; this criticism has been somewhat dampened by a widespread modern-day belief that the law of the time was in the wrong.

One of Kirby's best-known critics is Liberal senator Bill Heffernan. In 2002, Heffernan used parliamentary privilege to accuse Kirby of trawling for rent boys. However, the evidence Heffernan produced to support this claim was swiftly discovered to be a forgery; the incident is discussed in more detail at Bill Heffernan. Kirby's response was remarkable for its moderation and his willingness to let the facts speak for themselves.

This content from Wikipedia is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article Michael Kirby