Excursions in the Law

Author:   Peter Heerey
Publisher:   Federation Press
ISBN:  

9781876861131


Pages:   240
Publication Date:   15 May 2015
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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Excursions in the Law


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Overview

In 40 years as a barrister and judge Peter Heerey AM QC has observed and taken part in memorable legal events.\n\nThis book is partly a collection of recollections: a murder trial, a Privy Council appeal, the leading High Court decision on the liability for barristers’ negligence and the cause célèbre of Professor Sydney Sparkes Orr and his dismissal by the University of Tasmania.\n\nIt is also a journey into the past and to other lands – both real and fictional. Notable historical and legal figures such as Andrew Inglis Clark, Sir Owen Dixon and Abraham Lincoln are profiled. Travels to the American South, Quebec, Vanuatu and Ireland provide the basis for stories that capture the culture, history and personalities of these countries.\n\nSome pieces look at legal issues in literary terms; others the converse, as where The Merchant of Venice is analysed from a commercial, economic and forensic perspective.\n\n With a lawyer’s eye for detail and a writer’s keen sense of place and people, Heerey’s stories will entertain and illuminate.

Full Product Details

Author:   Peter Heerey
Publisher:   Federation Press
Imprint:   Desert Pea Press
Weight:   0.490kg
ISBN:  

9781876861131


ISBN 10:   1876861134
Pages:   240
Publication Date:   15 May 2015
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  College/higher education ,  Professional & Vocational ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

TASMANIAN STORIES Andrew Inglis Clark: The Man and his Legacy Andrew Inglis Clark and Cricket The Supreme Court of Tasmania: Its First Century 1824-1924 The Orr Case Revisited Hobart – A Guide for Innocent Mainlanders THE JUSTICE BUSINESS The Victorian Bar: Some History and a Little Lore Memories of the Battle of Hastings The Judicial Herd: Seduced by Suave Glittering Phrases? A Question of Judgment Judges at Work A Towering Figure of the Law Counsel’s Baggage Judgment Writing The Ballad of Briginshaw Chettyar’s Case Down with Defamation! Jeff Sher’s Farewell Ode to His Honour Judge Ross Ode to His Honour Judge Gebhardt IN OTHER LANDS A Last Hurrah – Privy Council Days Law in Vanuatu Canada and Quebec The Traveller’s Return Away Down South in Dixie The Years of Lyndon Johnson Justice Antonin Scalia Abraham Lincoln – Patent Lawyer How Judges Think A Night at the King’s Inns An Officer and a Spy LAW AND LITERATURE The Merchant of Venice and the Trade Practices Act Truth, Lies and Stereotype: Stories of Mary and Louis Storytelling, Postmodernism and the Law Aesthetics, Culture, and the Whole Damn Thing Rediscovering Rhetoric PUBLIUS Bracket (â€÷Bracket”) Creep Colonising Language Historical Dating Latinophobia

Reviews

"The foreword to this book was written by Sir James Gobbo. Sir James was the author's pupil-master when the author moved from his hometown of Hobart to Victoria and joined the Victorian Bar. Sir James remarks that he soon came to enjoy the author's breadth of interests, literary flair and wry sense of humour. Those traits are displayed clearly in this book which contains over 30 of the author's papers and other writings including poems. True to the word 'excursions' in the title, the subject-matter of the papers, which is divided into five parts, is diverse and extends from Hobart and Victoria to overseas jurisdictions including Vanuatu, Canada, the United States and Ireland. ... Peter Heerey is to be commended for a book which contains a collection of papers and other writings on such a variety of topics. Read full review... - Daniel Klineberg, Bar News, Autumn 2015 Peter Heerey is a former leader of the Victoria Bar and a former Federal Court judge. This book is a collection of his writings on diverse subjects. ... The book contains an interesting collection and itself gives us a good pen picture of the nature of the author. Read full review... - Peter W Young, Australian Law Journal, April 2015 ""What's on a judge's mind? Litigants and advocates would love to know. Former judge Peter Heerey answers that question in his latest book, a compendium of writing over many years, covering a vast array of topics and in myriad forms.There is plenty of engagement on show here from a mind full of ceaseless enquiry. The book is a testament to the foolhardiness of the provision in the Australian Constitution (introduced by referendum in 1977), which has resulted, as Heerey well demonstrates, in many of our best legal minds being lost to the bench at what can be the all-too-premature age of seventy."" Read full review... - Colin Golvan QC, Australian Book Review, Dec 2014 ""Excursions in the Law is a voyage across a broad terrain, from Knopwood's in Salamanca to the King's Inn of Ireland, following the journeys of the Hon Peter Heerey AM QC. This is not an autobiography - it is a collections of talks, articles, odes and recollections. There are some inside tracks into what appears to be a fascinating career at the bar including a conference with a Mr Chicken."" Read full review... - Tasman Ash Fleming, InPrint, Law Institute Journal Victoria, Dec 2014 ""Excursions are meant to be fun, as well as instructive, and these are. Peter Heerey refreshingly thought it unnecessary to exclude a sense of humour from his judgments. This collection of papers includes reviews of influential lawyers and politicians, notes on interesting cases and an account of an appearance before the Privy Council (""The thought crosses one's mind that, trying to be as objective as one can, there is much to be said for the retention of appeals to the Privy Council""). There are serious reflections on the way in which justice systems operate (and should operate) and examinations of issues such as whether Australia would be well served by a Bill of Rights. But the legal figures and occasions are chosen as often as not because they have attracted the author's keen and twinkling eye for human weakness and the absurd. A love affair with the Bard is revealed. There is an account of the Merchant of Venice by reference to the Elizabethan forerunner of the Australian Consumer Law. There are some mild rebukes for abusers of the English language. Then there is some poetry. The author frankly acknowledges his view that poetry should rhyme. It is not clear if he agrees with this reviewer that rhyming is not only a necessary but a sufficient condition of poetry. The book brings to mind the (regrettably unacknowledged) lines of the famous poet, Anon: Life's not for cranky fulmination but enjoyment. And wordsmiths to that worthy end deserve employment."" - Ross Macaw QC, Nov 2014 ""This is an interesting and entertaining collection of short pieces drawn from fact and fiction. The book is a cornucopia of different works ranging from serious analysis to humorous comments, poems, and recollections. ... Heerey's book is an enjoyable read that demonstrates his wide range of abilities as a wordsmith and his love of the English language."" Read full review... - Queensland Law Reporter, Oct [2014] 38 QLR ""I am enjoying it very much ... There is much in it of great interest to me, not least your discussion of me! I am currently writing a book that amplifies my heresies, and there is valuable both supportive and critical material in your work."" - Richard Posner, Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit ""This is brilliant. ... I love it."" - Sir Robin Jacob UK Court of Appeal (retired) ""... on a terribly long journey home to Sydney ...your book was a wonderful companion. Like everyone else who reads the book, I went first to the essays on Andrew Inglis Clark and Sydney Sparkes Orr. Two more different characters it would be hard to imagine. Yet each rejoiced in the reputation of a philosopher. Clark wrote the first draft of Chapter III of the Australian Constitution. Orr wrote a chapter of mighty conflict in Tasmanian society. Both are indelibly part of the history of Tasmania and thus of Australia. You bring them to life. After reading your book, I know which one I would invite to dinner!"" - The Hon Michael Kirby AC CMG"


This is an interesting and entertaining collection of short pieces drawn from fact and fiction. The book is a cornucopia of different works ranging from serious analysis to humorous comments, poems, and recollections. ... Heerey's book is an enjoyable read that demonstrates his wide range of abilities as a wordsmith and his love of the English language. Read full review... - Queensland Law Reporter, Oct [2014] 38 QLR I am enjoying it very much ... There is much in it of great interest to me, not least your discussion of me! I am currently writing a book that amplifies my heresies, and there is valuable both supportive and critical material in your work. - Richard Posner, Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit This is brilliant. ... I love it. - Sir Robin Jacob UK Court of Appeal (retired) ... on a terribly long journey home to Sydney ...your book was a wonderful companion. Like everyone else who reads the book, I went first to the essays on Andrew Inglis Clark and Sydney Sparkes Orr. Two more different characters it would be hard to imagine. Yet each rejoiced in the reputation of a philosopher. Clark wrote the first draft of Chapter III of the Australian Constitution. Orr wrote a chapter of mighty conflict in Tasmanian society. Both are indelibly part of the history of Tasmania and thus of Australia. You bring them to life. After reading your book, I know which one I would invite to dinner! - The Hon Michael Kirby AC CMG


Peter Heerey is a former leader of the Victoria Bar and a former Federal Court judge. This book is a collection of his writings on diverse subjects. ... The book contains an interesting collection and itself gives us a good pen picture of the nature of the author. Read full review... - Peter W Young, Australian Law Journal, April 2015 What's on a judge's mind? Litigants and advocates would love to know. Former judge Peter Heerey answers that question in his latest book, a compendium of writing over many years, covering a vast array of topics and in myriad forms.There is plenty of engagement on show here from a mind full of ceaseless enquiry. The book is a testament to the foolhardiness of the provision in the Australian Constitution (introduced by referendum in 1977), which has resulted, as Heerey well demonstrates, in many of our best legal minds being lost to the bench at what can be the all-too-premature age of seventy. Read full review... - Colin Golvan QC, Australian Book Review, Dec 2014 Excursions in the Law is a voyage across a broad terrain, from Knopwood's in Salamanca to the King's Inn of Ireland, following the journeys of the Hon Peter Heerey AM QC. This is not an autobiography - it is a collections of talks, articles, odes and recollections. There are some inside tracks into what appears to be a fascinating career at the bar including a conference with a Mr Chicken. Read full review... - Tasman Ash Fleming, InPrint, Law Institute Journal Victoria, Dec 2014 Excursions are meant to be fun, as well as instructive, and these are. Peter Heerey refreshingly thought it unnecessary to exclude a sense of humour from his judgments. This collection of papers includes reviews of influential lawyers and politicians, notes on interesting cases and an account of an appearance before the Privy Council ( The thought crosses one's mind that, trying to be as objective as one can, there is much to be said for the retention of appeals to the Privy Council ). There are serious reflections on the way in which justice systems operate (and should operate) and examinations of issues such as whether Australia would be well served by a Bill of Rights. But the legal figures and occasions are chosen as often as not because they have attracted the author's keen and twinkling eye for human weakness and the absurd. A love affair with the Bard is revealed. There is an account of the Merchant of Venice by reference to the Elizabethan forerunner of the Australian Consumer Law. There are some mild rebukes for abusers of the English language. Then there is some poetry. The author frankly acknowledges his view that poetry should rhyme. It is not clear if he agrees with this reviewer that rhyming is not only a necessary but a sufficient condition of poetry. The book brings to mind the (regrettably unacknowledged) lines of the famous poet, Anon: Life's not for cranky fulmination but enjoyment. And wordsmiths to that worthy end deserve employment. - Ross Macaw QC, Nov 2014 This is an interesting and entertaining collection of short pieces drawn from fact and fiction. The book is a cornucopia of different works ranging from serious analysis to humorous comments, poems, and recollections. ... Heerey's book is an enjoyable read that demonstrates his wide range of abilities as a wordsmith and his love of the English language. Read full review... - Queensland Law Reporter, Oct [2014] 38 QLR I am enjoying it very much ... There is much in it of great interest to me, not least your discussion of me! I am currently writing a book that amplifies my heresies, and there is valuable both supportive and critical material in your work. - Richard Posner, Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit This is brilliant. ... I love it. - Sir Robin Jacob UK Court of Appeal (retired) ... on a terribly long journey home to Sydney ...your book was a wonderful companion. Like everyone else who reads the book, I went first to the essays on Andrew Inglis Clark and Sydney Sparkes Orr. Two more different characters it would be hard to imagine. Yet each rejoiced in the reputation of a philosopher. Clark wrote the first draft of Chapter III of the Australian Constitution. Orr wrote a chapter of mighty conflict in Tasmanian society. Both are indelibly part of the history of Tasmania and thus of Australia. You bring them to life. After reading your book, I know which one I would invite to dinner! - The Hon Michael Kirby AC CMG


This is an interesting and entertaining collection of short pieces drawn from fact and fiction. The book is a cornucopia of different works ranging from serious analysis to humorous comments, poems, and recollections. ... Heerey's book is an enjoyable read that demonstrates his wide range of abilities as a wordsmith and his love of the English language. Read full review... - Queensland Law Reporter, Oct [2014] 38 QLR


Author Information

The Honourable Peter Heerey AM QC was born in Hobart, Tasmania. After graduating from the University of Tasmania and working as a solicitor he practised for 23 years at the Victorian Bar, being appointed Queen’s Counsel in 1985. He sat for 19 years as a judge of the Federal Court of Australia, including duty as President of the Defence Force Discipline Appeal Tribunal and a Deputy President of the Australian Competition Tribunal. His work on the Federal Court mainly involved intellectual property, competition law, administrative law and tax. Since retiring in 2009 he has served as Chair of the Australian Electoral Commission and returned to the Bar specialising in advice, arbitration and mediation.

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