In the
United
Kingdom
, the Judge Advocate General and Judge
Martial of all the Forces is a judge
responsible for the court martial
process within the British Army and
Royal Air Force. The
equivalent post in the
Royal Navy was the
Judge Advocate of the
Fleet though this role is now incorporated within the
Judge Advocate General's office.
Qualifications
The post is regulated by the
Courts-Martial Act 1951.
The appointment is made by the
British
Sovereign on the recommendation of the
Lord Chancellor. Formerly, the
Judge
Advocate General had to be a
barrister,
advocate, or
solicitor with higher
rights of audience, of 10 years'
standing. As of 21 July 2008 the experience needed to qualify was
reduced in line with a general move to broaden
diversity in the judiciary.
An
appointee who has practiced in England
and Wales now has to satisfy the judicial-appointment
eligibility condition on a 7-year basis, while a practitioner
from Scotland
or Northern
Ireland
will need 7 years' standing as barrister, advocate
or solicitor. The post is always held by a civilian rather
than an
commissioned
officer.
A
Judge Advocate General can also be appointed
from the
Vice Judge Advocate General or
Assistant Judge Advocate Generals.
Role
He is the legal adviser of the
Sovereign and of the
commander-in-chief in
military cases, and by his authority all general
courts-martial are held. In his office are
deposited the originals of all such proceedings, and on his receipt
of them they are examined, and either deposited as correct, or
communicated upon, or submitted by the Judge Advocate General to
Her Majesty for royal approval, or for pardon, or revision, as, in
the opinion of this officer, the case may require.
He is assisted by civilians who are his permanent staff. There is a
total of ten, comprising one Vice Judge Advocate General (must be a
barrister or advocate of seven years standing, or a deputy judge
advocate), 6 Assistant Judge Advocates General (must be a barrister
or advocate of seven years standing, or a deputy judge advocate), 2
Deputy Judge Advocates (must be a barrister or advocate of five
years standing).
These provide advice to accused and prosecution, and sum up the
evidence for the Court. Defendants are entitled to a defending
officer, and to civilian counsel if they so wish. The
British Army and the
RAF have similar arrangements, and the same
Judge Advocate General.
In the 1990s significant changes to the
courts martial system were instigated following European Court
of Human Rights
judgements.
The
Director of Army
Legal Services, a
major-general,
advises the army on all legal matters. His staff are officers of
the
Army Legal Services
Branch of the
Adjutant-General's Corps. They
number 110, including 20 short service captains. There are ten in
the
Territorial
Army.
The head of the
RAF Legal Branch,
is an
Air Vice Marshal, who advises
the RAF on all legal matters. His staff are officers of the Legal
Branch. They number around 40 including 10 Flight
Lieutenants.
The office was for many years a political one, the holder resigning
on a change of ministry. The Judge Advocate General was made
subordinate to the
Lord Chancellor,
and since 1951 has been appointed on his recommendation.
List of Judge Advocates General
Down to 1847 the dates are those of actual entrance upon
office, not of the appointment, which is usually a few days
earlier; or of the patent, commonly some days later than those
adopted in this list. After 1847 the dates are those of
the Gazette notices of the
appointment.
- January 1666: Samuel Barrowe
- 1684: George Clarke
- 1705: Thomas Byde
- 1715: Edward
Hughes
- 1734: Sir Henry
Hoghton
- 1741: Thomas
Morgan
- 1768: Sir
Charles Gould Morgan
- 8 March 1806: Nathaniel Bond
- 4 December 1807: Richard Ryder
- 8 November 1809: Charles
Manners-Sutton
- 25 June 1817: Sir John
Beckett
- 12 May 1827: James
Abercromby
- 2 February 1828: Sir John Beckett
- 2 December 1830: Sir
Robert Grant
- 7 July 1834: Robert Cutlar
Fergusson
- 22 December 1834: Sir John Beckett
- 25 April 1835: Robert Cutlar Fergusson
- 6 November 1838: William St
Julien Arabin
- 21 February 1839: Sir
George Grey
- 26 June 1841: Richard Lalor
Sheil
- 14 September 1841: John Iltyd
Nicholl
- 31 January 1846: James Stuart
Wortley
- 14 July 1846: Charles Buller
- 30 December 1847: William Goodenough
Hayter
- 26 May 1849: Sir David
Dundas
- 28 February 1852: George
Bankes
- 30 December 1852: Charles
Pelham Villiers
- 13 March 1858: John
Mowbray
- 24 June 1859: Thomas Emerson
Headlam
- 12 July 1866: John Mowbray
- 16 December 1868: Sir Colman Michael
O'Loghlen
- 28 December 1870: John Robert
Davison
- 17 May 1871: Sir Robert
Joseph Phillimore (held the office pending a rearrangement of
its duties)
- 21 August 1873: Acton Smee
Ayrton
- 7 March 1874: Stephen Cave
- 24 November 1875: George
Cavendish-Bentinck
- 7 May 1880: George Osborne
Morgan
- 13 July 1885: William
Thackeray Marriott
- 22 February 1886: John William
Mellor
- 9 August 1886: William Thackeray Marriott
- Sir Francis
Jeune, 1892–1904
- Thomas Milvain, appointed August
1905
- Sir Felix Cassel, 1915–1934
- Colonel Sir Henry MacGreagh,
1934–1955
- Captain Sir Frederick Gentle,
1955–1962
- Wing Commander Sir Oliver
Barnett, 1963–1968
- Wing Commander Brian Duncan,
1968–1972
- Harold Dean Q.C., 1972–1979
- Major John Morgan-Owen,
1979–1984
- James Stuart-Smith,
1984–1991
- James Rant, 1991–2003
- Judge Jeff Blackett,
2004–present
Includes material from: Haydn's
Book of Dignities, 12th
ed. (1894; reprinted 1969)
References
- Courts-Martial (Appeals) Act 1951, s.31
- Tribunals, Courts and
Enforcement Act 2007, s.50/ Sch.10, Pt.1
- Courts-Martial (Appeals) Act 1951, s.31(d)-(e)
External links
See also
United States
Canada