- Melbourne Law School - Research Publications
Melbourne Law School - Research Publications
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ItemThurgood MarshallPark, M. M. ( 1993)Biographical note on the career of Thurgood Marshall who died aged 84 in January, 1993.
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ItemRoyal road test updatePark, Malcolm McKenzie (The Victorian Bar, 1995)An even further collection of anecdotes regarding falsified, exaggerated, self invented, or self conferred qualifications.
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ItemRoyal road testPark, Malcolm McKenzie (The Victorian Bar, 1994)A collection of anecdotes regarding falsified, exaggerated, self invented, or self conferred qualifications.
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ItemMore helpful advice IIIPark, Malcolm McKenzie (The Victorian Bar, 1995)Yet another collection of legal anecdotes involving bold, insouciant, or impudent behaviour by counsel directed towards the court, the judicial officer, or the practice of law.
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ItemThis sporting lifePark, M. M. (The Victorian Bar, 1993)Speculation on sporting prowess being a necessary quality for appointment to high judicial office.
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ItemMore helpful advice IIPark, Malcolm McKenzie (The Victorian Bar, 1994)An even further collection of legal anecdotes involving bold, insouciant, or impudent behaviour by counsel directed towards the court, the judicial officer, or the practice of law.
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ItemMore helpful advicePark, Malcolm McKenzie ( 1994)A further collection of anecdotes involving bold, insouciant, or impudent behaviour by counsel directed towards the court, the judicial officer, or the practice of law.
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ItemA layman's triumphPark, M. M. ( 1989)Colonel Alfred Daniel Wintle was the quintessential Englishman. He was an infuriating chauvinistic (in the true sense of the word) eccentric bachelor-soldier who exemplified the expression “old woman” to describe a man. When he was not busy being patriotic he saw the whole of life through his monocle as one long mess-night lark. Perhaps, had the late Sir Alan Herbert learnt of Wintle’s existence earlier, he would not have found it necessary to invent Albert Haddock. He was an outdated Colonel Blimp figure and believer in the superiority of all things English at a time when the sun was beginning to set on the British Empire and Britannia no longer ruled the waves. The title of his posthumously published autobiography (“The Last Englishman”, 1968) was well-chosen. The author here relates this little man’s successful conduct of his own legal case in the House of Lords — a victory that Wintle never doubted was his due or within his grasp.
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ItemJean who? or, Good Lord, your place has gone up in flames!Park, M. M. ( 1991-11)Captain Olsen had his ship berthed in Sydney Harbour for less than 26 hours yet this resulted in court proceedings spanning fourteen-and-a-half-years. On the fortieth anniversary of the incident that gave rise to those proceedings, this article fills in the factual background to the incident that led to two of the leading cases in the 20th Century law of negligence.