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Encyclopedia > List of Senators of the College of Justice

The Senators of the College of Justice, and the Chairman of the Scottish Land Court (who ranks as a Senator), in order of appointment: The Senators of the College of Justice, also known as the Lords of Council and Session and as the Lords Commissioners of Justiciary, are the judges of the Court of Session and of the High Court of Justiciary in Scotland. ...

  1. The Rt Hon. Lord Hamilton (Lord Justice General and Lord President of the Court of Session)
  2. The Rt Hon. Lord Gill (Lord Justice Clerk)
  3. The Rt Hon. Lord Osborne
  4. The Rt Hon. Lord Johnston
  5. The Hon. Lord McGhie (Chairman of the Scottish Land Court)
  6. The Rt Hon. Lord Nimmo Smith
  7. The Rt Hon. Lord Kingarth
  8. The Hon. Lord Bonomy (Judge of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia)
  9. The Hon. Lord Eassie
  10. The Rt Hon. Lord Reed
  11. The Rt Hon. Lord Wheatley
  12. The Rt Hon. Lady Paton
  13. The Hon. Lord Carloway
  14. The Hon. Lord Clarke
  15. The Rt Hon. The Lord Hardie
  16. The Rt Hon. The Lord Mackay of Drumadoon
  17. The Hon. Lord McEwan
  18. The Hon. Lord Menzies
  19. The Hon. Lord Drummond Young (Chairman of the Scottish Law Commission)
  20. The Hon. Lord Emslie
  21. The Hon. Lady Smith
  22. The Hon. Lord Brodie
  23. The Hon. Lord Bracadale
  24. The Hon. Lady Dorrian
  25. The Hon. Lord Hodge
  26. The Hon. Lord Macphail
  27. The Hon. Lord Glennie
  28. The Hon. Lord Kinclaven
  29. The Hon. Lord Turnbull
  30. The Rt Hon. The Lady Clark of Calton
  31. The Hon. Lord Brailsford
  32. The Hon. Lord Uist
  33. The Hon. Lord Malcolm
  34. The Hon. Lord Matthews
  35. The Hon. Lord Woolman

Arthur Campbell Hamilton, Lord Hamilton, PC (born Glasgow, 10 June 1942), is Scotlands most senior judge. ... The Lord President of the Court of Session is head of the judiciary in Scotland and presiding judge of the College of Justice and Court of Session. ... Brian Gill, Lord Gill is Scotlands second most senior judge. ... The Lord Justice Clerk is the second most senior Judge in Scotland. ... The Scottish Land Court is based in Edinburgh and deals with disputes relating to agricultural tenancies between landlords and tenants. ... The Tribunal building in The Hague. ... Andrew Rutherford Hardie, Baron Hardie, PC, QC (born 8 January 1946) is a former Scottish Labour Party politician, Government minister and judge. ... Donald Sage Mackay, Baron Mackay of Drumadoon, PC, QC (b. ... The Scottish Law Commission is an independent body set up by the Parliament of the United Kingdom in 1965 to keep the law of Scotland under review and recommend necessary reforms to improve, simplify and update Scots law. ... The Honourable Lady Smith Anne Mather Smith, Lady Smith was appointed as a Judge of the Supreme Court in Scotland in 2001, taking the judicial title of Lady Smith. ... Philip Hope Brodie QC, The Hon. ... The Hon Lord Bracadale QC (born Alastair P. Campbell) is a Scottish High Court judge. ... Alan Turnbull, QC is a Scottish High Court judge. ... Lynda Margaret Clark, Baroness Clark of Calton, QC (born 26 February 1949) is a Scottish politician, formerly the Labour Member of Parliament for Edinburgh Pentlands. ...

Retired judges who still sit on a temporary basis

There are also some retired judges who still sit occasionally in the Court of Session or the Court of Criminal Appeal to hear cases if needed when there is a shortage of available judges. They are also called Senators of the College of Justice. The Court of Session is the supreme civil court in Scotland. ... The Court of Criminal Appeal was an English appellate court for criminal cases established by the Judicature Act 1873. ...

William Douglas Cullen, Baron Cullen of Whitekirk, PC (born 18 November 1935), is one of the senior members of the Scottish Judiciary. ... John Alastair Cameron, Lord Abernethy, 61, has been a Senator of the College of Justice of Scotland since 1992. ... Hazel Josephine Cosgrove, née Aronson (born 12 January 1946, Glasgow) has served as sheriff of Glasgow & Strathkelvin (1979-83) and of Lothian & The Borders (1983-96). ... Ranald Norman Munro MacLean, Lord MacLean, 66, retired from Scotlands judicial bench in 2005. ... John Taylor Cameron, Lord Coulsfield, 65, has been a Senator of the College of Justice since 1987 and now sits in the Second Division of the Inner House of the Court of Session and in the Lands Valuation Appeal Court. ... Ranald Ian Sutherland, Lord Sutherland 67, has been a Senator of the College of Justice in Scotland since 1985. ... Kenneth John Cameron, Baron Cameron of Lochbroom, (born 11 June 1931) is a retired Scottish judge. ... George William Penrose, Lord Penrose, PC is a Scottish judge (from 1990) and member of the Privy Council (from 2000) who sits in the Court of Session a civil court which primarily hears commercial actions. ...

External links


  Results from FactBites:
 
High Court of Justiciary - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (533 words)
The Court of Session's Lord President is the High Court's Lord Justice General.
The High Court was founded in 1672, but its origins derive from the College of Justice and the medieval royal courts.
From 1524, the justiciar or a deputy was required to have a permanent base in Edinburgh, and the College of Justice was established in Edinburgh in 1532.
SENATE - LoveToKnow Article on SENATE (4245 words)
Caesars revision of the senatorial list and his increase of the senate to 900 was a return to the old practice by which kings and the early magistrates had chosen their own body Under the.
When the chief senators had expressed their opinion on the motion of the president, or made proposals of their own, in the former case the house divided on the motion, in the latter the president put to the house in succession the various proposals made.
The censorial right of removing unworthy members from the senate was revived by Augustus, and was exercised by subsequent emperors at a yearly revision of the list, which supplemented the formal lectiones senatus periodically held by the princeps in his capacity of censor.
  More results at FactBites »

 

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