Middle Templar 2020

Page 35

BOOK REVIEW

MASTER ANDREW LONGMORE

Simon Brown’s Memoirs Book Review by Master Andrew Longmore Master Andrew Longmore was educated at Winchester College and Lincoln College, Oxford. He was Called to the Bar in 1966 and took Silk in 1983. A Judge of the High Court from 1993, he was appointed a Lord Justice of Appeal in 2001 until his retirement in 2019. He was Autumn Reader in 2010.

The curious title stems from an occasion when Master Nigel Wilkinson, peeved by a belittling remark from the author with whom he was playing in the Scrutton Cup, deliberately hit the ball onto the roof of the clubhouse at Woking and then insisted that Master Brown should play the ball as it lay. A ladder was procured and our hero was required to climb up and play the ball from the roof. Miraculously he succeeded in getting the ball onto the green. Somebody then leaked the story to the Daily Telegraph which gave it half a page spread, complete with a photograph of the roof and our hero in full-bottomed wig and court dress. Golf only occupies one chapter, however, and most Middle Templars may be chiefly interested in the author’s time at the Bar and on the Bench. He records Lord Bingham’s advice to a student to ’Go to the Bar – that’s where the magic is’ and then proves how right Lord Bingham was. He tells how a client once took the oath on a steak and kidney pie, how an apparently guilty teenager on being asked how he pleaded said ’I plead, most emphatically, not guilty’ and was indeed acquitted and how an acquitted arsonist told his startled counsel that there was no need to worry about his future conduct since he had just landed a job as assistant groundsman at Lord’s. But the highlight of Master Brown’s life at the Bar was undoubtedly the time he spent as Treasury Devil. He lifts the lid on both the pleasures and the agonies, which even earned him the right to take part in Lord Denning’s valedictory and said that generations to come would recall that ’short sentences are best, and verbs optional’. I once attended a seminar on Judgment Writing given by Lord Bingham. He began by saying that the opening

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This ‘delightful patchwork of memories’ (as Master Brown modestly calls it) deserves a wide readership among Middle Templars and beyond. It is full of fascinating and highly amusing stories about life at the Bar and on the Bench. Nor is it confined to such matters; as its title suggests there is much about outside interests, his prowess (or lack of it) on the golf course among them. Even the introduction tells a good story in which the author is castigated by a new and young golfing acquaintance for having had the same wife, the same house, the same model of car, the same holiday destination and the same golf club for 50 years. This unnamed City banker suggested that Master Brown must be bored out of his mind. The book is essentially an explanation of how wrong that new acquaintance was.

paragraph of any judgment of Master Brown was invariably a model of how a judgment should begin. He then read a couple of examples and it was apparent that they contained a succinct of the issues in the case which anyone could understand. So it is with this book; although narrated in an amusing and detached manner, no word is wasted and any temptation to go into deep legal analysis is firmly resisted. The book is loosely chronological (although it is not until the author is firmly on the Bench that he reveals that he swam the Bosphorus as an undergraduate) and describes the tribulation of his first murder case as well as the pleasure of being a Circuit Judge. He tells how the chair of the Norwich Housing Committee, on being invited to dinner in the Norwich lodgings and being invited to retire with the other ladies, proceeded to make apple pie beds for him and his clerk as a retaliatory gesture. Of all the courts in which Master Brown sat it seems that it may have been the Court of Appeal which he enjoyed the most but there is no doubt that the House of Lords and the Supreme Court gave greater scope to his talents. Only towards the end does a slight note of disillusionment creep in when he describes some of his colleagues in the Supreme Court as betraying excessive soft-heartedness. He then gives this as his explanation for ceasing to oppose Lord Sumption’s appointment to the court straight from the Bar. I have naturally tried to find an error in the book but that has proved difficult. I would only say that anyone brought up in Shropshire will be surprised to see Gobowen described as ‘a small branch line station’. At the time when Master Brown disembarked there to begin his National Service training in 1955, it was on the main line from Paddington via Birmingham to Birkenhead. Even now it is on the main line from Cardiff to Holyhead. Do get and read the book. It is utterly engrossing.

2020 Middle Templar

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Temple Church Weddings

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page 145

New Masters of the Bench 2019-20

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pages 127-129

Middle Temple Students' Association

4min
page 126

Middle Temple Young Barristers' Association

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pages 124-125

Hall Committee

4min
page 123

The COIC Pupillage Matched Funded Scheme

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What Have the Bar Council and the Inn Ever Done for Me?

2min
page 119

Behind the Lens

8min
pages 116-118

Temple Residents' Association

4min
page 121

Valedictory: The Rt Hon. Lord Carnwath

7min
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Temple Church During Lockdown

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pages 112-113

Lent Reader’s Feast: The Highways, Byways and Blind Alleys of International Law

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Temple Church Choir Summer Review

2min
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Becoming a Barrister

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Autumn Reader's Feast: Current Challenges in the Criminal Justice System

8min
pages 106-107

Talk to Spot

3min
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The Divorce Blame Game is Nearly Over

6min
pages 100-101

You have the Right to Remain Unidentified

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Levelling the Playing Field

8min
pages 96-97

A Day in the Country in Lockdown

9min
pages 92-93

Confronting the Challenges Presented by the Covid-19 Pandemic

8min
pages 90-91

Impeachment of a U.S. President

8min
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How Middle Temple Helped Me

3min
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Don’t Let Commercial Awareness be a Bar to Success

4min
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Student Life at the Inn

3min
page 86

In the Shoes of an Out of London Student

4min
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The Inns of Court

3min
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The ICCA Bar Course

3min
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Troubled Journeys on the Path to Justice

3min
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Turning the Tide against Corruption in the Congo

4min
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My Journey to the Bar and Becoming the First Kurdish Iraqi Barrister

3min
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Qualifying Sessions

4min
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The Role of an Inn of Court

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Five Perspectives on Sponsorship

8min
pages 76-77

Advocacy at the Inn

7min
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Outreach

3min
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Sherrard Conversations

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Mock Pupillage Interviews

7min
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Volunteering at Call Day

2min
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Mooting Trip to Cherokee

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Education Update

4min
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100 Years Since Helena Normanton's First Qualifying Session

2min
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MTYBA & MTSA International Women's Day

2min
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Créme de la Créme Climbing Rose

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Celebrating a Century of Women in Law

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Circuit Societies

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MTYBA Dark Waters Event

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The Rule of Law Under Attack

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Working in the Seychelles

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An Increased Use of Technology in Gibraltar's Legal System

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Access to Justice during the Coronavirus Pandemic: The Malaysian Experience

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Cross Border Practice in Europe and Brexit

4min
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Business as Usual at the European Court of Justice Pending Brexit

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Reflections on a Declaration of Friendship

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Mind the Gap: The General Adjourned Period and the Coronavirus Pandemic in Hong Kong

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Amity Visit to Canada

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Book Review: Equal Justice by Frederick Wilmot-Smith

3min
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Book Review: Court Number One: The Old Bailey Trials that Defined Modern Britain by Thomas Grant

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Book Review: Simon Brown's Memoirs by the The Rt Hon The Lord Brown

4min
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The Ceremonial Plate of the Middle Temple

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Lord Carson of Duncairn: Barrister, Statesman and Judge

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Unshaken & Unshakeable

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A Personal Collection of 15th Century Documents

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Justiciability – A Forgotten Saga

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Readers of the Temple: From the 16th to the 19th Century

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A Potted History of the Office of the Under Treasurer

5min
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Equality and Diversity at the Bar Council

4min
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The Spanish Influenza Pandemic

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Racial Equality, Inclusion and Anti-Racism Working Group

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BAME and the Bar

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From the Treasurer

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Speech at the Inauguration of the Middle Temple LGBTQ+ Forum

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Under Treasurers’ Forewords

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