Jonathan Mance, Baron Mance

British judge (born 1943) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jonathan Mance, Baron Mance

Jonathan Hugh Mance, Baron Mance, PC (born 6 June 1943) is a retired British judge who was formerly Deputy President of the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom.

Quick Facts The Right HonourableThe Lord MancePC, Deputy President of the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom ...
The Lord Mance
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Mance in 2019
Deputy President of the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom
In office
26 September 2017  6 June 2018
Nominated byDavid Lidington
Appointed byElizabeth II
PresidentThe Baroness Hale of Richmond
Preceded byThe Baroness Hale of Richmond
Succeeded byLord Reed
Justice of the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom
In office
1 October 2009  25 September 2017
Nominated byJack Straw
Appointed byElizabeth II
Preceded byPosition created
Succeeded byLady Arden of Heswall
Lord of Appeal in Ordinary
In office
3 October 2005  1 October 2009
Preceded byThe Lord Steyn
Succeeded byPosition eliminated
Lord Justice of Appeal
In office
27 April 1999  3 October 2005
High Court Judge
In office
1993  27 April 1999
Personal details
Born
Jonathan Hugh Mance

(1943-06-06) 6 June 1943 (age 81)
NationalityBritish
Spouse
(m. 1973)
Children3
EducationCharterhouse School
Alma materUniversity College, Oxford
OccupationJudge
ProfessionBarrister
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Early life

Mance was born on 6 June 1943,[1] one of four children of Sir Henry Stenhouse Mance, one-time chairman of Lloyd's of London, by his wife Joan Erica Robertson Baker.[2][3][4] His grandfather, Sir Henry Osborne Mance, was a distinguished soldier and President of the Institute of Transport; his great-grandfather, Sir Henry Christopher Mance, invented the heliograph.

Like his father, he attended Charterhouse School, a boarding school in Godalming, Surrey. He then studied law at University College, Oxford and graduated with a first class degree.[5] He was called to the Bar by the Middle Temple in 1965, becoming a QC in 1982 and a Bencher in 1989.[6]

Judicial career

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Perspective

In 1990, he became a recorder, and on 25 October 1993 was appointed a High Court judge,[7] serving in the Queen's Bench Division, and received the customary knighthood.[6] On 27 April 1999, he was appointed a Lord Justice of Appeal,[8] and appointed to the Privy Council.[6]

On 3 October 2005, he was appointed a Lord of Appeal in Ordinary with a Life Peerage as Baron Mance, of Frognal in the London Borough of Camden.[9] He was introduced in the House of Lords on 12 October 2005.[10] On 1 October 2009, he and nine other Lords of Appeal became Justices of the Supreme Court upon that body's inauguration. In a speech to the Hoge Raad in The Netherlands in 2013, Lord Mance described the creation of the Supreme Court as the consequence of a "back of an envelope plan", which "took some years to straighten out".[11]

He has also served as chairman of the Banking Appeals Tribunal (1992–93), chairman of the Consultative Council of European Judges (2000), president of the British Insurance Law Association (2000–02) and trustee of the European Law Academy (2003).[1]

Mance was appointed Deputy President of the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom in September 2017, succeeding Baroness Hale who became President of the Supreme Court.[12] He was sworn into the new position on 2 October 2017.[13] He retired from the Supreme Court on 6 June 2018.[14]

Other appointments

In October 2012, the Chancellor of the University of Oxford, The Lord Patten of Barnes, appointed Lord Mance as High Steward of the University of Oxford, on the retirement of The Lord Brown of Eaton-under-Heywood.[15] He served in this position until 2018.[5][1] He is an honorary fellow of University College,[16] and Visitor of St Cross College, Oxford. In 2013 he received an honorary doctorate from Canterbury Christ Church University.[17] He is the former Chief Justice of the Astana International Financial Centre Court, an adjudicative and arbitration centre[18] based in Kazakhstan.[19][20]

He serves as an international judge on the Singapore International Commercial Court.[21]

Selected cases

Personal life

He is married to Lady Arden of Heswall, herself a former Justice of the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom;[22] the two are the first married couple to serve concurrently in the Court of Appeal or consecutively in the Supreme Court.[23] They have two daughters and a son, Henry, who is the chief features writer of the Financial Times.[24] Lord Mance's interests include tennis, languages and music.[1]

References

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