Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Derek Oulton

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Prime Minister
  
Margaret Thatcher

Role
  
Bar-at-law


Name
  
Derek Oulton

Profession
  
Lawyer

Succeeded by
  
Thomas Legg

Derek Oulton Sir Derek Oulton Register The Times The Sunday Times

Born
  
14 October 1927 (age 96) (
1927-10-14
)

Alma mater
  
King's College, Cambridge

Education
  
King's College, Cambridge

Sir Antony Derek Maxwell Oulton GCB QC (14 October 1927 – 1 August 2016) was a British senior civil servant, who was Permanent Secretary of the Lord Chancellor's Department and Clerk of the Crown in Chancery, United Kingdom from 1982–1989.

Derek Oulton wwwtelegraphcoukcontentdamobituaries201608

Oulton was educated at St Edward's School, Oxford and then read law at King’s College, Cambridge, where he took a double first.

He was called to the bar at Gray’s Inn (where he was later a Bencher), and was in private practice as a barrister in Nairobi until 1960, when he joined the Lord Chancellor’s Department. He was Private Secretary to three successive Lord Chancellors, the Earl Kilmuir, the Viscount Dilhorne, and Lord Gardiner, and also served as Secretary to the Beeching Royal Commission on Assizes and Quarter Sessions, 1966–69.

Oulton's final civil service position was as Permanent Secretary of the Lord Chancellor’s Department and Clerk of the Crown in Chancery 1982–89.

He was awarded a University of Cambridge PhD on the basis of a jointly-authored practitioner text on legal aid and advice, and after retiring from the civil service entered academia, becoming a Research Fellow of Magdalene College, Cambridge in 1990. He subsequently became a Life Fellow and, until his retirement in June 2007, supervised undergraduate students in constitutional law. Sir Derek received a standing ovation from the College Law Society following his retirement at the Annual Lawyers' Dinner in 2007. A bench sits beside the River Cam in the grounds of the College in his honour.

On 8 May 2008, Oulton addressed the Cambridge University Gray's Inn Association, giving a talk entitled "A Life in the Law".

He died on 1 August 2016 at the age of 88.

References

Derek Oulton Wikipedia