Sneha Girap (Editor)

Malcolm Pill

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Malcolm Pill


Malcolm Pill httpswwwaberacukennewsarchive201107Ust

Books
  
A Cardiff Family in the Forties

Sir Malcolm Thomas Pill (born 11 March 1938) is a former Lord Justice of Appeal, who was the longest-serving member of the Court of Appeal of England and Wales upon reaching mandatory retirement at age 75.

Contents

Malcolm Pill lord thomas frances edwards theodore huckle qc mandie lavin sir robery worcester sir malcolm pilljpg

Pill was born on 11 March 1938. He was educated at Whitchurch Grammar School, Cardiff and Trinity College, Cambridge.

Pill was called to the bar (Gray's Inn) in 1962.

From 1963 to 1964 he was Third Secretary at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office and spent a period in Geneva at the United Nations Commission on Human Rights. For nine years he was chairman of the United Kingdom Committee of the Freedom from Hunger Campaign.

He was a Recorder from 1976 to 1987. He became a Queen's Counsel in 1978, and was appointed a High Court judge on 15 January 1988, receiving the customary knighthood, and assigned to the Queen's Bench Division. From 1989 to 1993, he was Presiding Judge for the Wales and Chester Circuit.

He was appointed a Lord Justice of Appeal on 1 February 1995, and was given the customary Privy Council appointment. Among his most notable judgments is the second appeal in the Stephen Downing case.

He retired from the Court of Appeal on 11 March 2013.

Judgments

Important decisions of Lord Justice Pill include:

  • Smith v Lloyds TSB Group plc [2001] QB 541
  • Irving v Penguin Books Ltd
  • HJ (Iran) and HT (Cameroon) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2010] UKSC 31 (at Court of Appeal)
  • Delaware v City of Westminster [2001] UKHL 55 (at Court of Appeal)
  • FHR European Ventures LLP v Cedar Capital Partners LLC [2014] UKSC 45 (at Court of Appeal)
  • Haugesund Kommune v DEPFA ACS Bank [2010] EWCA Civ 579
  • Publications

  • Pill, Malcolm (1994). European Parliamentary Constituency Committee for Wales: Report. London: H.M.S.O. ISBN 978-0101244121. 
  • — (1999). A Cardiff Family in the Forties. Chesterfield: Merton Priory Press. ISBN 1 898937 31 1.  (childhood memoirs)
  • — (2016). Choices and Chances 1948-1969: Memories of a Cardiffian. ISBN 978-0993500305.  (memoirs)
  • References

    Malcolm Pill Wikipedia