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Roger Ormrod

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Nationality
  
British

Role
  
Legal counsel

Rank
  
Major

Name
  
Roger Ormrod

Years of service
  
1942-1945

Spouse
  
Anne Lush

Profession
  
barrister

Died
  
January 6, 1992


Alma mater
  
The Queen's College, Oxford

Committees
  
Lord Chancellor's committee on legal education (chair, 1968)

Unit
  
deputy assistant director of medical services, 8th Corps

Education
  
The Queen's College, Oxford

Service/branch
  
Royal Army Medical Corps

Sir Roger Fray Greenwood Ormrod, PC (20 October 1911 – 6 January 1992) was a British Lord Justice of Appeal.

Ormrod was educated at Shrewsbury School and the Queen's College, Oxford. Although he had studied Law at university, his father insisted that he train as a doctor.

After serving in the Royal Army Medical Corps during the Second World War, he returned to legal practice, specializing in divorce cases and becoming Queen's Counsel in 1958. In 1961 he was appointed a judge of the Probate, Divorce and Admiralty Division, and in 1974 a Lord Justice of Appeal.

He was a significant figure in the development of the jurisprudence of no-fault divorce in the English courts.

His best known finding, in the case Corbett v Corbett (1971), was that the male-to-female transsexual partner to a marriage, while a woman for many legal purposes, did not qualify as a woman for purposes of marriage:

sex is clearly an essential determinant of the relationship called marriage because it is and always has been recognized as the union of man and woman. It is the institution on which the family is built, and in which the capacity for natural heterosexual intercourse is an essential element. [...] Having regard to the essentially heterosexual character of the relationship which is called marriage, the criteria must, in my judgement, be biological [...]. My conclusion therefore is that the respondent is not a woman for the purposes of marriage, but is a biological male and has been so since birth. It follows that the so-called marriage of 10 September 1963 is void.

References

Roger Ormrod Wikipedia