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Susan Crennan

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Nominated by
  
John Howard

Children
  
3

Preceded by
  
Michael McHugh

Spouse(s)
  
Michael Crennan

Succeeded by
  
Geoffrey Nettle

Nationality
  
Australian

Role
  
Justice

Appointed by
  
Michael Jeffery

Name
  
Susan Crennan


Susan Crennan Susan Crennan AC QC New Chambers

Full Name
  
Susan Maree Walsh

Born
  
1 July 1945 (age 78) Victoria, Australia (
1945-07-01
)

Alma mater
  
University of Melbourne Sydney Law School

Books
  
Industrial Property and Confidential Information

Education
  
University of Melbourne, Sydney Law School, University of Sydney

Similar People
  
Susan Kiefel, William Gummow, Michael Kirby

Susan Maree Crennan (born 1 July 1945), is a former Justice of the High Court of Australia, the highest court in the Australian court hierarchy.

Contents

Susan Crennan wwwhcourtgovauassetsjusticescrennanjpg

Early life and education

Susan Crennan Exteacher legal dynamo and oh yes a woman welcome to

Crennan was born in Melbourne, one of six children born to John Maurice Walsh and Marie Therese (née Henley), Roman Catholics of Irish descent. She attended Our Lady of Mercy College, Heidelberg and the University of Melbourne, where she received a Bachelor of Arts. She later received a Bachelor of Laws from the University of Sydney. Crennan also completed a Postgraduate Diploma (History) at the University of Melbourne on the constitutional history of the state of Victoria.

Career

Susan Crennan High Court Justice Susan Crennan to retire paving way for

Crennan was a teacher of English literature and was employed by various patent attorneys in New South Wales and Victoria between 1967–1978. She was admitted as a barrister in New South Wales in 1979 and Victoria in 1980. She was made Queen's Counsel in Victoria in 1989 and in New South Wales in 1990. From 1992–1997, Crennan served as a commissioner of the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission (now the Australian Human Rights Commission), the peak human rights body in Australia. In 1993, Crennan was the first woman to be appointed chair of the Victorian Bar Council, and the following year the first female president of the Australian Bar Association. Between 2003–2005, she was a member of the Council of the University of Melbourne.

Crennan was appointed to the Federal Court in 2003 and took her seat on the bench on 3 February 2004.

In September 2005 it was announced that she would replace Justice Michael McHugh in the High Court. Attorney-General of Australia Philip Ruddock, on announcing Crennan's appointment, said that Crennan "demonstrated, through the quality of her jurisprudence and her leadership, that she has the confidence of the legal profession and the broader Australian community". She was sworn into the High Court by Chief Justice Murray Gleeson on 8 November 2005. The appointment made her the second female Justice to sit on the bench of the High Court of Australia, the first being Justice Mary Gaudron.

Retirement

After earlier plans to retire on her 70th birthday, in November 2014 it was announced that she would retire on 3 February 2015, five months before her 70th birthday. This was explained as being in order that her retirement would not coincide with the retirement of Justice Kenneth Hayne, also planned for around that time. That would have left the court with only five justices for a period, making it difficult to consider constitutional cases.

Her final cases included consideration of the legality of the detention of 157 Sri Lankan Tamil asylum seekers at sea in July 2014, under Operation Sovereign Borders.

She was replaced by Victorian Court of Appeal judge Geoffrey Nettle.

Honours

In January 2008 Crennan was awarded the highest Australian civilian honour, Companion of the Order of Australia (AC), for outstanding service to the law and the judiciary, particularly through leadership and mentoring roles with legal and professional associations, as a contributor to reform, and to the community.

Personal life

Crennan is married to Michael Crennan QC, a barrister, with whom she has three children.

References

Susan Crennan Wikipedia