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RMIT GSBL Justice Smith Collection
Report, Ingleby, Richard, In the ball park: alternative dispute resolution and the courts, 1991
ISBN: 1875527044divorce mediation -- australia, dispute resolution (law) -- australia -
RMIT GSBL Justice Smith Collection
Report, Aronson, Mark, Managing complex criminal trials: reform of the rules of evidence and procedure, 1992
ISBN: 1875527087criminal procedure -- australia, law reform -- australia -
RMIT GSBL Justice Smith Collection
Report, Papers presented at the tenth annual AIJA conference, 1992
7-8 September 1991 Adelaide Improving the trial process Evidence in courts and tribunals DNA evidence Presentation of scientific evidence in court Professional liability and responsibility Erratum note stapled inside front coverISBN: 1875527079justice: administration of -- australia -- congresses, criminal procedure -- australia, evidence: criminal -- australia, criminal procedure -- australia -- congresses, evidence: criminal -- australia -- congresses -
RMIT GSBL Justice Smith Collection
Report, Reform of court rules and procedures in criminal cases : a collection of papers presented at an AIJA conference in Brisbane on 3-4 July 1998, 1998
ISBN: 1875527230criminal procedure -- australia, justice: administration of -- australia, court rules -- australia, criminal procedure -- australia -- congresses, justice: administration of -- australia -- congresses, court rules -- australia -- congresses -
RMIT GSBL Justice Smith Collection
Report, Parker, Stephen, Courts and the public, 1998
ISBN: 1875527222courts -- customer services -- australia, civil procedure -- australia, courts -- australia, justice: administration of -- australia, courts -- australia -- public opinion, court administration -- australia -
RMIT GSBL Justice Smith Collection
Report, Olsson, L. T, Guide to uniform production of judgments : second edition, 1999
Second editionISBN: 1875527257justice: administration of -- australia -- forms, law reporting -- australia -- forms, judgments -- australia -- forms, judgments -- australia -
RMIT GSBL Justice Smith Collection
Report, Corns, Chris, Anatomy of long criminal trials, 1997
ISBN: 1875527206criminal justice: administration of -- australia, trials -- australia -
RMIT GSBL Justice Smith Collection
Report, Moloney, Garrie J. et al, Cross-vesting of jurisdiction: a review of the operation of the national scheme, 1992
ISBN: 1875527095australia. jurisdiction of courts (cross-vesting) act 1987, federal government -- australia, courts -- australia, jurisdiction -- australia -
RMIT GSBL Justice Smith Collection
Report, Australian Institute of Judicial Administration Incorporated, Australian court libraries : guidelines for appellate courts, 1998
A working group of court librarians convened by Ms Wendy Ryan, Librarian of the Supreme Court of Western AustraliaISBN: 1875527214law libraries -- standards -- australia, appellate courts -- australia, criminal justice libraries -- standards -- australia, criminal justice libraries -- australia -
RMIT GSBL Justice Smith Collection
Report, Cairns, B. C, The use of discovery and interrogatories in civil litigation, 1990
ISBN: 0959002987discovery (law) -- australia, interrogatories -- australia -
RMIT GSBL Justice Smith Collection
Report, Sallmann, Peter, Report on criminal trials, [1985]
Shorter trials committee Written for the Committee by Peter A. SallmannISBN: 0958905509trials -- victoria, trial practice -- victoria, criminal procedure -- victoria -
RMIT GSBL Justice Smith Collection
Report, Greenleaf, Graham et al, Information technology in complex criminal trials, 1993
ISBN: 1875527117criminal procedure -- australia, information storage and retrieval systems -- law, court administration -
RMIT GSBL Justice Smith Collection
Report, Papers presented at the ninth annual AIJA conference, 1991
18-19 August 1990 Melbourne Cost of justice Alternative dispute resolution Electronic recording of police interviews with crime suspects ISBN: 1875527028costs (law) -- australia, dispute resolution (law) -- australia, police questioning -- australia, costs (law) -- australia -- congresses, dispute resolution (law) -- australia -- congresses, police questioning -- australia -- congresses -
RMIT GSBL Justice Smith Collection
Report, Brereton, David et al, The committal in Australia, 1990
ISBN: 1875527001preliminary examinations (criminal procedure) -- australia -
RMIT GSBL Justice Smith Collection
Report, Bedford, Narelle et al, Inquisitorial processes in Australian tribunals, 2006
ISBN: 1875527478administrative courts -- australia, governmental investigations -- australia, inquisitorial system -
RMIT GSBL Justice Smith Collection
Report, Opeskin, Brian, Appellate courts and the management of appeals in Australia, 2001
ISBN:187552729xappellate procedure -- australia, appellate courts -- australia -
RMIT GSBL Justice Smith Collection
Report, Barnard, Alan et al, Financing the Australian courts, 1989
ISBN: 0959002952court administration -- australia, courts -- australia, courts -- australia -- finance, australia -- appropriations and expenditures -
RMIT GSBL Justice Smith Collection
Report, Cranston, Ross et al, Delays & efficiency in civil litigation, 1985
Revised edition First published 1984ISBN: 0959002901court congestion and delay -- australia, civil procedure -- australia, actions and defenses -- australia -
RMIT GSBL Justice Smith Collection
Report, Freckelton, Ian et al, Australian magistrates' perspectives of expert evidence : a comparative study, 2001
ISBN: 1875527400police magistrates -- australia -- attitudes, magistrates -- australia -- attitudes, evidence: expert -- australia -
RMIT GSBL Justice Smith Collection
Book, International Conference on Therapeutic Jurisprudence. 2006, Perth, Australia, 3rd International Conference on Therapeutic Jurisprudence : transforming legal processes in court and beyond, 2007
therapeutic jurisprudence -- australia -- congresses, therapeutic jurisprudence -- congresses -
Supreme Court of Victoria Library
Portrait, Sir William Stawell
The portrait was commissioned in 1884, near the end of Stawell's term of office. The portrait was commissioned at the same time as those of Redmond Barry and Justice Molesworth. The total cost of all three paintings was 1200 pounds. Sir William Stawell arrived in Victoria in 1842; he quickly established a reputation for himself at the Bar. After the separation of the Port Phillip colony from New South Wales, Sir William served as the attorney general in the first representative government and was the leading prosecutor in the Eureka trials. Sir William was appointed as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court in 1857, serving 29 years in the post. In addition the township of Stawell was named after the recently appointed Chief Justice in 1858. The portrait is of historical significance as a portrait of Sir William Stawell.Full length portrait in oils of Sir William Stawell. Stawell is seated and dressed in his judicial robes. Signed and dated 1887 lower right hand corner of the painting. Plaque identifying subject. The Hon. Sir W.F. Stawell.K.C.M.C Chief Justice of the Supreme Court 1857-1886judges, william stawell -
Supreme Court of Victoria Library
Portrait, Sir William a'Beckett
Correspondence held by the library has John Denniston Wood (1829-1914), a barrister and politician, presenting the portrait to the Library Committee in 1867. Wood hopes that the painting will "hang there [in the Court] in like manner as the portraits of many of the sages of the law are held in the Courts at Guildhall". Wood also provides information about the painter, Mr Mosely "now deceased", but who was "selected by Sir WIlliam himself" to undertake the commission. Early accounts have the painting hanging in a prominent position in the 'old' Court house at La Trobe and Russell Streets; the portrait was moved down to the library in 1884, when the portraits of Barry, Stawell and Molesworth were also commissioned. Sir William a'Beckett was the first chief justice of the colony of Victoria, having previously had a busy career at the Sydney bar. The portrait is of historic signifcance because of its subject Sir William a'Beckett and its long association with the Court. A full length portrait of Sir William a'Beckett, seated and dressed in his judicial robes. With ornate gold frame with acorn motif.Plaque identifying subject : Sir William a'Beckett, Knight, resident judge of the Supreme Court of New South Wales for the district of Port Phillip from 1846 to 1852, First Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Victoria from Jan.1852 to Feb 1857.judges, william a beckett, supreme court -
Supreme Court of Victoria Library
Portrait, George Higinbotham
The portrait was commissioned after Higinbotham's death in 1893. A committee was appointed to investigate the making of a portrait and they appointed Mr L Bernard Hall, instructor and later director of the National Gallery of Victoria. George Higinbotham (1826-1892) had a distinguished career as a newspaper editor and politican before becoming a Judge of the Supreme Court in 1880 and the third Chief Justice in 1886. Higinbotham was a long serving attorney-general in the 1860s colonial administration. Higinbotham was active in the education, land and constitutional debates of his time. He played a prominent role through his chairmanship of the of the Royal Commission into Public Instruction with regard to the introduction of the free and secular primary school education.The portrait of George Higinbotham is of historic significance as the depiction of an important public figure in 19th Century Victoria. The painting is also of interest as an early example of L Bernard Hall's Australian works. Portrait in Oils of George Higinbotham. Higinbotham is seated at his desk, pen in hand. He is dressed in his judicial robes, ready for Court.Signed Lower right B Hall 95. Plaque on frame : The Hon. George Higinbotham Judge of the Supreme Court 1880-1886 Chief Justice of the Supreme Court 1866-1892supreme court, higinbotham george, hall bernard -
Supreme Court of Victoria Library
Portrait, Sir Robert Molesworth
The portrait was commissioned in 1884, near the end of Molesworth's term of office. The portrait was commissioned at the same time as those of Redmond Barry and Chief Justice Stawell. Robert Molesworth, like his contemporaries, Stawell and Barry, went to Trinity College, Dublin, and practiced at the Irish Bar before migrating to Australia in 1852. Molesworth quickly gained a large practice at the Bar. In 1853 he was acting Chief Justice and he later served as Solicitor-General in the early Victorian colonial administrations. Molesworth was appointed to the bench in 1856. He primarily worked in the Equity area, but his main contribution to Colonial administration was as the Chief Judge of the Court of Mines, establishing the basis of mining law in Australia.The portrait of Molesworth is significant because of whom it portrays and is the only known portrait of Molesworth.Full length portrait in oils of Sir Robert Molesworth. He is seated at a desk and dressed in Judicial robes. The frame is of 20th century originSigned with monogram and dated 1885 lower left. Plaque identifies sitter as The Hon. Sir Robert Molesworth Judge of the Supreme Court. 1856-1886courts, molesworth robert, a beckett edward -
Supreme Court of Victoria Library
Portrait, Sir Edmund Herring, 1963
Sir Edmund Herring had a military career before becoming the Chief Justice of Victoria in 1944. Sir Edmund served as an artillery officer with the British Army in World War One and was awarded the Military Cross. While he returned to the Law between the wars, becoming King's Counsel in 1936, he continued his military associations through Australian Militia Forces, rising to colonel by the start of the Second World War. At the outset of WWII Herring was appointed as Commander of the Royal Artillery for the Australian Sixth Division. Herring saw service in North Africa and Greece and was in charge of Australian Northern forces in 1942, afterwards working with General Blamey in Papua New Guinea. Sir Edmund was appointed Chief Justice, straight from his army command in 1944. As Chief Justice he quickly established the Law Reform Committee and after the war oversaw the extension of the Supreme Court buildings, with the creation of new Courts. He was considered an able administrator, but his refusal to appoint Joan Rosanove a Queen’s Counsel throughout the 1950s, did not sit well with many legal practitioners. After his retirement from the Bench, he continued in his many public activities, including trustee of the Shrine of Remembrance and the Australian War Memorial and a member of the Melbourne Grammar School Council, as well as Lieutenant Governor of the State of Victoria, a position he held from 1945 to 1972. Herring was also an outspoken social critic; between the wars he had been a member of the White Guard, who were a far right group acting against communism. During the Cold War period of the 1950s, Herring spoke out in favour of the British Empire and the American alliance. The portrait of Sir Edmund Herring is the second one that Sir William Dargie (1912-2003), completed of Sir Edmund; his first effort in 1944/45 won the Archibald prize. Dargie won the Archibald prize a record eight times. His fame as a portrait painter was not without controversy, as he was considered ‘safe’ and the favourite of conservative sitters, particularly as many of his Archibald winners were of ‘Captains of Industry’. While no Archibald prize was awarded for this portrait, it is an interesting counterpoint to Dargie’s 1944/45 portrait. The portrait of Sir Edmund Herring is significant because of whom it portrays and the artist William Dargie who painted it.Portait in oils of Sir Edmund Herring. This is a half portrait of Sir Edmund in his red judicial robes. Gold leaf frame, with plaque.Plaque reads "The Honourable Sir Edmund Francis Herring, KCMG, KBE, DSO, MC, ED. Chief Justice of the Supreme Court 1944-1964"edmund herring, william dargie -
Supreme Court of Victoria Library
Portrait, Robert Dowling, Sir Redmond Barry, 1886
This painting was created by Robert Dowling (1827-1886) in 1885. At this time Dowling was considered Australia's best portraitist. Dowling had been born in England, but migrated to Van Diemen's Land in the early 1830s with his parents. Dowling worked in both Tasmania and Victoria as an artist, before returning to England in 1857. He did not return to Australia until 1884 and received eighteen commissions for portraits. The Barry portrait was commissioned after Barry's death which explains some of the mistakes in the depiction of Barry's robes; the fur cuffs and collar are too large, and the cummerbund is sitting in the wrong place. Sir Redmond Barry is an important figure in Colonial Victorian History, responsible for the establishment and support of some of our finest cultural institutions (the University of Melbourne, the State Library of Victoria, the Supreme Court Library, and aspects of the Museum of Victoria's collection). This is in addition to his role as barrister defending aborigines in the 1840s and his position as a foundation judge of the Supreme Court of Victoria, a position he held for nearly 30 years, presiding over two of the most well known of colonial trials: the Eureka Trials in 1854 and the Kelly trial in 1880.The portrait of Sir Redmond Barry is significant because of the historical importance of Redmond Barry in colonial Victorian history. The painting is also of aesthetic significance as the work of the distinguished portraitist Robert Dowling. Portrait in oils of Sir Redmond Barry. Barry is depicted standing, dressed in red Judicial robes, his hand resting on a chair; behind is a table with books.Signed and dated 1886 (lower left) by Robert Dowling.redmond barry, portraits, judges, robert dowling -
Greensborough Historical Society
Book - Biographical dictionary, Who's who in Australia, 1980o
Biographical entries of prominent Australians, including political and judicial appointeesHard cover book with worn edges, paper dust jacketaustralians, biographies, achievements -
Federation University Historical Collection
Book, Tulloch & King, Printers, M. McCallum's Ballarat District Citizens and Sports, 1916, 1916
A biographical gallery of "Who's Who" in public, political, official, judicial, patriotic, naval, military, charitable, professional, scientific, artistic, journalistic, ecclesiastical, religious, temperance, industrial, clerical, mercantile, commercial, aerial, scholastic, social club, musical, dramatic, friendly society, fraternal, athletic and sporting life, with Ballarat associations, past or present.Small hard covered brown book of 142 pages including advertisements.Stamped "The School of Mines Industries & Science Ballaratballarat district citizens and sports, m. m. mccallum, ballarat, citizens and sports at home and abroad, citizens and sports, political, official, judicial, patriotic, naval, military, charitable, professional, scientific, artistic, journalistic, ecclesiastical, religious, temperance, industrial, clerical, mercantile, commercial, aerial, scholastic, social club, musical, dramatic, friendly society, fraternal, athletic and sporting life, ballarat associations, clarendon college advertisement, wiles cooker, e. rowlands, koomah spa, thomas a. williams, leslie coulter, lela lake, margaret mcnanamny, leslie morshead, alice thwaites, james wiles, alfred williams -
Greensborough Historical Society
Article - Newspaper Clipping, Banyule withdraws from NE Link lawsuit, 05/08/2020
Banyule Council withdraws from the judicial review of the North East link Project, hoping to gain improvements to the Project design which will benefit the local community.News clipping, black and white text and image.north east link, banyule council, alison champion -
Supreme Court of Victoria Library
Portrait, Sir Edmund Herring, 1964
The portrait of Chief Justice Sir Edmund Herring is significant because of whom it portrays and who painted it. Sir Edmund Herring (1892-1982), had a military career before becoming the Chief Justice of Victoria in 1944. Sir Edmund served as an artillery officer with the British Army in World War One and was awarded the Military Cross. While he returned to the Law between the wars, becoming Kings Counsel in 1936, he continued his military associations through the Australian Militia forces rising to colonel by the start of the Second World War. At the outset of World War Two Herring was appointed as Commander of the Royal Artillery for the Australian Sixth Division. Herring saw service in North Africa and Greece and was in charge of Australian Northern forces in 1942, afterwards working with General Blamey in Papua New Guinea. It was at this time that Herring confirmed the death sentences of 22 Papuans who had been found guilty of murder and treason. Sir Edmund was appointed Chief Justice, straight from his army command in 1944. As Chief Justice he quickly established the Law Reform Committee and after the war oversaw the extension of the Supreme Court buildings, with the creation of new Courts. He was considered an able administrator, but his refusal to appoint Joan Rosanove a Queen’s Counsel throughout the 1950s, did not sit well with many legal practitioners. After his retirement from the Bench, he continued in his many public activities, including trustee of the Shrine of Remembrance and the Australian War Memorial and a member of the Melbourne Grammar School Council, as well as Lieutenant Governor of the State of Victoria a position he held from 1945 to 1972. Herring was also an outspoken social critic, between the wars he had been a member of the White Guard, who were a far right group acting against communism. During the Cold War period of the 1950s, Herring spoke out in favour of the British Empire and the American alliance. The portrait of Chief Justice Sir Edmund Herring is significant because of whom it portrays and who painted it. The portrait of Sir Edmund Herring is the second one that Sir William Dargie (1912-2003), completed of Sir Edmund, his first effort in 1944/45 won the Archibald prize. Dargie won the Archibald prize a record eight times.Portrait in oils of Sir Edmund Herring, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Victoria (1944-1964). Sir Edmund is seated, this is a half portrait, dressed in his red judicial robes. The sitter takes up most of the frame and there is very little extra information in the picture. signed lower left "Dargie'. Plaque with the following details : Sir Edmund Francis Herring, KCMG, KBE, DSO, MC, ED. Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, 1944-1964.judges, herring