Lyman Duff

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The Right Honourable
Sir Lyman Duff
GCMG PC QC
Lyman Poore Duff.jpg
Lyman Poore Duff in 1910
8th Chief Justice of Canada
In office
March 17, 1933 – January 7, 1944
Nominated by Richard B. Bennett
Preceded by Francis Anglin
Succeeded by Thibaudeau Rinfret
18th Puisne Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada
In office
September 27, 1906 – March 17, 1933
Nominated by Wilfrid Laurier
Preceded by Robert Sedgewick
Succeeded by Frank Hughes
Personal details
Born Lyman Poore Duff
(1865-01-07)January 7, 1865
Meaford, Ontario
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Ottawa, Ontario
Alma mater University of Toronto, Osgoode Hall Law School

Sir Lyman Poore Duff GCMG PC QC (7 January 1865 - 26 April 1955) was the eighth Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada, was the longest serving justice of the Supreme Court of Canada,[1] and briefly served as Acting Governor General of Canada in 1931[disputed ] and 1940.

Early life and career

Born in Meaford, Canada West (now Ontario) to a Congregationalist minister, he received a Bachelor of Arts in mathematics and metaphysics in 1887, a Bachelor of Laws in 1889 from the University of Toronto and then entered Osgoode Hall Law School. He was called to the Ontario Bar in 1893. In 1901, he was created a Queen's Counsel. From 1890 to 1895, he was a mathematics teacher at Barrie Collegiate Institute. He was a lawyer in Fergus, Ontario and moved to Victoria, British Columbia in 1895 to practise law.

Judicial and other appointments

File:Lyman Duff.jpg
Bust of the Rt. Hon. Sir Lyman Duff in the Supreme Court of Canada building.

In 1904, he was appointed a puisne judge of the Supreme Court of British Columbia. In 1906 was appointed a justice of the Supreme Court of Canada. He was appointed Chief Justice of Canada in 1933, succeeding to Chief Justice Anglin. On January 14, 1914, he was appointed to Her Majesty's Most Honourable Privy Council.[2] Duff was the first Puisne Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada to be appointed to the Imperial Privy Council. In 1924 he was elected honorary bencher of Gray's Inn, at the recommendation of Lord Birkenhead.[3]

In 1931, he served as Administrator of the Government of Canada between the departure of Lord Bessborough for India and the arrival of Lord Tweedsmuir.[disputed ] Duff took on the position, as the Chief Justice was unavailable. In 1933, Duff was promoted to Chief Justice. He was made a Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St. Michael and St. George the following year[4] as a result of Prime Minister Richard Bennett's temporary suspension of the Nickle Resolution.

When Governor General Lord Tweedsmuir died in office on February 11, 1940, according to the rules of succession, Chief Justice Duff became the Administrator of the Government. He held the office for nearly four months, until King George VI appointed a new Governor General on June 21, 1940, acting on the advice of his Canadian Cabinet. Duff was the first Canadian to hold the position, even in the interim. A Canadian-born Governor General was not appointed until Vincent Massey in 1952.

Duff also heard more than eighty appeals on the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council, mostly Canadian appeals; however, he never heard Privy Council appeals from the Supreme Court of Canada while he served on the latter. The last Privy Council appeal heard by Duff was the 1946 Reference Re Persons of Japanese Race.[3]

Upon reaching the mandatory retirement age for judges in 1939, his term of office by three years by special Act of Parliament; in 1943, his term of office was extended for another year by Parliament.[3] He retired as Chief Justice in 1944.

Impact

Sir Lyman Duff poses with his bust at its official unveiling, Sept. 5, 1947. In photo: (L.-R.:) J.L. Ilsley, J.C. McRuer, Sir Lyman Duff, John T. Hackett, K.C., W.L. Mackenzie King, Thibaudeau Rinfret.

Duff employed a conservative form of statutory interpretation. In a 1935 Supreme Court judgment, he detailed how judges should interpret statutes:

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The judicial function in considering and applying statutes is one of interpretation and interpretation alone. The duty of the court in every case is loyally to endeavour to ascertain the intention of the legislature; and to ascertain that intention by reading and interpreting the language which the legislature itself has selected for the purpose of expressing it.[5]

Duff has been called a "master of trenchant and incisive English," who "wrote his opinions in a style which bears comparison with Holmes or Birkenhead."[6] A former assistant of Duff, Kenneth Campbell, argued that Duff was "frequently ranked as the equal of Justices Holmes and Brandeis of the United States Supreme Court,"[7] and Gerald Le Dain asserted that Duff "is generally considered to have been one of Canada's greatest judges."[8]

More recent commentary has focused on Duff's legal formalism and its effect on Canadian federalism. Bora Laskin attacked Duff's decisions, arguing that Duff used circular reasoning and hid his policy-laden decisions behind the doctrine of stare decisis.[9] As well, Lionel Schipper noted that, in reviewing Duff's judgments, it was:

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apparent that he has given certain factors very little consideration in formulating his decisions. ... In constitutional cases, not only are the actual facts of the case significant but the surrounding social, economic and political facts are equally significant. A shift in these latter factors is as important in deciding a case as any other change in the facts. It is this consideration that Chief Justice Duff ignored.[10]

Further reading

Biography

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Constitutional work

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Analysis

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Notes

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  2. Appointment notice at The London Gazette: no. 31427. p. 1. 1 July 1919. Retrieved 2012-12-13.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  4. Appointment notice at The London Gazette: (Supplement) no. 34010. p. 5. 29 December 1933. Retrieved 2009-04-21.
  5. The King v. Dubois 1935 CANLII 1 at 381, [1935] SCR 378 (13 May 1935), Supreme Court (Canada)
  6. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. at 51
  7. Campbell 1974, at 243
  8. Le Dain 1974, at 261
  9. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found., at 1069-70.
  10. Schipper 1956, at 11

References

Political offices
Preceded by Acting Governor General of Canada or administrator
1931 and 1940
Succeeded by
The Earl of Athlone