Book
review
M Beloff, MJBQC: A Life
Within and Without the Law, Hart Publishing, 2022, ISBN
978-1-84946-666-0
1 One suspects that the publishers of MJBQC must have been grinding their
teeth as, shortly after publication, the death of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth
II rendered the author MJBKC and the book title an historical curiosity. Be
that as it may, this is a delightful account of the life and times of one of
Great Britain’s most distinguished lawyers and public figures and, so far
as the Channel Islands are concerned, judges. The author is apologetic for
serial name dropping, but when you have reached the pinnacle of your
profession, that is inevitable. As Isaiah Berlin remarked when similarly
challenged, “That is just what the Queen Mother was saying to me the
other day”.
2 Amongst other gems, the reader learns that
three of the author’s grandparents were gold medallists at the University
of St Petersburg while the fourth, Simeon, was born in the Russian shtetl of Tzczuzin. It was Simeon
(a man of business rather than an academic) who transferred the Beloff family (originally Rabinowitch)
to London early in the 20th century. The author’s father, Max Beloff, (Lord Beloff FBA, FRHistS, FRSA,) was an historian and life peer. Michael Beloff would no doubt admit to being born with a silver
spoon (silver-plated at least) in his mouth. Early life passed at the Dragon
School and Eton, followed by study at Magdalen
College, Oxford. He was President of the Oxford Union, which might have laid
the foundation for a career in politics, but that was not to be.
3 The author has compartmentalised
his autobiography as, to an extent, he has done to his life. The reader is taken
through Oxford of the 1960s, Gray’s Inn (because his mentor John Morris “did
not recognise even the existence of alternatives”), and the
successful application for silk at the age of 38. He recovered from the
congratulations of an Oxford neighbour who told him “I know someone once
who got silk and never received a single brief” and did indeed receive
many fascinating briefs, described with the self-deprecating dry humour which
is his hallmark.
4 In 1994 followed the transition to academia
when the author was appointed as President of Trinity College, Oxford. One of
his senior fellows was Dr Alan Milner, known to Channel Islanders as the
founder and editor in chief for many years of the Jersey Law Reports (and from 2000 of the Guernsey Law Reports too).
While abhorring any objectionable discrimination of any kind, he expresses
himself uncomfortable with the wokeness of focussing
on the “right” proportion of students from BAME backgrounds. As he
astutely observes, the English football team of 2020 would not have enjoyed the
success it did had its squad not been selected on the basis that they were the
pick of the footballing crop.
One of the undoubted privileges of the presidency is the ability to invite a glittering array of cabinet ministers,
ambassadors, lawyers, sportspeople, and other distinguished persons to
dine (or even lunch) at High Table. That is a particular privilege in Trinity
which has long enjoyed a well-deserved reputation for culinary excellence.
Sadly, I speak not from personal experience.
5 In 2006 it was farewell to Trinity, and a
return to the Bar or, as the author puts it “Second time around the
track”. Although Beloff claims it recalled the
lament of Count Orsino to his court musicians “’Tis not so sweet now as it
was before”, it was nonetheless, by the standards of lesser mortals, full
of interesting challenges and escapades. He advised the Garrick Club on the
legality, not the morality, of the maintenance of the bar to female membership,
later enjoying an excellent dinner to celebrate victory over the forces of
progress (on whose side he asserts he was).
He records his election as Treasurer of Gray’s
Inn and the stresses on the Master Treasurer’s waistband associated with
that high office. Interestingly, and rather
sadly, he writes of unsuccessful attempts to seek appointment to the
House of Lords.
6 Many in Jersey and Guernsey will enjoy the
chapter on “Politics and the Law”, and another entitled “Judge
Not Lest Ye Be Judged”. Subscribers from
the smaller Bailiwick will be particularly pleased that a photograph
appears of Beloff dressed for the Court of Appeal of
Guernsey (but not one of Jersey) and pointing out the apparently superior toque
worn in that jurisdiction. It is clear that his time as a judge of both appeal
courts in the Channel Islands was one of great enjoyment and stimulation. One
might regret some of the typos (clamor de haro) and the absence of accents (desastre) but these are minor gripes. He was sworn
in (by the author of this review) as an “ordinary judge of the Court of
Appeal”
in Jersey on 23 October 1995 and held office in both Bailiwicks for 19 years.
He says that he participated in over a hundred cases. Certainly, his
contribution to the jurisprudence of the Islands over a wide-ranging area of
law was remarkable. He made several important contributions to that
jurisprudence extrajudicially by writing for this Review.
But primarily it was in his judicial capacity that his mark was made in the
Islands. In Planning and Environment Committee v Lesquende
Ltd
he delivered the judgment of the Court of Appeal holding that judicial review
was available in Jersey to control abuse of executive power and that its
function was similar to that wielded in other common law jurisdictions; namely,
decisions could be quashed on grounds of illegality, irrationality or
procedural impropriety. That was one of the early foundations of this
significant area of administrative law.
7 Notwithstanding his enjoyment of judicial life,
his autobiography makes it clear that the author’s passions were more
often engaged by his involvement in sport. He missed an athletics blue at Oxford
by a whisker but later became involved as a lawyer in the burgeoning area of
sports law, both as an adviser and advocate and as an arbitrator. The chapter
entitled “My Sporting Life” is the longest in the book, and replete
with stories and anecdotes of his involvement with sportsmen and women and
their triumphs and disasters. He was involved with the Court of Arbitration for
Sport (both as advocate and arbitrator), the International Cricket Council (as
chairman), the British Association for Sport and Law (President for two terms)
and countless other sporting organisations both national and international. The
author contends persuasively that a lex sportiva has emerged embracing contract,
administrative, employment and intellectual property law, amongst others. He
co-authored one of the first books on sports law and continues to edit the
Sweet and Maxwell International Sports Law Review.
8 This is an exhilarating and engaging story of a
legal life which is at times learned, and at times reflective, but always
hugely entertaining. You should buy it!
Sir Philip
Bailhache was the Bailiff of Jersey and President of the Jersey Court of Appeal
between 1995 and 2009. He has been the Editor of the Jersey and Guernsey Law
Review since its foundation (as the Jersey Law Review) in 1997.