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Joseph Cantley

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Sir Joseph Donaldson Cantley OBE QC (8 August 1910 – 6 January 1993) was an English barrister and High Court judge. He is best remembered for being the judge in the trial of Jeremy Thorpe in 1979.

Early life

Cantley was born in Manchester, where his father was a general practitioner. He was educated at Manchester Grammar School and then studied law at Manchester University. He was called to the bar at Middle Temple in 1933, and came top in his bar finals examination, gaining first-class honours and the Certificate of Honour.

He became a barrister in Manchester, with a pupillage under Denis Gerrard and then practising on the Northern Circuit.

Cantley served in the British Army in the Second World War, first in the Royal Artillery and then on staff appointments, spending time in North Africa and Italy. He became an Officer of the Order of the British Empire in 1945, and was demobilised as a lieutenant colonel.

He returned to the bar after the war. He had a mixed practice, specialising in contract law cases. He became a QC in 1954, and a Bencher at Middle Temple in 1963. He served as Treasurer at Middle Temple in 1981.

One of his last trials was leading for the prosecution when Gwynne Evans and Peter Allen were convicted for the murder of John Alan West in 1964, which led to the last two judicial executions in Britain before the abolition of the death penalty in 1965.

Judicial career

Cantley became Judge of the Court of Record in the Hundred of Salford in Lancashire in 1960, and was Judge of Appeal in the Isle of Man High Court from 1962 to 1965. He was appointed as a High Court judge in 1965, allocated to the Queen's Bench Division, and received the customary knighthood.

He was Presiding Judge on the Northern Circuit from 1970 to 1974. He had a low public profile until he presided at the trial of Jeremy Thorpe in May–June 1979, shortly after the 1979 UK general election on 3 May 1979 - so much so that no press agency could find a photograph of him.[citation needed] Thorpe was acquitted, and Cantley's summing up roundly condemned the prosecution witnesses and praised the defendants, while claiming not to express an opinion. His summing up was parodied by Peter Cook in a sketch "Entirely a Matter for You" performed at the Secret Policeman's Ball at the end of June 1979. Cantley was considered as Presiding Judge on the South Eastern Circuit, but declined to become Treasurer of Middle Temple in 1981.

He married Hilda Gerrard in 1966, widow of his former pupil-master, Denis Gerrard. He retired from the bench in 1985. In later life, he lived with his wife in the Temple and attended the Temple Church.

References