George Alexander Gale

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George Alexander Gale
Born(1906-06-24)June 24, 1906
DiedJuly 25, 1997(1997-07-25) (aged 91)
AwardsOrder of Canada

George Alexander Gale,

Chief Justice for the province of Ontario
, Canada from 1967 until his 1976 retirement from that post.

Born in Quebec City, he moved to Vancouver, British Columbia for his youth before settling in Toronto for his legal career.[1]

Education and career time line

  • 1929: Gale graduated from the University of Toronto where he received his Bachelor of Arts
  • 1932: Formally became a lawyer following further studies at the Osgoode Hall Law School
  • 1944: Became partner of Toronto legal firm Donald, Mason, Weir & Foulds (today known as WeirFoulds LLP)
  • 1946: Designated King's Counsel in 1946
  • October 30 1946: Became a judge for the Trial Division of Ontario's High Court of Justice
  • 1952: King's Counsel designation became
    Queen Elizabeth II
  • 1956: Chief editor for what became known as "Holmestead & Gale", a rewriting of Ontario's court rules
  • 1963: Became member of the Ontario Court of Appeal
  • June 1 1964: Became Chief Justice of Ontario's High Court of Justice
  • September 21 1967: Became Chief Justice of Ontario, the province's highest judicial position
  • 1968: Joined executive of the Canadian Judicial Council
  • 1969: Judicial Council of Ontario is created with Gale as its first Chairman
  • 1976: Retired as Chief Justice of Ontario, subsequently joining the Ontario Law Reform Commission as vice-chair
  • 1979: Joined the (Ontario) Premier's Advisory Committee on Confederation

Other roles

From 1956, he also served for a long term on the Board of Governors of

Wycliffe College, a Toronto theological school affiliated with the Anglican Church of Canada. He was also active within that church denomination as a member and Churchwarden
(1956–1960) of Toronto's St. John's York Mills parish.

Gale donated a trophy in 1973 for a competition which is today known as the Gale Cup Moot which demonstrates skills in legal argumentation using staged proceedings.

Brother in Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity (Alpha Phi, University of Toronto)

Honours

References

  1. ^ Skelton, Chad (28 July 1977). "Ontario chief justice on bench 30 years (obituary, with death notice on same page)". The Globe and Mail. pp. C10.
  2. ^ York University, list of honorary degrees

External links