William Ballantine
Serjeant William Ballantine | |
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St Paul's School | |
Occupation | Lawyer |
Serjeant William Ballantine SL (3 January 1812 – 9 January 1887) was an English Serjeant-at-law, a legal position defunct since the legal reforms of the 1870s.
Early career
Born in Howland Street,
Serjeant-at-Law
Ballantine became a Serjeant-at-law in 1856, being then entitled to wear the white coif or cap of that rank (see illustration). He was one of the last Serjeants in the courts, that title and position being abolished in the judicial reforms of 1873. During the 1860s, he took on a number of high-profile cases.
Mordaunt divorce trial
Ballantine served as
It became clear that because of these revelations that the Prince of Wales would have to be summoned to court to give evidence in the case. Although he could be
Ballantine, as counsel for Lord Mordaunt, the plaintiff, was entitled to cross-examine the Prince of Wales. Instead, in an attempt to save the Prince from any embarrassment, he declared that he had no questions for His Royal Highness, thus saving the Prince's honour. However, Ballantine lost the case because he had failed to convince the jury that Lady Mordaunt was guilty.
Retirement
In the early 1880s, Ballantine retired from the law in order to write and travel, publishing several volumes of reminiscences. His interest in the theatre and journalism made him a familiar sight around London. Although he was recognised as an incisive cross-examiner, Ballantine was not regarded by his peers as being 'a model legal mind.'[citation needed] The Law Times, in a brief notice,[1] stated that Ballantine "left behind him scarcely any lesson, even in his own poor biography, which the rising generation could profitably learn." But in the same issue there is a full obituary with a detailed description of his life and career, ending with "[…] he had an individuality of character which gave him a position almost unique in the estimation of the public. His intimate acquaintance with human nature made him an excellent prosecutor or counsel for the defence in criminal trials. […] He was a skilful cross-examiner, an amusing speaker, and a great adept in the art of penetrating the motives and designs of criminals."
He died at Margate on 9 January 1887, aged 75 years. Ballantine's private life was considered Bohemian; and though he earned large sums, he died poor. Barrister and politician Sir Edward Clarke wrote [2] that Ballantine spent the latter part of his life "in exile at Boulogne, only being saved from poverty by the allowance made him by his son, which was generously supplemented by six members of the Bar".
Family
On 4 December 1841, he married Eliza, daughter of Henry Gyles of London. The DNB [3] reports that he left no issue, but a variety of other sources[4][5] record that he was the father of William Henry Walter Ballantine, an attorney on the South Eastern Circuit and a Member of Parliament.
Other cases
Among Ballantine's other notable cases were:
- his successful prosecution of Franz Mullerfor the murder of Mr. Briggs in 1864,
- his successful prosecution of Madame Rachel for fraud in 1868,
- his skilful defence of the Tichborne claimantin 1871, and
- his defence of the Gaekwad (Gaekwar) Maharaja of Baroda in 1875, his fee in this last case being one of the largest ever known at the time. [citation needed]
Notes
References
- Seccombe, Thomas (1901). Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography (1st supplement). Vol. 1. London: Smith, Elder & Co. . In
- Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
- 'In Vanity Fair' by Roy T Matthews and Peter Mellini. Scolar Press, London and the University of California Press, Berkeley and Los Angeles. (1982) pgs 115-6
- Foster, Joseph. Men At The Bar. London: Hazell, Watson and Viney, 1885.
- Clarke, Sir Edward. The Story of My Life. London, J. Murray, 1918.