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BARON WILLIAM VENTRIS FIELD FIELD (18...

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Originally appearing in Volume V10, Page 323 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BARON WILLIAM VENTRIS FIELD FIELD (1813-1907)  ,
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English judge, second son of Thomas Flint Field, of Fielden, Bedfordshire, was born on the zest of August 1813 . He was educated at King's school, Bruton,
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Somersetshire, and entered the legal profession as a
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solicitor . In 1843, however, he ceased to practise as such, and entered at the Inner Temple, being called to the bar in 1850, after having practised for some time as a
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special pleader . He joined the Western circuit, but soon ex-changed it for the Midland . He obtained a large business as a junior, and became a queen's counsel and bencher of his
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inn in 1864 . As a Q.C. he had a very extensive
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common law practice, and had for some time been the leader of the Midland circuit, when in
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February 1875, on the retirement of Mr Justice Keating, he was raised to the bench as a justice of the queen's bench . Mr Justice Field was an excellent puisne judge of the type that attracts but little public attention . He was a first-
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rate lawyer,had a good knowledge of commercial matters,
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great shrewdness and a
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quick intellect, while he was also painstaking and scrupulously
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fair . When the rules of the Supreme Court 1883 came into force in the autumn of that
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year, Mr Justice Field was so well recognized an authority upon all questions of practice that the lord chancellor selected him to sit continuously at Judges' Chambers, in order that a consistent practice under the new rules might as far as possible be established . This he did for nearly a year, and his name will always, to a large extent, be associated with the settling of the details of the new procedure, which finally did away with the former elaborate
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system of " special pleading." In 1890 he retired from the bench and was raised to the peerage as Baron Field of Bakeham, becoming at the same time a member of the privy council . In the House of Lords he at first took
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part, not infrequently, in the hearing of appeals, and notably delivered a carefully-reasoned
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judgment in the case of the
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Bank of England v . Vagliano Brothers (5th of March 1891), in which, with Lord Bramwell, he differed from the majority of his
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brother peers .

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long, however, deafness and advancing years rendered his attendances less frequent . Lord Field died at
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Bognor on the 23rd of
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January 1907, and as he
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left no issue the peerage became
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extinct .

End of Article: BARON WILLIAM VENTRIS FIELD FIELD (1813-1907)
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