Lennie Hoffmann, Baron Hoffmann

His father was a well-known solicitor who co-founded what has become Africa's largest law firm, Edward Nathan Sonnenbergs.[2][4] He was educated at the University of Cape Town and then attended The Queen's College, Oxford, as a Rhodes Scholar, where he studied for the BCL degree and won the Vinerian Scholarship.After being called to the Bar from Gray's Inn in 1964, Hoffmann became one of the most sought after and highly priced barristers of his generation and was quickly made a judge, having taken silk on 19 April 1977.Hoffmann gave the leading judgment in Investors Compensation Scheme Ltd v West Bromwich Building Society, in which he set out five principles for interpreting contracts.[15] Hoffmann's failure to declare his links with Amnesty International before ruling on whether Augusto Pinochet was immune from prosecution led to the unprecedented setting aside of a House of Lords judgment.This seems to me to underline the need for the judicial arm of government to respect the decisions of ministers of the Crown on the question of whether support for terrorist activities in a foreign country constitutes a threat to national security.However, in 2004, Hoffmann took a robust stand (joining the majority of judges in the decision) against the executive in the Belmarsh case, A v. SSHD [2004] UKHL 56.
The Right HonourableSecond Senior Lord of Appeal in OrdinaryElizabeth IIThe Lord Nicholls of BirkenheadThe Lord Hope of CraigheadLord of Appeal in OrdinaryThe Lord Collins of MapesburyCourt of Final Appeal of Hong KongIncumbentTung Chee-hwaCape TownUnion of South AfricaAlma materUniversity of Cape TownThe Queen's College, OxfordChineseYue: CantoneseYale RomanizationJyutpingthe interpretation of contractsUK company lawintellectual property lawpatentsMuizenbergEastern EuropeEdward Nathan SonnenbergsRhodes ScholarVinerian ScholarshipUniversity College, Oxfordcalled to the BarGray's Innbarristerstaken silkJerseyGuernseyknightedLord Justice of AppealChedworthTwinsectra v Yardleytrust lawtax lawLord MillettInvestors Compensation Scheme Ltd v West Bromwich Building SocietyCentre for Commercial Law StudiesQueen Mary, University of LondonHong Kong Court of Final AppealGold Bauhinia StarChief ExecutiveHong KongAmnesty InternationalAugusto Pinochetunprecedented setting asideHouse of LordsDaily TelegraphA v Secretary of State for the Home DepartmentLord DenningRe Augustus Barnett & Son LtdImprover v RemingtonNestle v National Westminster Bank plcEnglish trusts lawduty of careBishopsgate Investment Management Ltd v Maxwell (No 2)Re D'Jan of London LtdWilliam Sindall plc v Cambridgeshire County CouncilRe Saul D Harrison & Sons plcSouth Australia Asset Management Corp v York Montague LtdCo-operative Insurance Society Ltd v Argyll StoresBanque Financiere de la Cite v Parc (Battersea) LtdO'Neill v PhillipsBruton v London & Quadrant Housing TrustKirin-Amgen v Hoechst Marion RousselOBG Ltd v AllanTransfield Shipping Inc v Mercator Shipping IncThe AchilleasAttorney General of Belize v Belize Telecom LtdThe IndependentThe London GazetteThe Edinburgh GazetteWayback MachinePatrick ChanHong Kong order of precedenceJudiciary of Hong KongCourt of Final AppealHigh CourtCourt of AppealCourt of First InstanceDistrict CourtFamily CourtMagistrates' courtsLands Tribunal