Neil Young (judge)

Neil John Young is a Melbourne barrister, Queen's Counsel, and former Judge of the Federal Court of Australia. He served on the Federal Court from 30 November 2005 to 24 January 2007.

The Honourable

Neil John Young

QC
Judge of the Federal Court of Australia
In office
30 November 2005  24 January 2007
Personal details
Born7 January 1952
NationalityAustralian

Early life

Young was educated at St Bede's College, Mentone.[1] In 1973 Young completed his law degree with first class honours at Melbourne University.[2] He was a tutor at Melbourne University and Ormond College.[1] He completed a Masters at Harvard in 1977.[3]

His wife, Inga Arnadottir, is the Honorary Consul-General for Iceland in Australia.[3]

Career

Young was admitted to the Victorian Bar on 3 March 1975.[4] From 1975 to 1976 he was Judge's Associate to High Court Justice Sir Ninian Stephen.[1]

Young spent a year with a Wall Street law firm and a year working for the Australian practice Allen Allen & Hemsley,[3] before he began practising at the Victorian Bar in 1979. He practices commercial law, corporations law, trade practices, appeal cases and taxation. He was appointed Queen's Counsel in 1990. In 1997-1998 he was Chairman of the Victorian Bar, and President of the Australian Bar Association in 1999. In November 2005 he was appointed Judge of the Federal Court of Australia, at which time his colleagues described him as "one of the most organised people imaginable. Painstakingly so. He is conscientious and utterly measured in his courtroom presentation, much to the chagrin of fellow barristers whose cases fell to Young's medium-paced delivery."[5]

In January 2007 Young stepped down from the bench, returning to private practice.[4] In 2016 and 2017 the Doyle's list of 'Leading Competition Law Barristers' included Neil as one of Australia's leading preeminent Senior Counsels.[6][7]

His principle areas of practice are:[8]

  • Appellate
  • Banking and Financial Services
  • Commercial Law
  • Competition and Consumer Law/Trade Practices
  • Constitutional Law
  • Corporations and Securities
  • Equity
  • Intellectual Property
  • Taxation and Revenue
  • Trade Practices/Competition and Consumer
  • Trusts

He practices in the High Court, Victorian Supreme Court, the Federal Court and various other jurisdictions including New South Wales, Queensland, Tasmania, South Australia and Western Australia.[4]

gollark: Oh. I assumed they meant some COVID-19 milestone, but apparently they just meant the capitol mess.
gollark: Oh yes, true, blood loss is probably not linear.
gollark: Of course.
gollark: Of course, they should just unhook themselves from the blood draining machine.
gollark: Well, in this model, it is already too late, as they cannot make blood not go below 40% regardless of thing done.

References


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