|
Register Now!
|
|
Register now for vtap for the fastest and easiest way to watch web video on your mobile device!
|
|
This article is about the founder of a law firm. For other people of the same name, see Michael Fox.
Michael Fox (b. London, England on March 8, 1934) is an Israeli-British lawyer and founder of Herzog, Fox & Neeman (the largest law firm in Israel and the former law firm of Fox & Gibbons (UK, merged into Denton Wilde Sapte). Fox received his LL.B. degree (with honours) from King's College London, and was admitted as a Solicitor of the Supreme Court of England (1958) and to the Israel Bar (1969).
Fox is also a member of the International Bar Association and the Law Society of England and Wales. He is an expert in corporate law, especially in mergers & acquisitions and infrastructure development.
Michael Fox (February 27, 1921 - June 1, 1996) was an American character actor born in Yonkers, New York.
Two of his regular TV roles were as the coroner in the courtroom drama Perry Mason, and as Saul Feinberg on the CBS soap opera The Bold and the Beautiful from 1989-1996.
He is also notable for being the reason Michael J. Fox registered his name with a middle initial when he first joined the Screen Actors Guild (to differentiate his name from "Michael Fox").
Among his earlier television work was the next-to-last episode of Adventures of Superman, as the ringleader of a criminal gang that tried to conduct a Perils of Pauline-style series of murder attempts on the show's various protagonists (see illustration).
Fox died June 1, 1996, in Woodland Hills, Los Angeles, California.
Sir Michael John Fox (8 October 1921 - 9 April 2007) was a British barrister and judge. He was a High Court judge from 1975 to 1981 and a Lord Justice of Appeal from 1981 until 1992.
Fox was born in Ireland to Catholic parents, the youngest of four children. His father worked in the Irish Civil Service. His parents supported Michael Collins, and moved to England in 1922 as Éamon de Valera grew in popularity. Fox was educated at Drayton Manor School in Hanwell. His father died in 1930, and his mother remarried. His poor eyesight prevented him joining the armed forces during the Second World War, and worked in intelligence in the Admiralty from 1942 to 1945.
He read jurisprudence at Magdalen College, Oxford after the war, gaining a second-class degree in 1947 and then the Bachelor of Civil Law in 1948. He was called to the bar at Lincoln's Inn in 1949. He joined the chambers of Cyril Radcliffe at 3 New Square, as a pupil of John Sparrow (later Warden of All Souls College, Oxford). He practised as a Chancery barrister, dealing with tax, trusts, wills and real estate. He became a Queen's Counsel in 1968, and became head of his chambers in 1972.
He was appointed as a High Court judge in 1975, receiving the customary knighthood and becoming a Bencher at Lincoln's Inn. He was allocated to the Chancery Division, where he was involved in various high-profile cases. He refused an injunction to stop the Coventry Free Festival, held in Stoneleigh in Warwickshire, accepting undertakings to restrict the sound output and limit its opening hours; he granted an injunction to stop a clergyman from holding services at his church after he had been dismissed; and he granted Ladybird Books an injunction to stop David Sullivan publishing a "hardcore" pornographic magazine under the name "Ladybirds". He refused Bali bras permissions register their brand as a trade mark, as it would be confused with Berlei bras.
He was promoted to the Court of Appeal in 1981, and as is customary was sworn of the Privy Council. In 1984, he upheld the appeal by Victoria Gillick, that children should not be given contraceptives without their parents' consent, except in an emergency or with the permission of the court, [1985] 1 All ER 533. This judgment was narrowly overturned by a 3-2 majority on appeal to the House of Lords, [1986] AC 112. Also in 1984, he granted an injunction to stop The Daily Mirror from publishing information from bugged telephone conversations of National Hunt jockey John Francome, [1984] 2 All ER 408.
In 1985, he ordered the Metropolitan Police to give documents relating to the death of Blair Peach, a teacher killed in London in 1979 during a demonstration by the Anti-Nazi League against a National Front election meeting, to his family, who were suing the police, [1986] 2 All ER 129. In 1988, he ruled that Doreen Hill, mother of Jacqueline Hill, the last woman murdered by the "Yorkshire Ripper", Peter Sutcliffe, was not entitled to damages from West Yorkshire police, on the grounds that the police did not owe a duty of care to the victims of criminals that they failed to catch, even if they were negligent, [1987] 1 All ER 1173. This decision was upheld by the House of Lords, [1988] 2 All ER 238.
In 1990, he upheld the rulings that The Independent and The Sunday Times were in contempt of court for publishing extracts from Peter Wright's book Spycatcher, breaching court orders made against other newspapers, but fines of £50,000 were quashed. This decision was upheld by the House of Lords. Also in 1990, he rejected an appeal by "Miss Whiplash", Lindi St Clair, holding that her income from prostitution was subject to income tax as "profits from trade". He also delivered the lead judgment in influential cases such as Ashburn Anstalt v Arnold [1989] Ch 1, distinguishing a lease from a licence of land, and Agip (Africa) Ltd v Jackson [1991] Ch 547, on constructive trusts and the ability to trace funds.
He married fellow barrister Hazel Stuart, stepdaughter of Lord Denning, in 1954; later, as Lady Hazel Fox QC, she was director of the British Institute of International and Comparative Law from 1982 to 1989. They had three sons and a daughter together. He took early retirement in 1992 as a result of his failing eyesight, and he spent much time at the family farm, Nuthanger Farm, near Watership Down, Hampshire. He suffered from Alzheimer's disease in his later years. He was survived by his wife and their four children.
Michael Fox first "trod the boards" in grade school plays in his hometown of Yonkers, New York. After toying with the idea of becoming a history teacher, Fox did "something as foreign to my nature as one could think of, " becoming a "boomer" (a migratory railroad worker) and taking jobs as a brakeman with various lines. His interest in acting was rekindled in the mid-1940s and he appeared in several "little theater" plays in Los Angeles. An acting- directing stint in a Players Ring production of "Home of the Brave" caught the eye of Harry Sauber, an associate of exploitation mogul "Jungle Sam" Katzman, and Fox landed his first film role (Yank in Indo-China, A (1952)). He appeared in dozens of movies (and innumerable TV episodes) in the decades since; one of his regular TV roles was as the coroner in the courtroom drama "Perry Mason" (1957).



