Martin Daubney (judge)

Alfred Martin Daubney (born 18 January 1961) was appointed as a judge of the Supreme Court of Queensland in 2007. He is an honorary fellow of the Australian Catholic University, a member of the Senate of the University of Queensland, and is President of the King’s College council at the University of Queensland.

Education

Daubney attended Downlands College, a co-educational Catholic school located in Toowoomba. He graduated from the University of Queensland with a Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Laws.[1]

Legal career

After completing articles of clerkship Daubney was admitted as a solicitor in April 1987, becoming a barrister in 1998. He was appointed Senior Counsel in 2000.[2]

In addition to his practice in Queensland, he also practiced as a barrister in the High Court of Fiji from 1994-2007.[1]

While a barrister, Daubney was involved in the administration and regulation of the profession, first as Honorary Treasurer of the Bar association of Queensland from 1998-2005. In 2005 he held the position of Vice-President of the Queensland Bar Association, to be appointed President in 2006. Daubney was also a Director of the Law Council of Australia and a member of the Council of the Australian Bar Association from 2006-2007.[3]

While holding these positions within the Bar Association, he was an active member of the Management Committee of the Queensland Bar Practice Course from 2000-2007 and of the Legal Practitioners Admission Board, 2004-2007.[1]

In 2004-2005, Daubney chaired a Commission of Inquiry into the Queensland Thoroughbred Racing Industry.[4]

Judicial career

The Hon. Justice Daubney was sworn in as a Judge of the Supreme Court in the Trial Division on 18 July 2007. He has been involved in many cases of note, including some very serious cases in the criminal sphere and some important commercial matters.[5]

In July 2014 Daubney was accused by The Courier-Mail of being involve in a "deliberate campaign" against Queensland's Chief Justice Tim Carmody and of encouraging retired justices to attack Carmody publicly, which Daubney denied. Subsequently the Courier-Mail published a full apology in which it accepted the truth of Daubney's denial, and expressed its regret and apology for any suggestions that Daubney's denial was anything less than accurate and truthful. [6]

Extra judicial positions

Daubney has been President of the King's College Council at the University of Queensland since 2009 and has been a member of the Senate of the University of Queensland since 2010. Justice Daubney also served from 2007-2009 as the Chair of the Law School Advisory Committee for the University of Southern Queensland. In 2007 he was made an honorary fellow of the Australian Catholic University. He was a Director of the Stuartholme School Foundation from 2003-2011.

As a member of the University of Queensland's Senate, he was subject to an unlawful investigation by the Crime and Misconduct Commission following the university's admission scandal involving the admission of the daughter of then Vice Chancellor Paul Greenfield. Daubney challenged the legality of the investigation to the commission's parliamentary committee as the CMC's role does not involve the investigation of judicial officers in such a situation, even though he was performing in a non-judicial role.[7]

Daubney has also been a member of the Queensland Law Society's Commercial Litigation Specialist Accreditation Advisory Committee since 2007. He was a national Vice-President and Queensland Chair of the Australian Association of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta from 2008 to 2014, and has been a member of the Catholic Archdiocese of Brisbane Finance Council since 2011.[3]

Publications

References

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