The Honourable David Malcolm AC QC |
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Chief Justice of Western Australia |
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In office 26 May 1988 – 1 May 2006 |
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Preceded by | Sir Francis Burt |
Succeeded by | Wayne Martin |
Lieutenant-Governor of Western Australia |
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In office 26 February 1990 – 9 October 2009 |
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Monarch | Elizabeth II |
Governor | Sir Francis Burt (1990–1993) Michael Jeffery (1993–2000) John Sanderson (2000–2005) Ken Michael (2006–2009) |
Preceded by | Sir Francis Burt |
Succeeded by | Wayne Martin |
Personal details | |
Born |
Bunbury, Western Australia |
6 May 1938
Died | 20 October 2014 Perth, Western Australia |
(aged 76)
Alma mater |
University of Western Australia Wadham College, Oxford |
David Kingsley Malcolm, AC, QC (6 May 1938 – 20 October 2014) was the Chief Justice of Western Australia from May 1988 until his retirement from the bench in February 2006. He was also an expatriate justice of the Supreme Court of Fiji.
Born in Bunbury, Western Australia, Malcolm was educated at Guildford Grammar School in Perth and was awarded a Rhodes Scholarship in 1960. He studied for his BCL at Wadham College, Oxford. Before serving as Chief Justice, Malcolm was a deputy counsel for the Asian Development Bank and one of Western Australia's most prominent Queen's Counsel. He regularly appeared before the Privy Council. He was appointed Chief Justice of the Supreme Court on the retirement of the widely respected Francis Burt. In 1990 he also became Lieutenant-Governor of the state.
Malcolm earned great respect during his time as Chief Justice, and received great acclaim from the legal profession on his retirement on 7 February 2006. However, during his final year on the bench he came under increasing pressure, by the media, for perceived failings on the bench after he aborted a murder trial.
At his farewell, the Attorney-General, Jim McGinty, commented on the landmark judgement that Malcolm had handed down in the appeal of John Button, a high-profile case in which a manslaughter conviction was quashed over 30 years after the event. Wayne Martin replaced Malcolm as Chief Justice, and Malcolm later became Professor of Law at the University of Notre Dame Australia, Fremantle.