High Court and Supreme Court She became a
High Court judge in 1991. In 1992, at the age of 47, she was the first woman appointed to the
Supreme Court. She was considered for appointment to the role of President of the High Court in 1994, but declined to have her name put forward. She made two dissents early on in her period on the Court. In 2001, she was the sole member of the Supreme Court to dissent in
TD v Minister for Education. The court overturned a decision of
Peter Kelly in the High Court to direct the government to build secure care units for certain children. The majority held in the Supreme Court that it would violate the separation of powers for the judicial arm of government to direct how the state was to administer its resources which was a right reserved under the Constitution for the legislative and executive arms of government. From 1995 to 1998, she chaired the Working Group on a Courts Commission, which was responsible for a significant reform of the organisation of the courts since the foundation of the state. It led to the establishment of the
Courts Service. From 2006, she chaired the Working Group on a Court of Appeal. The report of the group was published by the government in August 2009. It recommended the establishment of a general
Court of Appeal. This was ultimately established in 2014, after a
referendum in 2013.
Chief Justice of Ireland On 4 July 2011, she was nominated by
Taoiseach Enda Kenny to become
Chief Justice of Ireland, and she was appointed as Chief Justice by
President Mary McAleese on 25 July 2011. She was the first woman appointed to the office and as a member of the
Church of Ireland, she was the first non-Catholic to hold the position. She was also the first graduate of
Trinity College Dublin to have been appointed to the office; Chief Justices have largely been graduates of
University College Dublin. She succeeded
John L. Murray. During her tenure as Chief Justice, the Supreme Court issued suspended declarations of unconstitutionality for the first time. The court first adopted this approach in
N.V.H v Minister for Justice & Equality in May 2017. As Chief Justice, she oversaw changes in the operations of the Supreme Court and the courts generally. She oversaw the removal of the requirement for judges to wear wigs while hearing cases. In 2015, the Supreme Court sat outside Dublin for the first time since 1931, sitting in
Cork. She corresponded with the
Office of Public Works over the lack of heating in the
Four Courts, threatening to cancel sittings if the issue was not resolved. She advocated for the inclusion of a new courtroom for the Supreme Court in plans to develop a new family court complex on Hammond Lane. In her capacity as Chief Justice, she oversaw the administration of the Presidential Declaration of Office at the inauguration of President
Michael D. Higgins in
Dublin Castle in November 2011. She retired from the position in July 2017 and was succeeded by Judge
Frank Clarke. She was the third-longest serving Supreme Court judge ever at the time of her retirement. In her remarks on her retirement, she drew attention to the government's failure to institute a judicial council, having first attempted to persuade the government to establish one in 1997.
Post-retirement In 2019, she was made an honorary fellow of
Trinity College Dublin. She was appointed on a non-statutory basis as the relevant section in the Judicial Council Act 2019 on judicial conduct had not yet been commenced. == Personal life ==