Giraud was Minister of Public Instruction in two cabinets in 1851, and was a member of the consultative council. On 26 October 1851
Eugène Corbin, procureur-général at
Bourges, was appointed Minister of Justice to replace
Eugène Rouher, whose resignation had been accepted. In the same decree Giraud was appointed Minister of Education and Religious Affairs, and was named interim Minister of Justice in Corbin's absence. Corbin did not accept the appointment. On 1 November 1851
Alfred Daviel was made Minister of Justice. Giraud resigned from the consultative council in August 1852 after the confiscation of the property of the
House of Orléans. He then became professor of Roman Law in the faculty of Paris. In 1861 he succeeded Laferriere as inspector general of the judiciary. He died in Paris on 13 July 1881, aged 79. ==Works==