After the war's end, Menzies resumed the legal studies he had begun at the
University of Melbourne in 1910. He graduated
Bachelor of Laws in 1920 and was admitted to the
Victorian Bar in the same year. He began conducting prosecutions in the courts of
petty session and also appeared as a legal assistant before boards of inquiry and
royal commissions. Menzies was an unsuccessful candidate for
Nationalist preselection in the seat of
Toorak at the
1920 state election. In 1926, Menzies was appointed Crown Solicitor of Victoria in succession to Edward Guinness, who had held the position since 1889. He had previously served as assistant crown solicitor. In 1928, he was accused by
Eugene Gorman of improperly interfering in the trial of Gorman's client Ernest Kleinert, who had been charged with the murder of Menzies' cousin's wife Iolene Sampson. Kleinert was acquitted. As crown solicitor, Menzies was "responsible for conducting criminal prosecutions and for advising government departments and instrumentalities" and "superintended a wide range of litigation in the
Supreme Court and the
High Court of Australia". He was responsible for Victoria's submission to the
uniform tax case of 1942. Menzies retired as crown solicitor in 1954, having been appointed
Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in 1951. He subsequently served on the boards of several companies associated with
Staniforth Ricketson. In 1955, Menzies served on the three-member commission which determined the capital of the
Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland. He also served on the 1959
Monckton Commission into the federation's future as a representative of the Commonwealth of Nations. ==Personal life==