High Court McKechnie was appointed a
High Court judge in October 2000. He presided over competition matters in the High Court from 2004 to 2010. He also sat as a judge in the
Special Criminal Court and the
Court of Criminal Appeal. In the High Court, McKechnie made Ireland's first
declaration of incompatibility under the
European Convention on Human Rights Act 2003 in
Foy v An t-Ard Chláraitheoir. An editorial in the
Irish Examiner said the decision was "compassionate, sympathetic and landmark". Also in 2007, he decided in the
Mr. G case that an unmarried father had a right to withhold or give consent before their child is removed from the country. The Supreme Court upheld the decision. He heard a challenge to the legality of the
Twenty-eighth Amendment of the Constitution of Ireland in 2009. His decision in
Digital Rights Ireland v. Minister for Communications clarified the rules of
standing, outlining criteria required for a company to pursue an . In 2010, he was elected President of the Association of European Competition Law Judges Association of European Competition Law Judges, which represents judges from each of the
European Union member states. He was the first graduate of UCC to be appointed to the Supreme Court. Among his judgments adopted unanimously by the court included cases involving family law, judicial review, tax law, insolvency law, immigration law, European Union law, and extradition. McKechnie wrote dissents in significant decisions of the court. In 2015, in
DPP v. JC he formed the minority with
John L. Murray and
Adrian Hardiman, declining to depart from previous court decisions regarding the
exclusionary rule in Ireland. He disagreed with six other judges of the Supreme Court in 2017 in
DPP v Doyle by holding that people in custody had a right of access to a solicitor during questioning. In
Persona Digital Telephony Ltd v. Minister for Public Enterprise, Ireland he wrote the sole dissent from the majority regarding the position of
champerty and maintenance in Irish law. The approach of McKechnie in
Gorry v. Minister for Justice and Equality, where he held that there was a constitutional right for spouses to cohabit, was not adopted by his colleagues. He was a member of the Administration of Civil Justice Review Report chaired by
Peter Kelly which made recommendations on modernising and lowering the cost of civil litigation in the Irish courts. He retired upon reaching the mandatory retirement age of 70 in April 2021. == Personal life ==