During the first three decades of its existence, the reputation of the Court of Appeal was very high, probably higher than that of any other tribunal in Irish legal history.
Maurice Healy, writing in 1939, thought that the Court as it was constituted in the early 1900s "could compare with any college of justice in history". V.T.H. Delaney, writing in 1960, believed that all Irish
barristers would choose the old Court of Appeal as representing the Irish
judiciary at their best. This reputation depended largely on the quality of the individual judges:
Christopher Palles is still often called "the greatest of Irish judges", and
Gerald FitzGibbon,
Hugh Holmes and
Lord Ashbourne were his intellectual equals. Unfortunately, when these men were gone, there was a problem in finding replacements of equal calibre, and from about 1916, after the death of Fitzgibbon (in 1909), and the retirement of Holmes (in 1913) and Palles (in 1916), the reputation of the Court declined. In its last years, according to Healy, the judges were notable only for their constant quarrelling among themselves, and in 1924 the new
Irish Free State forcibly retired them all. ==Notes==