Nolan was called to the
bar at the
Middle Temple in 1953, and specialised in tax law. He became a
Queen's Counsel (QC) in 1968, and was called to the Bar in
Northern Ireland in 1974, becoming a QC in Northern Ireland at the same time. He was a member of the
Bar Council in 1973 to 1974, and a member of the
Senate of the Inns of Court from 1974 to 1980. He became a
bencher at Middle Temple in 1975. He was a member of the Sandilands Committee on Inflation Accounting from 1973 to 1975. He was a
Recorder in the
Crown Court in Kent from 1975 to 1982, when he was appointed as a
High Court judge and assigned to the
Queen's Bench Division, receiving the customary
knighthood. In 1984, during the
miners' strike, he granted injunctions to the
National Coal Board to prevent the
National Union of Mineworkers using
flying pickets. He was Presiding Judge of the
Western Circuit from 1985 to 1988. He was promoted to the
Court of Appeal in 1991, joining the
Privy Council. He heard appeals in many high-profile cases, including the case brought by relatives of the football spectators who died at
Hillsborough in 1989, and in the case to review the decision not to bring prosecutions after the
Marchioness disaster in 1989. He sat with the
Master of the Rolls,
Lord Donaldson of Lymington, in
M v Home Office, finding
Home Secretary Kenneth Baker guilty of
contempt of court after he refused to bring an
asylum seeker back from
Zaire, where he had been
deported contrary to an earlier court order. He also sat in the constitution of the Court of Appeal which quashed the conviction of
Judith Ward for involvement in the bombing of a coach on the
M62 in 1974. After just over two years in the Court of Appeal, he was promoted to the
House of Lords in January 1994, becoming a
Lord of Appeal in Ordinary and receiving a
life peerage as a
Law lord, taking the title
Baron Nolan, of Brasted in the County of Kent. He retired as a law lord in 1998. ==Committee on Standards in Public Life==