John Reed (judge)Sir John Ranken Reed CBE KC (26 December 1864 – 22 April 1955) was a New Zealand judge. Reed was the eldest son of George McCullagh Reed, a newspaper proprietor, and Jessie Chalmers Reed (née Ranken). He was born in Ipswich, Queensland, where his father had moved to in 1861 to be the Presbyterian minister.[1] His brother was Vernon Reed.[2] He received his education at Auckland Grammar School, Dunedin High School, Victoria College, Jersey, and Clare College in the University of Cambridge, England.[3] He served his articles with Devore and Cooper in Auckland and was admitted as a barrister in June 1887. He had a practice in the Bay of Islands and relocated to Auckland in early 1896, where he joined William Thorne.[3] In 1898, Reed set up his own practice in Auckland.[4] In 1900, he took James Every Stephen Bailey into a partnership under the banner of Reed and Bailey.[4] In 1912, Roland Perceval Towle joined the partnership, and their practice was known as Reed, Bailey and Towle.[4] Bailey retired at the end of 1919 and two of the staff became partners instead, and the practice was then known as Reed, Towle, Hellaby, and Cooper.[5] For a time, Reed was president of the Auckland Law Society.[6] Outside of the judiciary, Reed had a strong interest in military matters and in 1911, he was appointed Judge Advocate General of the New Zealand Territorial Forces.[6] In November 1912, Reed was appointed King's Counsel.[6] In February 1921, he was appointed judge to the Supreme Court; this was the first of two appointments triggered by the retirement of Justice Chapman and the resignation of Justice Cooper.[7][8] He retired from his practice at the end of February 1921 but the name did not change as Reed's son, Mervyn Ranken Reed, carried on as one of the partners.[9] Reed was also a prominent Freemason,[6] serving as the Auckland district grand master for seven years.[10] Reed was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (military division) in the 1919 King's Birthday Honours.[11] In 1935, he was awarded the King George V Silver Jubilee Medal.[12] He was appointed a Knight Bachelor in the 1936 King's Birthday Honours.[13] References
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