Everything about Andrew Morritt totally explained
Sir (Robert) Andrew Morritt CVO (born
5 February 1938) is a
British judge. Sir Andrew was appointed as
Vice-Chancellor (deputy head of the
Chancery Division of the
High Court of Justice) in 2000, and became the first
Chancellor of the High Court in October 2005, under the provisions of the
Constitutional Reform Act 2005. In April 2006, the
Lord Chancellor ceased to be titular President of the Chancery Division; as Chancellor of the High Court, Morritt became the senior judge of the Chancery Division. He attended
Magdalene College, Cambridge.
Morritt was called to the
Bar at
Lincoln's Inn in 1962, became a
Queen's Counsel in 1977, and was
Attorney-General to the
Prince of Wales from 1978 to 1988. He was appointed as a judge of the High Court in 1988, in the Chancery Division, and received the customary
knighthood. He was promoted to the
Court of Appeal in 1994, and became Vice-Chancellor in October 2000. He was Treasurer of Lincoln's Inn in 2005.
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