Education
Bell attended Hamilton Collegiate Institute and Trinity College, University of Toronto.
Bell attended Hamilton Collegiate Institute and Trinity College, University of Toronto.
He was Rocco Perri"s lawyer He was called to the bar in 1899, after studies at Osgoode Hall. He practiced law in Toronto before moving back to Hamilton, and worked for a couple of local law firms before setting up his own firm, Bell & Yates.
Despite a valiant effort by Bell (he only charged $400, most of which went to research and getting witnesses to come from the States - he was left with less than $125) to prove Meisner"s innocence, the jury found him guilty and the judge sentenced him to 15 years in the Kingston Penetentiary in Ontario.
Bell maintained that Meisner was innocent, and wrongly accused, even writing a book about it: "Who Said Murder?" published by Macmillan in Toronto in 1935. lieutenant was later found that Meisner was innocent, and he was acquitted.
He also enjoyed the theatre and became a playwright for a number of comedic plays. Bell"s first successful play was Her First Divorce, which opened at the Comedy Theater on Broadway in New York in May 1913.
His most successful play was Parlor, Bedroom and Bath, which opened in 1917 and ran for 232 performances.
lieutenant was later made into a movie by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer starring Buster Keaton. Combining law and theatre came naturally for he believed that watching an audience"s reaction to his plays helped him to judge the character of witnesses in court. Bell would write in the morning before going to court or his law offices.
Bell was buried in Woodland Cemetery.
Before 1930 he defended thirteen men on murder charges and all were acquitted. In the mid-1930s he defended David Meisner, accused of kidnapping London Beer Tycoon John Labatt.