Background
Born in Limerick on 15 August 1841, son of Carroll Naish of Ballycullen and his second wife Anne Margaret Carroll or O"Carroll, Naish was educated at Clongowes Wood School and Dublin University.
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Born in Limerick on 15 August 1841, son of Carroll Naish of Ballycullen and his second wife Anne Margaret Carroll or O"Carroll, Naish was educated at Clongowes Wood School and Dublin University.
He was an outstanding student, gaining numerous distinctions in mathematics, physics and natural science, as well as law. He was called to the Irish Bar in 1865, and practiced on the Munster Circuit, becoming a Queen's Counsel in 1880. His career as a barrister was mixed: he was too nervous and retiring to be a good advocate, but hard work and academic brilliance partly compensated for this.
He appeared in the celebrated libel action brought by Canon O"Keeffe against Cardinal Cullen, and co-wrote an influential textbook on the Common Law Procedure Acts.
He became Law Adviser to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland (a deputy to the two senior law officers) in 1880. The office had become a very onerous one and had been criticised for its excessively political nature, since one of the Law Adviser"s responsibilities was to advise magistrates on how to deal with proceedings with a political element.
Naish is credited with having suggested that magistrates in their ongoing struggle with the Irish National Land League, should rely on an obscure medieval statute, 34 Edward III c.1, to imprison those who could not find sureties for their good behaviour. This was arguably an abuse of the law since the statute was clearly aimed only at cases of riot.
Thus, concerns about his obviously political role may explain why the office was left vacant after his promotion.
He was Solicitor-General for Ireland from January 1883 and Attorney-General for Ireland from December 1883. He stood for the House of Commons at Mallow as the Government candidate in 1882, but in the fraught political atmosphere which followed the Phoenix Park murders, was crushingly defeated by William O"Brien. He was appointed to the Privy Council of Ireland in 1885 and served as Lord Chancellor of Ireland from May to July 1885 and again from February to June 1886.
He was a Lord Justice of the Irish Court of Appeal 1885-1886 and 1886-1890.
Naish"s health failed when he was still in his late forties: he travelled to the Continent in hope of a cure, but died at the German spa town of Bad Ems on 17 August 1890 and was buried there. Delaney, in his biography of Christopher Palles, calls Naish an outstanding judge, even in an age when the Irish judiciary included such eminent figures as Christopher Palles himself, Gerald Fitzgibbon, and Hugh Holmes.
Elrington Ball, on the other hand, thought him a poor choice as Lord Chancellor: in Ball"s view Naish was a good academic lawyer but an unsuccessful barrister and a failure as a politician. As a Roman Catholic, however, he was acceptable to Nationalists.
The Dictionary of National Biography praises him as a brilliant academic, and while accepting that he had his faults as a barrister, agrees with Delaney that he was a great judge, perhaps the most eminent Irish judge of his time.