Education
He was educated privately, paid for by his uncle William Menelaus.
He was educated privately, paid for by his uncle William Menelaus.
After pupilage, Darling was called to the English Bar (Inner Temple) in 1874. As a judge, he presided over a number of important trials, including the Stinie Morrison case (1911), that of "Chicago May" Churchill. and the trial for criminal libel of Noel Pemberton Billing Member of Parliament (1918), brought by Maude Allen after Billing and Harold Sherwood Spencer had claimed there were 47,000 "sexual perverts" in high places who were controlled by the Germans. He also sat on the criminal appeals of Doctor Hawley Crippen and Sir Roger Casement, both of which he dismissed.
He was known for his erudition and at times inappropriate wit, both on and off the bench, as well as for being impeccably dressed and wearing a silk top hat whilst riding to Court on a horse and accompanied by a liveried groom.
He displayed his literary acuity in a book of essays Scintillae Juris. The novelist and barrister F. C. Philips gave his opinion, "I think that the wittiest book ever written by a legal luminary was one called "Scintillæ Juris" by Mr.
Justice Darling, when he was a barrister on the Oxford Circuit. I understand that when he was raised to the Bench he stopped its circulation."
During the Billing trial one of the witness, Eileen Villiers-Stuart, claimed to have seen the mysterious "Black Book" in which the names of the "perverts" were listed, declared in court that Darling was one of them.
She was later convicted of bigamy, and admitted that her testimony was invented.
He retired from the bench in 1923, and was created Baron Darling in 1924. He was active in House of Lords debates on legal issues, including promoting the Infant Life Preservation Acting 1929. She was the daughter of Alice Clive and Major
General
William Wilberforce Harris Greathed.
24th United Kingdom Parliament. 25th United Kingdom Parliament. 26th United Kingdom Parliament]
He was appointed a Queen"s Counsel in 1885, and was a Conservative Member of Parliament for Deptford from 1888 until 1897, when he was appointed a Judge of the Queen"s Bench Division.
Darling was made a member of the Privy Council in 1917, entitling him to sit on the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council.