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Canterbury Law Review |
Last Updated: 29 April 2013
BOOK REVIEW
JANET NOVEMBER
IN THE FOOTSTEPS OF ETHEL BENJAMIN, NEW ZEALAND'S FIRST WOMAN LAWYER
Victoria University Press for the Law Foundation of New Zealand, xi plus 260pp, 2009, rrp $50
Reviewed by Professor Jeremy Finn, School of Law, University of Canterbury
The outlines of Ethel Benjamin's career are fairly well known and have been
the subject of discussion on a range of books and articles.
November adds
enormously to our understanding of Benjamin's career and the circumstances in
which she practised
The most interesting chapters in the book are those
dealing with Benjamin's practice in what we may now loosely call family law
—
separations, divorces, maintenance and adoptions. November has taken
Benjamin's business correspondence and turned it into a fascinating
and
invaluable account of her practice — much of it done without hope of fee
or reward — which gives an unprecedented
insight into the social realities
of the period. This is essential reading for all legal and social historians of
the period. There
is also an interesting chapter on other aspects of Benjamin's
practice which shows a constant interplay between 'legal' activities
and
property management for clients and Benjamin's own entrepreneurial ventures.
Unfortunately, we have no contemporary accounts
of legal practice with which we
can compare this, so we do not know whether Benjamin was unusual in bolstering
her practice in this
way.
The other major element of Benjamin's practice,
which became integrated into general business affairs, was to deal with liquor
licensing,
where Benjamin was heavily involved both as legal practitioner and,
later, as owner or part owner of hotels. As November comments,
it may seem
unusual that a generally progressive liberal such as Benjamin would be linked to
the liquor interest, but it seems likely
that financial considerations, possibly
as well as professional obligations, would have made it difficult for Benjamin
to turn down
the lucrative business that came her way. We may also speculate
that, as a Jew, Benjamin felt uncomfortable with the evangelical
Christian basis
for the temperance movement with which she contended on behalf of her
clients.
The discussion of Benjamin's involvement as a hotel owner never
quite manages to explain whether it was financial success as a lawyer
that in
that enabled her to invest in hotels, or whether investment in hotels subsidised
her practice. Curiously, it is in this discussion,
with its excerpts from
letters to hotel managers and business associates, that Benjamin comes most
alive as a person. It is a feature
of the book that although we know much about
what she did, we know relatively little of her private life and
habits.
November's discussion of Ethel Benjamin's career in New Zealand is
rounded off with an account of her, perhaps very surprising, decision
to abandon
her practice in Dunedin and operate a catering business at the Christchurch
exhibition of 1906-07 before briefly moving
to Wellington and then going
overseas. It would be interesting to know what caused the change of scene;
unfortunately it is one of
several questions about Benjamin which the historical
record does not allow the author to answer.
The book is augmented by a
splendid final chapter or epilogue which describes the careers of several other
early Otago women lawyers
- Marion Thompson, Margaret Mackay, Judith Mayhew
Jonas, Sylvia Cartwright and Judith Medlicott.
There are several minor
mistakes in the text. Some arise from a repetition of errors in earlier
publications, such as the statement
that New Zealand was the first jurisdiction
in the British Empire to enact adoption legislation. That distinction actually
belongs
to the province of New Brunswick, which legislated for adoption in 1873,
some eight years before New Zealand. More pertinently, but
excusably, the author
repeats the standard received version that Ethel Benjamin was the first female
law student in New Zealand.
This is not so. The records of the University of New
Zealand show that Mary M O'Brien of Auckland College, was credited with passes
in several legal subjects in 1891. Other errors should not have made it past
either author or editor, such as the assertion on page
115 that Ashburton was an
Otago electorate, or that supplies for Ethel Benjamin's catering operation at
the Christchurch exhibition
could be sourced from 'nearby Timaru'.
Despite
these minor flaws, the book is an invaluable contribution to our legal history.
November is to be commended for her writing;
Victoria University Press should be
congratulated on the elegant volume they have produced, and readers must also be
grateful to
the New Zealand Law Foundation for assisting with its
publication.
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URL: http://www.nzlii.org/nz/journals/CanterLawRw/2009/14.html