Just as in London, Baxter's legal career in Sydney was not a success. Within two months of taking up his post, the Governor, Sir Ralph Darling, wrote to the Colonial Office to complain that he was totally inexperienced and incapable of speaking effectively in court. Professionally incompetent, Baxter relied heavily on the new Solicitor General, William Foster and even sought help from other lawyers.[1]
Alexander Baxter became a member of the New South Wales Legislative Council in 1829 but continued to fail to gain the Governor's confidence. The Governor and Chief Justice were sometimes required to draft legislation; work that should have been done by Baxter.[1]
In 1831, Baxter resigned his post to take up the position of second judge on the Supreme Court of Tasmania. However, in Hobart, the Lieutenant-Governor was appalled by his behaviour and decided that it would have been "a violation of all public decency to have suffered him to take his seat on the Bench". Sir George Arthur agreed to a request for leave of absence from Baxter as a means of getting rid of him.[1]
Private life
In March 1827, shortly before leaving for New South Wales, Baxter married Maria del Rosario Anna Uthair, a Spanish heiress.[1] Their son was born in Sydney on 24 August 1828.[2] Baxter fell out with his wife over his lavish spending, which led to his bankruptcy.[3] He became an alcoholic and attacked her violently after she gave birth to twin daughters.[4] When she had the daughters baptised in the Roman Catholic faith, he left her, taking his young son with him, and Governor Darling helped Maria to return to England. As a widow, in 1836, she was still trying to recover jewels and other property that had been seized in Sydney to repay her husband's debts.[1]
Return to England
Baxter left Tasmania late in 1831. The following year he was imprisoned for debt for 12 months in Marshalsea prison.[1]
Baxter died at Onchan on the Isle of Man in 1834.[5]
^"Family notice: birth". The Sydney Gazette and New South Wales Advertiser. 25 February 1830. p. 3. Retrieved 15 July 2020 – via Trove. On the evening of Tuesday last, the Lady of ALEXANDER MACDUFF BAXTER Esq. M. C. His Majesty's Attorney General, of twins, both daughters, and, with the mother, doing well.