James Ivory, Lord IvoryFRSE (1792 – 1866), was a Scottish judge.
Life
The son of Thomas Ivory, watchmaker and engraver, he was born in Dundee on 29 February 1792.[1] His family lived and ran a business from the High Street in Dundee[2]Sir James Ivory the mathematician was his uncle, and James Ivory, the watchmaker was his grandfather.
After attending Dundee Academy he studied for the legal profession at the University of Edinburgh was admitted as a member of the Faculty of Advocates in 1810, and in that year was enrolled as a burgess of Dundee. When, in 1819, the select committee of the House of Commons was engaged in making inquiries into the state of the Scottish burghs, Ivory was examined with reference to the municipal condition of Dundee, and strongly advocated for the abolition of self-election, which was then prevalent in the town councils of Scotland, and continued in force until 1833.
In 1849 he was appointed a lord of justiciary (taking the title of Lord Ivory), and served both in the Court of Session and the High Court of Justiciary until his retirement in October 1862. For several years before that date he was the senior judge of both courts.
As a lawyer Ivory was distinguished by the subtlety of his reasoning, his minuteness of detail, and profound erudition. He was not a fluent orator, but in the early part of his career, when legal argument was conducted in writing, be obtained a high reputation.
Ivory died at his Edinburgh home of 9 Ainslie Place[3] on 18 October 1866. He is buried in New Calton Cemetery in its north-west section.