Julie Dodds-Streeton

Julie Anne Dodds-Streeton QC is a Reserve Judge of the Supreme Court of Victoria. She was formerly a judge of the Federal Court of Australia, having served for four years from February 2010. Prior to that, she was a Justice of Appeal in the Supreme Court of Victoria (appointed August 2007), having previously been a Judge of the Trial Division of that Court from 2002.[1]


Julie Anne Dodds-Streeton

Reserve Judge of the Supreme Court of Victoria
Assumed office
24 November 2015
Judge of the Federal Court of Australia
In office
1 February 2010  1 April 2014
Judge of the Victorian Court of Appeal
In office
8 August 2007  1 February 2010
Judge of the Supreme Court of Victoria
In office
23 July 2002  1 February 2010
Personal details
NationalityAustralian
Spouse(s)Roger Arnold Streeton
EducationUniversity High School, Melbourne
University of Melbourne
Monash University
OccupationJudge, lawyer

Early life and education

Dodds-Streeton attended University High School, Melbourne before studying at the University of Melbourne, graduating with a Bachelor of Arts with First Class Honours and then a Bachelor of Laws, also with Honours.[1] She also was awarded a Master of Arts from Monash University.[2]

Career

Dodds-Streeton served her articles with Paveys and was admitted as a solicitor in 1981. She worked as an academic at the Melbourne Law School, where she was a Senior Lecturer in corporate law, real property, intellectual property and equity, before becoming a barrister in 1988, where she read with Joseph Santamaria.[3] practising principally in commercial law. Dodds-Streeton was appointed Queens Counsel in 2001.[2] Dodds-Streeton was a member of the Insolvency and Corporate Reconstruction Committee of the Law Council of Australia. Dodds-Streeton was one of the counsel assisting the HIH Royal Commission,[4] where she cross-examined Malcolm Turnbull about his role in the sale of FAI Insurance to HIH Insurance.[5]

Supreme Court of Victoria

Dodds-Streeton was appointed to the Trial Division of the Supreme Court of Victoria on 23 July 2002,[3] before being elevated to the Court of Appeal on 8 August 2007.[1] Dodds-Streeton joined fellow justices Marilyn Warren and Rosemary Balmford on the court and Victoria's first all female Full Court sat for the admissions ceremony in August 2002.[6][7]

Federal Court

On 1 February 2010 Dodds-Streeton was appointed to the Federal Court,[2] where she served for four years until her retirement on 1 April 2014.[1]

Subsequent career

Justice Dodds-Streeton was a member of the Expert Advisory Panel established in June 2015 by the Federal Government to oversee the competitive evaluation process of the Future Submarine Program.[8] In August 2014 she was appointed as a panel member of the Commonwealth Bank's Open Advice Review Program, chaired by former High Court judge, the Honourable Justice Ian Callinan AC, QC. The panel was a part of a dispute settlement procedure for customers who received financial advice from the Commonwealth Bank received between 2003 and 2012.[9]

Since 2011 she has held the position of President of the Professional Standards Review Board, Anglican Dioceses of Melbourne, Ballarat and Wangaratta, and since 2017, also Bendigo.[10]

She is a current Senior Fellow, Law School, University of Melbourne (since 2013);[8] Member of the Council of Australian Law Deans - Australian Law Schools Standards Committee (since 2015); and Member and Fellow of the Australian Academy of Law (from 2016).[11]

References

  1. "Retirement - The Honourable Justice Julie Anne Dodds-Streeton". Victorian Bar. Retrieved 11 December 2017.
  2. "Federal Court appointments" (PDF). Retrieved 11 December 2017 via NSW Bar Association.
  3. "New practitioners admitted by the first women's Full Court of the Supreme Court" (PDF). 122 Victorian Bar News 17. 2002.
  4. "The HIH Royal Commission". Archived from the original on 7 May 2015.
  5. "Defiant Turnbull defends role in FAI sale". The Sydney Morning Herald. 14 May 2002. Retrieved 11 December 2017.
  6. "New practitioners admitted by the first women's Full Court of the Supreme Court" (PDF). 2002) 122 Victorian Bar News 48.
  7. The first all female Full Court in Australia was in NSW, R v Meissner [1999] NSWCCA 91 (15 April 1999), Supreme Court(NSW) per Beazley JA, Simpson J and Bell J.
  8. "Meet the Judge in Residence: The Hon Justice Julie Dodds-Streeton". Melbourne Law School. Retrieved 11 December 2017.
  9. "Open Advice Review program: Initial Report" (PDF). Commonwealth Bank. Archived (PDF) from the original on 1 November 2015.
  10. "Power and trust in the church: a protocol under the Professional Standards Act 2009" (PDF). Anglican Church of Australia Anglican Diocese of Melbourne. 26 August 2010. p. 19. Retrieved 11 December 2017.
  11. "Fellows". Australian Academy of Law. Retrieved 11 December 2017.
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