Alfred Karney Young


Sir Alfred Joseph Karney Young was a British barrister and judge. He held a number of political and judicial offices, including Attorney General of British East Africa, Chief Justice of the Seychelles, Attorney General of Fiji, Chief Justice of the Leeward Islands, Chief Justice of Fiji, and Chief Judicial Commissioner for the Western Pacific.

Early life and family

Alfred Young was born in Victoria, Colony of Vancouver Island, where his father, William Alexander George Young, was Colonial Secretary and also acting Colonial Secretary of Vancouver Island. His mother was Cecilia Eliza Cowan Cameron.
Alfred Young was the youngest of three children. His brother was Sir William Douglas Young, Governor of the Falkland Islands from 1915 to 1920. His sister was Mary Alice Young, who married Frederick Mitchell Hodgson, later Governor of Gold Coast like her father.
He was educated in England at St. Mark's School, Windsor until 1884, and graduated from Magdalen College, Oxford in 1887.

Legal career

He was called to the Bar at the Inner Temple, 15 May 1889. His colonial legal career began with an appointment in the British administration of British Honduras, where he compiled a list of the colony's laws, and made a report on the 1901 Census.
In April 1893 he sailed on the from New York for Liverpool.
Young was appointed Crown Prosecutor in the Seychelles in 1903, where he made the decennial revision of the current list of laws of the Seychelles. He served as Attorney General of the British Central Africa Protectorate from May 1906 and Stipendiary Magistrate in Trinidad before being appointed Chief Justice of the Seychelles in 1909.
In April 1914 he was appointed Attorney General of Fiji, which included his being made an Official Member of the Legislative Council of Fiji.
He was in Sydney in June 1920, the guest at a rugby match of the Governor of New South Wales, Sir Walter Davidson. Davidson had been Governor of the Seychelles when Young was Crown Prosecutor and Attorney General there. In November 1920 Young was appointed Chief Justice of the Leeward Islands, and in 1921 as a member of the Fijian Legislative Council. He was appointed Chief Justice of Fiji and Chief Judicial Commissioner for the Western Pacific in December 1922, and received a knighthood the following year. He was in Sydney again in April 1927.

1928 Royal Commission

In 1928 Young headed a Royal Commission to investigate whether the swimming baths in the capital, Suva, operated a 'Europeans-only' policy.
Since 1879 the colony of Fiji had imported indentured workers from India to work in the European-owned plantations, which produced sea island cotton from the late 1860s to the early 1870s, then copra, then sugarcane from around 1880. This Indian immigration came about because the Pacific Islands couldn't provide enough labour. These islands provided labour from 1864 to 1911, when the European planters in the Solomon Islands and the New Hebrides brought about legislation to prevent emigration from those islands.
The involvement of the Indian Army and India generally during the First World War had convinced the colonial Indian Government of the necessity of enfranchising all Indian citizens, and this was granted in 1917. This move towards "responsible government" included Indians living in Fiji, which replicated in some degree the political motivation and agitation which within India pushed towards the Dominion status enjoyed by Canada, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa.
Moves towards independence continued to gather pace during Young's time as Chief Justice in Fiji, where many time-served previously indentured labourers from India had stayed on to live permanently. In 1928, Indian Fijians began to complain about low numbers of enfranchised rate-payers in Suva, and about a perceived 'Europeans-only' policy of segregation in the two municipally-run public Suva swimming baths. The Governor, Sir Eyre Hutson appointed a Committee to investigate the municipal matter. The committee split into three factions which each produced a report on the situation. The disagreement between the three groups led to the Governor appointing Young to head a Royal Commission: he found that there had been a policy of segregation, which was brought to an end.

Cricketing career

Alfred Young played cricket twice for Kent County Cricket Club, once in 1887 and again in 1890. The latter match, against MCC at Lord's, was his only first-class cricket appearance. He also played for Rochester Cricket Club. According to his Wisden obituary, he was "a sound, steady batsman, showing special skill in placing the ball off his legs and late cutting".
Young was an early pioneer of cricket in British Honduras, his first posting in the judiciary of the British colonial administration.

Later life and death

He retired in 1929, and married Frances May Buckley on 19 April 1930. Her parents were Sir Henry Miller and Jessie Orbell. Frances was the widow of St. John McLean Buckley, a wealthy New Zealand sheep rancher who died in 1916.
Young was later appointed a Resident Magistrate in Cape Town, South Africa, and died there in Tamboerskloof on 5 January 1942, aged 76.
A brief notice of his death appeared in the New Zealand Herald.

Selected publications