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Sir Martin Moore-Bick's contract law experience will be asset to Grenfell inquiry

Sir Martin Moore-Bick
Sir Martin Moore-Bick is ‘scrupulously fair, pleasant and even-handed’, according to colleagues. Photograph: Philip Toscano/PA

Sir Martin Moore-Bick may not be high profile outside legal circles but his expertise in arcane commercial contracts could prove highly relevant to the Grenfell Tower inquiry.

Required to retire at the age of 70 last December, Moore-Bick ended his judicial career in England and Wales as vice-president of the civil division of the court of appeal. He has since served on Gibraltar’s court of appeal.

Most of his appeal court cases involved technical judgments, in shipping and transport, rather than headline-grabbing claims against the government over alleged breaches of human rights.

His knowledge of contract law should be useful in the inquiry’s investigation into the overlapping layers of responsibility that accumulated around the Grenfell Tower renovations. Police have revealed that 60 firms were involved in the refurbishment.

Moore-Bick was chosen by the lord chief justice, Lord Thomas of Cwmgiedd, to chair the inquiry. His nomination was accepted by Downing Street, which praised him as being “highly respected [and] hugely experienced”.

Media attention focused quickly on one controversial case that he presided over; in 2014 he, with two other judges, ruled that Westminster council could rehouse Titina Nzolameso, a single mother with five children, more than 50 miles away in Milton Keynes.

Westminster did not need to explain in detail what other accommodation was available, Moore-Bick concluded, adding that it could take “a broad range of factors” into account, including the pressures on the council in deciding what housing was available.

The following year the supreme court reversed his judgment, pointing out that the council had not asked “any questions aimed at assessing how practicable it would be for the family to move out of the area”.

Lawyers who know Moore-Bick, however, rallied to his defence. James Turner QC tweeted: “What is all this utter nonsense about Sir Martin Moore-Bick being ‘controversial’? He’s actually scrupulously fair, pleasant and even-handed.”

Other cases show a more complex pattern of decision-making. He was praised by civil liberties lawyers when he criticised the police for retaining information notices on suspects for too long. He was lauded by the justice minister, Dominic Raab, for applying “long-awaited common sense” to limit human rights law in a case where he deported a foreign-born criminal whose young children lived in Britain.

Moore-Bick may now be subjected to the kind of press scrutiny that beset chairs of the national child abuse inquiry, which is now on its fourth chair after a succession of controversial appointments. Moore-Bick’s resilience will certainly be put to the test.

Moore-Bick’s double-barrelled name and Cambridge education may suggest that he is a classic establishment figure but he attended a grammar school in Kent rather than Eton or Winchester.

His entry in Who’s Who lists his interests as early music, gardening, and reading. His younger brother was a major general.