obituaries johnny veeder, qc - amazon s3...2020/03/21  · lawyer was nowhere to be seen. papers...

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84 1GM Saturday March 21 2020 | the times Register Johnny Veeder took silk in 1986 On being assured that Johnny Veeder was in his chambers, a new pupil observed with trepidation that his room looked like the immediate after- math of a bomb blast. The distinguished lawyer was nowhere to be seen. Papers were strewn everywhere. Books were piled haphazardly on every surface. Then a voice was heard from under Veeder’s desk, where he was on all fours. He announced that he “had had a clear up” but could no longer find a vital document. The two of them spent a good while searching, until the pupil pointed out that Veeder was standing on it. The pupil had entered the redoubt of one of the world’s most brilliant arbi- trators, scholars and teachers in dispute resolution and international law. Taking pupils under his wing and teaching them about law, arbitration, ethics and good practice, Veeder would also school them in the art of devising complex practical jokes, often working late into the night creating spoof letters and faxes. He would attack the key- board with two index fingers or use a broad-nib fountain pen that would discharge ink all over his hands and produce a script that nobody, including him, could decipher. For many years breaks were taken, at Veeder’s insistence, at a small and shab- by Tibetan restaurant in Leicester Square. Thankfully, it was later closed by the Health and Safety Authority. Veeder took special delight in minority (or unsafe) establishments; the more dignified the company, the less salubri- ous his choice of restaurant. Many will recall the member states delegates’ din- ner at the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law (Uncitral) working group session in New York that Veeder took great joy in arranging in the most unappetising “hole in the wall” in Queens. Never before had so many state representatives bonded and agreed on key issues in such haste. He liked nothing better than blowing the dust off old documents and leafing through antiquated case law; he was a frequent visitor to the National Archives in Kew. Russian law became a particular fascination. As a visiting professor at King’s Col- lege London he would regale students with stories of Stalinist Russia, the American Civil War (another passion), Peru’s revolutionary Communist Party (the Shining Path) and much else of seeming irrelevance that by some ingenious tangential device he would bring to bear on investor-state arbitra- tion. He never used the title professor, once claiming to a colleague that he was so fed up with other people using titles to promote themselves that he was searching online to purchase a doctorate. For 20 years he was editor of Arbitra- tion International, and ensured the con- tinued success of the journal despite a paucity of contributors, lawyers being increasingly unable to find time in their busy schedules. As such, a Mr Ylts (an unknown arbitration scholar claiming to have been legal secretary to the Ma- cau Sardines tribunal) wrote a number of significant articles. As the years rolled by, Mr Ylts’s rise through the aca- demic ranks was impressive. Later arti- cles credited Mr Ylts with a doctorate, then a second doctorate, then a per- manent chair. And the quality of his contributions on the law of arbitration were as impressive as his accolades. It was only much later that Veeder admit- ted, under pressure, that Mr Ylts was in fact him. The pièce de résistance came in the year 2000, amid all the concern about the Y2K computer bug, when the index to Arbitration International announced the article: “The ‘Y2K Problem’ and Ar- bitration: The Answer to the Myth” by Professor Dr Ylts (Vol 16, Issue 1, 1 Mar 2000, pages 79-80). On turning to the relevant page, the following appeared: “It is regretted that for technical rea- sons publication of this article was rendered impossible.” His humour was always good natured. Van Vechten Veeder was born in London in 1948 to John Van Vechten Veeder, who came from a prominent family of Dutch heritage in New York, and Helen Letham Townley, a Scot who had studied chemistry at St Andrews University. Always known as Johnny after his father, he was a direct descend- ant of one of the Dutch families that had founded New Amsterdam in the early 17th century. His father worked for an American oil company in Paris and the boy was initially educated at the Ecole Rue de la Ferme in the French capital. Aged seven he was sent to board at Clifton College in Bristol, where his uncle, Nicholas Hammond, was headmaster. Already well on the way to his full height of 6ft 4in, Veeder excelled at rugby, playing for All England School- boys. He would play rugby for Cam- bridge, where he studied modern lan- guages and then switched to law at Jesus College. After graduation he would turn out for the Harlequins B team, but as his legal career quickly developed he would soon have to con- tent himself with a seat at Twickenham. He was called to the English Bar in 1971 and began to practise at what was then 4 Essex Court. There he built a busy practice in employment and com- mercial law and took silk in 1986. From the early 1980s, notably under the gui- dance of Johan Steyn (later Lord Steyn), Veeder, a keen traveller, worked on cases such as Joc Oil in Bermuda she became an apprentice at the chic millinery boutique run by Suzanne Talbot on the Rue Royale. However, she was already known locally as a talented singer. She soon quit her apprenticeship and was a regular performer at the many music halls in Paris, including the Folies Belleville and the Bobino. At the Bouf- fes Parisiens, the theatre founded by Jacques Offenbach and dedicated to the performance of operettas and their spin-offs, opéras bouffes, Delair emerged as a leading operetta star, a performer who ticked all the boxes for a leading lady of that genre: saucy, mischievous and playful. Decades later she was fêted as an “outstanding Offenbachian” for her stage performances as Métella in the composer’s La Vie Parisienne (1958) and as the tipsy title character in La Périchole (1968). At the same time as she was making her name on the Parisian music scene, Delair appeared regularly in films. From the age of 13 she had non-singing bit parts in a string of dramas and come- Obituaries Johnny Veeder, QC Leading arbitration lawyer with a penchant for shabby restaurants and Pilkington Glass in Russia. He increasingly focused on international disputes, fighting cases of all shapes and sizes and becoming one of the world’s most sought-after arbitration special- ists. Alongside Sir Michael Kerr, he oversaw the rebirth of the London Court of International Arbitration (LCIA), which kindled a massive expansion of the field in London. Veeder also played a key role in arbi- tration institutions and bodies world- wide. He drafted laws and rules, formu- lated policies and represented Britain at Uncitral. When comfortably over 40, he began the first under-40 arbitration group (the Young International Arbi- tration Group at the LCIA), which led to the under-40 movement across the globe. Delivering the Goff lecture in 2001, he said: “The absence of enforcea- ble standards across national bounda- ries threatened a gradual deterioration in standards of legal conduct. The international arbitral process would then be brought into disrepute and, once its reputation was lost, it could take decades to rebuild confidence.” As an advocate he insisted on the highest standards. He taught his juniors never to use their opponent’s names, never to use inflammatory language and always to be open and straight with the tribunal and the other side. He had a talent for bridging differences. Being taller than just about everyone else, Veeder had a way of hunching his shoulders down to the level of the per- son he was talking to. He was unassum- ing and disarming. His first marriage, to Hazel Burbidge in 1970, ended in divorce. In 1991 he married Marie Lombardi, who worked for the bank Paribas Capital Markets (now BNP Paribas). When they occu- pied neighbouring flats at the Barbican, Veeder had invited friends round for Sunday lunch and, with typical hapless- ness, locked himself out with the steam- ing joint ready to carve on the kitchen table. He persuaded his neighbour to al- low him and his guests to troop through her flat, into her garden and over the fence into his. Their romance began with a thank-you note. They enjoyed relaxing at their home in Manchester by the Sea, Massachusetts, where Veed- er would pilot his Concordia yacht. She survives him along with their daughter Anne, who is studying zoolo- gy at Edinburgh University. He is also survived by a daughter and son from his first marriage. Tabitha works in human resources and Sebastian works in sales. He was as uninterested in his appear- ance as in his choice of restaurant and was known to complete a multiplicity of tasks in one of his well-worn suits. One of his colleagues was wont to remark: “There are things he would do in his suit that I would not do in my pyjamas.” Johnny Veeder, QC, was born on December 14, 1948. He died of complications from pneumonia on March 8, 2020, aged 71 The practical joker would work late into the night on spoof letters Suzy Delair French chanteuse who overcame the taint of Nazi collaboration to become a national institution Like Maurice Chevalier and Coco Chanel, the vivacious Suzy Delair became something of a French institu- tion — an Officer of the Legion of Hon- our, no less — despite being tainted by the whiff of collaboration with the enemy during the Nazi occupation. In March 1942 she, with a small group of other French actors, accepted an invi- tation to visit film studios in Germany. That she was reportedly disappointed not to have met Joseph Goebbels, the propaganda minister, left a sour taste for many French filmgoers, but it did not seem to affect her popularity unduly. She may have been punished after liber- ation, but it was little more than a ges- ture and she enjoyed her greatest suc- cesses after the war. These did not include Atoll K (1951), the final, inglorious, movie made by Laurel and Hardy. However, Delair earned the distinction of being the last surviving cast member of a Laurel and Hardy film. The daughter of a seamstress and a saddler, Suzette Delair was born in Paris, in 1917 or 1918. In her early teens

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Page 1: Obituaries Johnny Veeder, QC - Amazon S3...2020/03/21  · lawyer was nowhere to be seen. Papers were strewn everywhere. Books were piled haphazardly on every surface. Then a voice

84 1GM Saturday March 21 2020 | the times

Register

Johnny Veeder took silk in 1986

On being assured that Johnny Veederwas in his chambers, a new pupilobserved with trepidation that hisroom looked like the immediate after-math of a bomb blast. The distinguishedlawyer was nowhere to be seen. Paperswere strewn everywhere. Books werepiled haphazardly on every surface.Then a voice was heard from underVeeder’s desk, where he was on all fours.He announced that he “had had a clearup” but could no longer find a vitaldocument. The two of them spent agood while searching, until the pupilpointed out that Veeder was standingon it. The pupil had entered the redoubtof one of the world’s most brilliant arbi-trators, scholars and teachers in disputeresolution and international law.

Taking pupils under his wing andteaching them about law, arbitration,ethics and good practice, Veeder wouldalso school them in the art of devisingcomplex practical jokes, often workinglate into the night creating spoof lettersand faxes. He would attack the key-board with two index fingers or use abroad-nib fountain pen that woulddischarge ink all over his hands andproduce a script that nobody, includinghim, could decipher.

For many years breaks were taken, atVeeder’s insistence, at a small and shab-by Tibetan restaurant in LeicesterSquare. Thankfully, it was later closedby the Health and Safety Authority.Veeder took special delight in minority(or unsafe) establishments; the moredignified the company, the less salubri-ous his choice of restaurant. Many willrecall the member states delegates’ din-ner at the United Nations Commissionon International Trade Law (Uncitral)working group session in New Yorkthat Veeder took great joy in arrangingin the most unappetising “hole in thewall” in Queens. Never before had somany state representatives bonded andagreed on key issues in such haste.

He liked nothing better than blowingthe dust off old documents and leafingthrough antiquated case law; he was afrequent visitor to the NationalArchives in Kew. Russian law became aparticular fascination.

As a visiting professor at King’s Col-lege London he would regale studentswith stories of Stalinist Russia, theAmerican Civil War (another passion),Peru’s revolutionary Communist Party(the Shining Path) and much else ofseeming irrelevance that by someingenious tangential device he wouldbring to bear on investor-state arbitra-tion. He never used the title professor,once claiming to a colleague that hewas so fed up with other people usingtitles to promote themselves that hewas searching online to purchase adoctorate.

For 20 years he was editor of Arbitra-tion International, and ensured the con-tinued success of the journal despite apaucity of contributors, lawyers beingincreasingly unable to find time in theirbusy schedules. As such, a Mr Ylts (anunknown arbitration scholar claimingto have been legal secretary to the Ma-cau Sardines tribunal) wrote a numberof significant articles. As the yearsrolled by, Mr Ylts’s rise through the aca-demic ranks was impressive. Later arti-cles credited Mr Ylts with a doctorate,

then a second doctorate, then a per-manent chair. And the quality of hiscontributions on the law of arbitrationwere as impressive as his accolades. Itwas only much later that Veeder admit-ted, under pressure, that Mr Ylts was infact him.

The pièce de résistance came in theyear 2000, amid all the concern aboutthe Y2K computer bug, when the indexto Arbitration International announcedthe article: “The ‘Y2K Problem’ and Ar-bitration: The Answer to the Myth” byProfessor Dr Ylts (Vol 16, Issue 1, 1 Mar2000, pages 79-80). On turning to therelevant page, the following appeared:“It is regretted that for technical rea-sons publication of this article wasrendered impossible.” His humour wasalways good natured.

Van Vechten Veeder was born inLondon in 1948 to John Van VechtenVeeder, who came from a prominentfamily of Dutch heritage in New York,and Helen Letham Townley, a Scot whohad studied chemistry at St AndrewsUniversity. Always known as Johnny

after his father, he was a direct descend-ant of one of the Dutch families thathad founded New Amsterdam in theearly 17th century.

His father worked for an Americanoil company in Paris and the boy wasinitially educated at the Ecole Rue de laFerme in the French capital. Agedseven he was sent to board at CliftonCollege in Bristol, where his uncle,Nicholas Hammond, was headmaster.

Already well on the way to his fullheight of 6ft 4in, Veeder excelled atrugby, playing for All England School-boys. He would play rugby for Cam-bridge, where he studied modern lan-guages and then switched to law atJesus College. After graduation hewould turn out for the Harlequins Bteam, but as his legal career quicklydeveloped he would soon have to con-tent himself with a seat at Twickenham.

He was called to the English Bar in1971 and began to practise at what wasthen 4 Essex Court. There he built abusy practice in employment and com-mercial law and took silk in 1986. Fromthe early 1980s, notably under the gui-dance of Johan Steyn (later LordSteyn), Veeder, a keen traveller, workedon cases such as Joc Oil in Bermuda

she became an apprentice at the chicmillinery boutique run by SuzanneTalbot on the Rue Royale. However, shewas already known locally as a talentedsinger.

She soon quit her apprenticeship andwas a regular performer at the manymusic halls in Paris, including the FoliesBelleville and the Bobino. At the Bouf-fes Parisiens, the theatre founded byJacques Offenbach and dedicated tothe performance of operettas and theirspin-offs, opéras bouffes, Delairemerged as a leading operetta star, aperformer who ticked all the boxes for aleading lady of that genre: saucy,mischievous and playful.

Decades later she was fêted as an“outstanding Offenbachian” for herstage performances as Métella in thecomposer’s La Vie Parisienne (1958) andas the tipsy title character in LaPérichole (1968).

At the same time as she was makingher name on the Parisian music scene,Delair appeared regularly in films.From the age of 13 she had non-singingbit parts in a string of dramas and come-

Obituaries

Johnny Veeder, QCLeading arbitration lawyer with a penchant for shabby restaurants

and Pilkington Glass in Russia. Heincreasingly focused on internationaldisputes, fighting cases of all shapes andsizes and becoming one of the world’smost sought-after arbitration special-ists. Alongside Sir Michael Kerr, heoversaw the rebirth of the LondonCourt of International Arbitration(LCIA), which kindled a massiveexpansion of the field in London.

Veeder also played a key role in arbi-tration institutions and bodies world-wide. He drafted laws and rules, formu-lated policies and represented Britainat Uncitral. When comfortably over 40,he began the first under-40 arbitrationgroup (the Young International Arbi-tration Group at the LCIA), which ledto the under-40 movement across theglobe. Delivering the Goff lecture in2001, he said: “The absence of enforcea-ble standards across national bounda-ries threatened a gradual deteriorationin standards of legal conduct. Theinternational arbitral process wouldthen be brought into disrepute and,once its reputation was lost, it couldtake decades to rebuild confidence.”

As an advocate he insisted on thehighest standards. He taught his juniorsnever to use their opponent’s names,never to use inflammatory languageand always to be open and straight withthe tribunal and the other side. He hada talent for bridging differences. Beingtaller than just about everyone else,Veeder had a way of hunching hisshoulders down to the level of the per-

son he was talking to. He was unassum-ing and disarming.

His first marriage, to Hazel Burbidgein 1970, ended in divorce. In 1991 hemarried Marie Lombardi, who workedfor the bank Paribas Capital Markets(now BNP Paribas). When they occu-pied neighbouring flats at the Barbican,Veeder had invited friends round forSunday lunch and, with typical hapless-ness, locked himself out with the steam-ing joint ready to carve on the kitchentable. He persuaded his neighbour to al-low him and his guests to troop throughher flat, into her garden and over thefence into his. Their romance beganwith a thank-you note. They enjoyedrelaxing at their home in Manchesterby the Sea, Massachusetts, where Veed-er would pilot his Concordia yacht.

She survives him along with theirdaughter Anne, who is studying zoolo-gy at Edinburgh University. He is alsosurvived by a daughter and son from hisfirst marriage. Tabitha works in humanresources and Sebastian works in sales.

He was as uninterested in his appear-ance as in his choice of restaurant andwas known to complete a multiplicity oftasks in one of his well-worn suits. Oneof his colleagues was wont to remark:“There are things he would do in hissuit that I would not do in my pyjamas.”

Johnny Veeder, QC, was born on December 14, 1948. He died of complications from pneumonia on March 8, 2020, aged 71

The practical joker would work late into the night on spoof letters

Suzy DelairFrench chanteuse who overcame the taint of Nazi collaboration to become a national institution

Like Maurice Chevalier and CocoChanel, the vivacious Suzy Delairbecame something of a French institu-tion — an Officer of the Legion of Hon-our, no less — despite being tainted bythe whiff of collaboration with theenemy during the Nazi occupation.

In March 1942 she, with a small groupof other French actors, accepted an invi-tation to visit film studios in Germany.That she was reportedly disappointednot to have met Joseph Goebbels, thepropaganda minister, left a sour taste formany French filmgoers, but it did notseem to affect her popularity unduly.She may have been punished after liber-ation, but it was little more than a ges-ture and she enjoyed her greatest suc-cesses after the war.

These did not include Atoll K (1951),the final, inglorious, movie made byLaurel and Hardy. However, Delairearned the distinction of being the lastsurviving cast member of a Laurel andHardy film.

The daughter of a seamstress and asaddler, Suzette Delair was born inParis, in 1917 or 1918. In her early teens