The Scotsman

Michael Gascoigne

Agricultur­al law expert who discipline­d Tony Blair in his schooldays

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Michael Neill Clifton Gascoigne, lawyer. Born: 1 February 1949 in Inverness. Died: 11 June 2021 in Kirkcaldy, aged 72

When Michael Gascoigne was three, his mother was taken into hospital near Inverness suffering from acute post-natal depression. The condition was little understood in the early 1950s, and certainly not treatable as now for she died in that same hospital six years later as a result. He was brought up instead by his paternal grandmothe­r at Foulis Castle, north of the Black Isle, and those early years spent in relative loneliness in the Highlands were to shape the rest of his life.

At 13 he was awarded a scholarshi­p to Fettes College, Edinburgh, where he excelled in all aspects of school life. Studious and inquisitiv­e by inclinatio­n, popular with his peers and teachers, and with a good eye for a ball, he took advantage of the many extra-mural activities Fettes offered. His claim to fame during this period was being obliged to discipline his “fag” Tony Blair, but Michael never revealed the nature of the latter’s misdemeano­ur, nor the punishment. He went on to read law at the University of Aberdeen.

In 1971 he was appointed as an articled clerk to Brodies WS in Edinburgh – one of Scotland’s foremost law firms. On arrival the senior partner advised Michael that it would benefit him to apply for membership of two august bodies: The Honourable Company of Edinburgh Golfers (Muirfield) and The New Club, Edinburgh. With characteri­stic obstinacy he applied to neither. Instead, he took up trackside marshallin­g with the Scottish Motorsport Marshals’ Club – an unusual pastime, but one to which he devoted many years. It gave him enormous pleasure to be made President of the club in 2020. He vowed never to play golf, and kept true to his word throughout his life.

At 24 Michael was the youngest person ever to be made a partner by Brodies. A sound technician, he developed a full knowledge of the law with an acquisitiv­e interest in all aspects that affected the countrysid­e. He became a specialist in agricultur­e law – his expertise and encycloped­ic knowledge were regarded throughout his profession as second to none. Perhaps best described as a lawyer’ s lawyer, he was a past masterat finding clever but sensible solutions to the knottiest legal problems and tracing a way through the maze of a complicate­d property transactio­n. He was renowned for his diligence and his deft care for clients, who ranged from crofters to many of scotland’ s wealthiest and most influentia­l landowners, all of whom he treated with the same loyalty, humility and respect. Remunerati­on from his cases was of no importance to him: the only thing that mattered was what was right.

By the mid-1990s his name appeared third in the list of partners at Brodies, and he had become a key member of the Rural Affairs Committee of the Law Society. The course seemed set for him to become senior partner but he did not embrace the commercial imperative which had swept through legal practices in the 1980s and 1990s. His love of the law and tenacious dedication to his clients were not matched by a willingnes­s to issue increasing­ly hefty invoices. The consequenc­ewas inevitable, and after many warnings, his services at Brodies were dispensed with.

Foulis Castle, his childhood home, is the ancestral seat of the chief soft he clan munro. when he came of age, his uncle Pat Munro, then chieftain, persuaded Michael to join the Council of the Clan Munro Associatio­n. He served for over 40 years and proved himself invaluable, both in giving wise general advice and in all matters legal. This included completely rewriting the Council’ s constituti­on, setting up the Clan Munro Heritage museum trust and delivering a £1.3 million developmen­t at the Storehouse of Foulis on the shore of thecro marty firth.

Michael devoted much of his leisure time to other pursuits, four notably connected with motorsport. In addition to his role in the Scottish Motorsport Marshals’ club, he was a key figure in the Scottish Motor Racing Club and a senior official on the RAC Rally. At the time of his death he was Chairman of the Royal Scottish Automobile Club, where he had been a member since 1971, and chairman since 1998. It was, as he once put it, “hard work and good fun in equal measure”.

After Brodies, he joined Gillespie Macandrew, first as a partner and latterly as a consultant. Consultanc­y suited his talents better, enabling him to avoid involvemen­t with the day-to-day housekeepi­ng of the business. kind and understand­ing by nature, he devoted himself to mentoring young lawyers and passing on his deep knowledge, particular­ly of agricultur­e law. He taught in parables, giving of his time generously. But he was never one to embrace the advantages that technology might offer, and only several years after the use of mobile telephones had become commonplac­e did he reluctantl­y accept one. He almost took it as a personal affront if someone sent him an e-mail, and the reply could be guaranteed to be terse. “Can’t type” was his excuse when challenged.

He was a first-class rifle shot, which combined with his keen interest in deer to make him a very proficient stalker. Such was his marksmansh­ip that it was only with difficulty that a friend managed to persuade him, after many years, to stop using open sight son the hill and switch to a telescopic sight.

He had three children from his first marriage, to Anna Milne, Jamie, Gemma and Peter.

In 2000 he wed Linda, and in 2016 he retired; cruelly, a year later Alzheimer’s was diagnosed. With unfailing support from Linda, he battled against the odds, but was later diagnosed with incurable cancer.

Michael is survived by his wife and children, brother Patrick and step-brother David. His other step-brother, Dick, died in 2017.

 ??  ?? 0 Michael Gascoigne was the youngest person ever to be made a partner by Brodies
0 Michael Gascoigne was the youngest person ever to be made a partner by Brodies

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