Eddie Barker and Chua Sian Chin were two Cabinet members drawn from
Lee and Lee, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong recounted at the firm's 60th
anniversary celebrations this week.
Excerpt from his speech:
In the early days, my parents and Dennis Lee worked hard to get Lee and
Lee off the ground and pay the bills. My father had started off at
Laycock & Ong. He spent a lot of his time representing trade unions,
working often pro bono - so much time that John Laycock wrote him a
letter, expressing his displeasure but in typical British understated
style. They were unhappy but they put it in a polite way.
The
letter was displayed at the "Remembering Lee Kuan Yew" exhibition held
at the National Museum earlier this year. But in case you didn't make
the exhibition or didn't see the letter, let me read it out to you
because when you draft many letters, it is useful to know how to do
these things.
"Dear Harry,
Ong and myself have been
discussing the question of members of our firm appearing in these
lengthy arbitrations or commissions on wages etc. which are now all the
vogue. We have been suffering from these heavily during the past few
months. Coupled with the absences of so many of our qualified lawyers
during March, they have left us with a backlog of purely legal work in
the way of our ordinary business which cannot easily be overtaken. We
have come to the conclusion that we must not take any more of these wage
disputes. They can never be short, we fear, because they are always
preceded by long negotiations; and we can see clearly that it is likely
there will be more, perhaps many more, in the near future.
If any
special case arises, the same might be specially considered by us; in
that case, please let us have full information before you accept any
work.
Yours Sincerely,
John Laycock"
This is quite a classy letter and probably played a part in the foundation of Lee and Lee!
So my father moved next door - John Laycock was probably at 11 or 12
Malacca Street - set up at 10-B Malacca Street, Lee and Lee, and took on
all sorts of cases to make a living. Divorces, chap jee kee runners,
routine debt collection, and he continued to be active in the unions and
politics.
After he became prime minister in 1959, he tapped Lee
and Lee for talent, and persuaded some of the partners to join him in
politics.
Eddie Barker became minister for law and drafted the
Separation documents, including the Proclamation of Independence. Chua
Sian Chin, who joined Lee and Lee in 1959, became a partner in 1965. And
he would enter politics and become the minister for health at the age
of 34, making him the youngest Cabinet minister in independent
Singapore's history.
Then there was S. Ramasamy, who I think was
the chief clerk at Lee and Lee, and he became legislative assemblyman
for Redhill constituency. Later on after we became independent, and
after Separation, he served as Member of Parliament for two terms, also
for Redhill constituency. And so 60 years on, Christopher de Souza is
continuing the tradition!
As my father became increasingly involved in politics, he left Lee and Lee's affairs to my mother and Dennis.
My mother regarded her husband and children as her first priority but
she did her work. Every day she came home for lunch from the office so
as to see her children. She would take a nap and then go back to work.
When I had chicken pox - I must have been aged four or five years old -
she nursed me at home, with her work files at my bedside.
On days
when business was slow, she would wait for new call-in clients at the
office, because in those days there were no mobile phones, and she took
along her knitting to office because she loved to knit. In the evenings,
she would bring home files to do and the files would come as big
bundles in the open cane baskets which some of you may remember. She
would stack them up and do them one by one, mostly conveyancing
documents, and I would be fascinated with the documents - not with what
was written inside, but what was pasted inside - because the conveyance
documents and title deeds would have revenue stamps for what seemed to
me like fabulous denominations; we had $500 stamps, $1,000 stamps, and
also old faces because these were transactions from properties which
were 30 or 40 years old, from previous reigns.
I used to collect
stamps - these were 10-cent stamps, 50-cent stamps - and you would be
very lucky to find a $5 postage stamp, and here were $500 stamps.
My mother would look at me and say these are not postage stamps but revenue stamps; you don't put them on envelopes!
My mother decided to do mostly solicitors' work. When Kim Li (Mrs Lee's
niece) joined the firm, my mother advised her, and in fact told her
"umpteen times", that "women should not do litigation because that would
make them argumentative, and more difficult to find husbands!"
And I understand my mother gave the same advice to other ladies in the
firm, including Kim Li's daughter, Joanna, who entered law school in
2005. I am reporting this to you as hearsay evidence, but on good
authority, but of course I would never venture to offer any such advice
to anybody.
My mother developed the Conveyancing Practice and the
Trust and Probate Practice at Lee and Lee. Many of the clients she
acted for became her friends, and remain to this day clients of the
firm. She retired from partnership in 1987, nearly 30 years ago, but she
stayed on as a consultant for many years after that.
No comments:
Post a Comment