Egil Endresen

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Egil Endresen (born April 28, 1920 in Stavanger , Fylke Rogaland ; † May 10, 1992 ) was a Norwegian lawyer and politician of the Høyre , who was a member of the Storting for eight years and between 1970 and 1971 Minister of Justice and Police in the government of Prime Minister Per Borten was. He was later a judge at the Supreme Court of Norway (Norges Høyesterett) from 1977 to 1988 .

Life

Degree, judge and lawyer

Endresen, son of the office manager Gustav Adolf Emil Endresen and the porcelain painter Alida Anda, spent 1936 to 1937 a stay abroad at the Lycée Corneille in Rouen and, after graduating from school in 1940 and graduating from commercial high school in 1941, began studying law at the University of Oslo , which he did in 1947 graduated as Candidatus juris (Cand. jur.). In the meantime he joined the armed forces (Forsvaret) during the Second World War and was most recently a captain of the army (Den Norske Hær) and intelligence officer.

After completing his studies, Endresen was first secretary in the Ministry of Justice in 1947 and was then first assistant judge (Dommerfullmektig) at the district court (Herredsrett) of Ryfylke in 1948 and then from 1949 to 1950 assistant judge at the district court of Jæren . In 1950 he left the civil service and set up as a lawyer with his own law firm in Stavanger.

At the beginning of the 1950s, he also began his political career in local politics and was first a member of the Stavanger City Council between 1951 and 1955 and then a member of the city council from 1955 to 1963 and between chairman of the Høyre faction on the city council. In addition, he was co-owner of the family-owned shipping company Edvin Endresen between 1953 and 1962 and lastly served from 1960 to 1962 as vice-chair of the education committee of the Norwegian Shipping Association (Norges Rederforbund) .

After an administration course at the Research Fund in 1958 and a study visit to Paris with a scholarship from the defense and security organization Folk og Forsvar , he was admitted to the Norwegian Supreme Court in 1960. and from 1957 to 1958 chairman of the bar association (Den norske sakførerforening) in the Stavanger district. In 1962 Endresen finished his legal practice and was first manager and then between 1963 and 1965 director of the tourism committee of Stavanger and the Fylke Rogaland.

Storting Member, Minister and Supreme Court Justice

In the election of September 13, 1965 , Endresen was elected for the first time as a candidate for the conservative Høyre as a member of the Storting and represented the interests of Fylke Rogaland until the election on September 10, 1973 . During his membership in parliament he was between October 8, 1965 and December 16, 1969 secretary of the Storting and from October 1, 1969 to October 3, 1970 member of the parliamentary group of Høyre.

On October 3, 1970, Endresen was appointed as the successor to his party friend Elisabeth Schweigaard Selmer by Prime Minister Per Borten as Minister for Justice and Police ( Justice and Political Minister ) in his cabinet and was a member of this until the end of Borten's term of office on March 17, 1971.

In 1972 Endresen became a district judge ( Sorenskriver ) at the District Court of Holt and worked there until 1977. He was then appointed judge at the Supreme Court of Norway (Norges Høyesterett) , where he worked until 1988. In addition, he was chairman of the committee for the study and professional license of chiropractors from 1979 to 1984 and chairman of the advisory committee of the Reich Insurance Administration for War Pension Matters (Rikstrygdeverket i Krigspensjoneringssaker) between 1983 and 1991 .

Endresen, who was also chairman of the Norway- Normandy Association in 1982 , was appointed commander of the Order of Saint Olav in 1987 for his many years of political and legal services .

His son is the lawyer Clemens Endresen , who has also been a judge at the Norwegian Supreme Court since April 2006.

publication

  • Grensene for et forretningsministeriums handlefrihet , in: Festskrift til John Lyng , Oslo 1975

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Norwegian Ministries at rulers.org