Founding Partners

Eugene Aubrey Pyfrom Dupuch
Eugene Aubrey Pyfrom
Dupuch was born in Nassau, Bahamas on December 7, 1912. He was educated at Queen’s College, Nassau
and at St. John’s University, Minnesota,
U.S.A.
His interest in the law
was sparked in 1942 when a well-established political group sued “The Tribune”,
the family newspaper, for libel. He and
his older brother, Etienne, despite their lack of legal experience, decided to
defend themselves and won the case, and this led to him attending the
University of Toronto’s School of Law in 1943.
Mr. Dupuch was known as a
prolific lawyer. His greatest joy was in
the practice of criminal law, but his interest in Constitutional Law was
sparked by his dean at Law School, Dr. W. P. M. Kennedy, and he was regarded as
an expert in this field.
In 1960 he and Mr.
Orville A. Turnquest (as he then was) formed a partnership which endured until
his untimely death in 1981.
In September, 1998 the
third law school of the Council of Legal Education (Caribbean) was established
in The Bahamas and named after him – The Eugene Dupuch Law School.
His Excellency Sir Orville Turnquest,
G.C.M.G., Q.C.,
His Excellency Sir Orville Turnquest,
G.C.M.G., Q.C., was the Governor-General of the Commonwealth of The Bahamas. He
was sworn in on January 3, 1995, succeeding His Excellency Sir Clifford
Darling, and retired on November 13, 2001.
Upon assumption of the Office of
Governor-General, Sir Orville was made a Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St.
Michael and St. George.
A former Deputy Prime Minister,
Attorney-General and Minister of Foreign Affairs, Sir Orville has had an
illustrious career as a barrister-at-law and counsel and attorney.
Sir Orville Turnquest became Deputy
Prime Minister, Attorney-General and Minister of Foreign Affairs on September
1, 1993, having served as Attorney-General and Minister of Justice and Foreign
Affairs since August 21, 1992.
In private practice in The Bahamas
since 1953 as counsel and attorney and notary public, the Governor-General was
a senior partner in the law firm of Dupuch and Turnquest prior to his becoming
a Cabinet Minister. He acted as Stipendiary and Circuit Magistrate and Coroner
in 1959, and served as President of The Bahamas Bar Association and chairman of
The Bahamas Bar Council between 1970 and 1972. He is a former part-time
lecturer in law at The Bahamas Extra-mural Department of the University of the
West Indies and a member of The Bahamas Law Revision Committee. He was a law
tutor and a member of the Examining Board for admission to The Bahamas Bar from
1965 until his ministerial appointment. Sir Orville was made a Queen's Counsel
of the Supreme Court on January 6, 1993.
Sir Orville has been awarded LL.D.
(Hon.) from Elmira College, N.Y., LL.D.
(Hon.) from University of the West Indies,
Honorary Degree of Doctor of Humane Letters from Sojourner-Douglass
College, Maryland, and Member of the Presidents Associates of Nova Southeastern
University, Ft. Lauderdale, Florida.
He married the late Edith Louise Thompson on
February 19, 1955. He has two daughters and one son --- Caryl Antoinette
Eileen Lashley, a barrister-at-law; Michele Cecile Edith Fields, a chartered
accountant; and Orville Alton Thompson Turnquest, a former bank officer who now
serves as a Cabinet Minister and Member of Parliament in The Bahamas.
In semi-retirement Sir Orville is in
constant demand as a public speaker, and practices as a Consultant Counsel to his former law firm; he also devotes a great deal of his time to
historical research.
His recreational pursuits are tennis, swimming, music and reading.
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