man on the Clapham omnibus

English edit

Etymology edit

First put to legal use in a reported judgement by Sir Richard Henn Collins MR in the 1903 English Court of Appeal libel case, McQuire v. Western Morning News, who attributed it to Lord Bowen.

Noun edit

man on the Clapham omnibus (plural (rare) men on the Clapham omnibus)

  1. (UK, law) Any hypothetical reasonable person used by the Courts in considering questions of reasonableness; an everyman.
  2. (UK, by extension) Any ordinary person; everyman.
    Synonym: man on the street

See also edit