Cearbhall Ó Dálaigh (born Feb. 12, 1911, Bray, near Dublin, Ire.—died March 21, 1978, Sneem, County Kerry) was the chief justice of the Irish Supreme Court (1961–74) and the fifth president of Ireland (1974–76).
His parents were active in the struggle for Irish independence. Ó Dálaigh studied at University College Dublin, earning a degree in Celtic studies in 1931. He was an Irish-language editor on The Irish Press (1931–42), meanwhile becoming a lawyer (1934). Twice unsuccessful as a Fianna Fáil candidate for election to Dáil Éireann (lower house of the Oireachtas, the Irish parliament), he became Ireland’s youngest attorney general, serving in two Fianna Fáil governments (1946–48, 1951–53). In 1953 he became a judge on the Supreme Court and was elevated to chief justice in 1961; he resigned in 1972 to become the first Irish member of the Court of Justice of the European Communities.
When Erskine H. Childers died in 1974, Ó Dálaigh was nominated without opposition as president of Ireland. In September 1976, not long after the Irish Republican Army (IRA) assassinated the British ambassador, Ó Dálaigh referred an Emergency Powers Bill (designed to frustrate the terrorist activities of the IRA) to the Supreme Court for consideration of its constitutionality before signing it into law. The court in due course upheld the bill and the president signed it, but in late October Defense Minister Patrick S. Donegan called him “a thundering disgrace” for his having failed to do so immediately. Already disappointed in the court’s decision, Ó Dálaigh was stung by what he considered Donegan’s assault on the dignity of the presidency, and he resigned several days later.