Andrew Graham Murray, 1st Viscount Dunedin, GCVO, PC (21 November 1849 – 21 August 1942) was a Scottish politician and judge.
[citation needed] His father and grandfather were solicitors, and founding partners of the Edinburgh firm Tods Murray & Jamieson.
[citation needed] The latter year he was also elected Member of Parliament for Bute,[3] a seat he held until 1905,[4] and appointed Solicitor General for Scotland in Lord Salisbury's Conservative administration.
[citation needed] During his tenure as a Law Lord he gave long majority judgments in cases including Metropolitan Water Board v Dick Kerr & Co Ltd[9] concerning frustration and Tredegar v. Harwood[10] concerning a landlord's liability to insure premises, Ellerman Lines Ltd v Murray[11] on employment law and excessive reliance on a preamble or draft international instrument, Sorrel v Smith[12] concerning the tort of conspiracy to interfere with a trade or calling, Leyland Shipping Co Ltd v Norwich Union Fire Insurance Society Ltd[13] on causation in tort, Dunlop Pneumatic Tyre Co Ltd v New Garage & Motor Co Ltd[14] on penalty clauses and Plumb v Cobden Flour Mills Co Ltd[15] on employer's liability.
He married firstly Mary Clementina, daughter of Admiral Sir William Edmonstone, 4th Baronet, in 1874.
Ronald Thomas Graham Murray (1875–1934) was a major in the Black Watch and fought in the First World War.