Sir Thomas de Multon Lee Braddell (25 November 1856 – January 1927) was a barrister and colonial judge.
[1][2][3] In 1879, Braddell went to Singapore to join his father's law firm, and in the following year was admitted to the local bar.
[2][3] In 1913, he went to Kuala Lumpur as Chief Judicial Commissioner of the Federated Malay States.
One of his most notable judgments was in the Paniker case (1915) which caused dismay in the rubber industry when he decided that the appellant had not acted unlawfully when he induced rubber workers to leave their employer for better conditions.
Their eldest son, Roland Braddell, was a lawyer and joint editor of the book One Hundred Years of Singapore (1921).