Edmund de Clay
Edmund de Clay was an English-born lawyer and judge who served as Lord Chief Justice of Ireland and Chief Justice of the Irish Common Pleas.[1]
He was born in Nottinghamshire, and later became a landowner there.[2] By 1383, he was regarded as a man who was "learned in the law" and in that year he became Serjeant-at-law.[3] He is known to have been reluctant to take up this offfice, probably because it would involve him in heavy expenses, and he did so only after King Richard II issued a warrant commanding de Clay, along with two other leading advocates, John Hill and Sir John Cary,[4] to be admitted to that rank by a specified day.[5]
In 1385 he was sent to Ireland with a large retinue to take up office as Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas. He was transferred to the more senior office of Lord Chief Justice of Ireland in 1386.[6] He had returned to England and was living on his estates in Nottinghamshire by 1389; later he is recorded as sitting on a commission of oyer and terminer. His date of death is not recorded,[7]
References
Legal offices | ||
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Preceded by John Penros |
Lord Chief Justice of the King's Bench for Ireland 1386-1388 |
Succeeded by Richard Plunkett |