Powys-Lybbe Forbears - Person Sheet
Powys-Lybbe Forbears - Person Sheet
Death8 Sep 1495
BurialSempringham
GeneralChief Justice of England.
Notes for Sir William Hussey
He and Elizabeth had issue for many generations.

His and Eliz B.’s dau. Elizabeth m. Richard Grey, earl of Kent but dsp.
DNB Main notes for Sir William Hussey
Hussey or Huse, Sir William d. 1495

Name: Hussey or Huse, Sir William
Dates: d. 1495
Active Date: 1475
Gender: Male

Field of Interest: Law
Occupation: Chief justice
Place of
    Education
: Gray's Inn
Spouse: Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Berkeley
Sources: Foss's Lives of the Judges; Dugdale's Baronage, ii...
Contributor: J. A. H. [John Andrew Hamilton]

Article
Hussey or Huse, Sir William d. 1495, chief justice, was probably a son of the Sir Henry Huse who received a grant of free warren in the manor of Herting in Sussex in the eighth year of Henry VI. Campbell, however, describes him as belonging to a Lincolnshire family of small means. He was a member of Gray's Inn, and on 16 June 1471 was appointed attorney-general, with full power of deputing clerks and officers under him in courts of record. As attorney-general he conducted the impeachment of the Duke of Clarence for treason. In Trinity term of 1478 he attained the degree of serjeant-at-law, and on 7 May 1481 was appointed chief justice of the king's bench, in succession to Sir Thomas Billing, at a salary of 140 marks a year. This appointment was renewed at the accession of each of the next three kings, and under Henry VII he was also a commissioner to decide the claims made to fill various offices at the coronation (Rutland Papers, p. 8).
In the first year of this reign he successfully protested against the king's practice of consulting the judges beforehand upon crown cases which they were subsequently to try (Year-book, 1 Hen. VII, p. 26). In June 1492 he was a commissioner to treat with the ambassadors of the king of France. He seems to have died late in 1495, as on 24 Nov. of that year Sir John Fineux [q.v.] succeeded him as chief justice. He married Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Berkeley of Wymondham, and had two sons, John, lord Hussey of Sleaford [q.v.], and Robert, from whom descend the Hussey family of Honnington, Leicestershire.

Sources
Foss's Lives of the Judges; Dugdale's Baronage, ii. 309; Burke's Extinct Baronetage, p. 275; Rymer's Federa, xii. 481; Coke's Institutes, iii. 29; Cal. Rot. Pat. pp. 39, 276, 316, 326; Campbell's Lives of the Chief Justices.

Contributor: J. A. H

published  1891
Last Modified 7 Dec 2006Created 14 May 2022 by Tim Powys-Lybbe
Re-created by Tim Powys-Lybbe on 14 May 20220