fbpx
Wikipedia

Robert Atkyns (judge)

Sir Robert Atkyns (1620–1710) was an English Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer, Member of parliament, and Speaker of the House of Lords.[1][2]

Sir Robert Atkyns
Died18 February 1710(1710-02-18) (aged 89)
Sapperton, Gloucestershire
BuriedSapperton Church
WifeMary Clarke
Anne Dacres
IssueRobert
Anne
FatherSir Edward Atkyns
Occupationbarrister, MP and Judge
MemorialsSapperton Church, Gloucestershire

Early life

He was the eldest son of Sir Edward Atkyns, one of the Barons of the Exchequer during the Commonwealth, and the elder brother of Sir Edward Atkyns, who preceded him as Lord Chief Baron. There had been lawyers in the family for many generations: "He himself, and his three immediate ancestors, having been of the profession for near two hundred years, and in judicial places; and (through the blessing of Almighty God) have prospered by it."[3] In The History of Gloucestershire written by his son Sir Robert Atkyns the record of the family is carried still further back, in an unbroken legal line, to a Richard Atkyns who lived at the beginning of the fifteenth century, and "followed the profession of the law in Monmouthshire". Robert Atkyns was born in Gloucestershire in 1620. It is not certain whether he went to Oxford or to Cambridge, Alexander Chalmers including him among the famous men of Balliol College,[4] and George Dyer among those of Sidney Sussex College.[5] Chalmers's statement may have originated in the fact that in 1663 Atkyns received from Oxford the degree of master of arts.[6] In 1638 he was admitted to Lincoln's Inn, and was called to the bar in 1645. Mention of his name is made in some reported cases.

Parliamentary and judicial career

In 1659, he entered Richard Cromwell's parliament as member for Evesham. Probably he was already known to sympathise with the king's party, for he was among the sixty-eight who were made knights of the Bath at Charles's coronation. His name does not appear in the list of members of Charles's first parliament, but in that of 1661, he sat for East Looe, speaking frequently upon legal questions, and, as appears from the record of the debates, with acknowledged authority. In 1661 he was made a bencher of his inn and a King's Serjeant, and about the same time was appointed recorder of Bristol. He served as one of the fire judges after the 1666 great fire of London. On the death of Sir Thomas Tyrrell in 1672 he became a judge of the court of Common Pleas.

Along with Sir William Scroggs, he was a judge in some of the trials arising from the Popish Plot, but there is little trace of the part which he took. According to Roger North, who was an eyewitness to the Plot trials, Scroggs entirely dominated the proceedings: the other judges, in his view "were passive and meddled little". Atkyns shared in the opinion that papists should be sternly dealt with; yet, to judge from his writings and his later life, it is inconceivable that he could have shared in the passion of the time. The chief civil case in which Atkyns took part during this period was that brought by Sir Samuel Barnardiston against Sir William Soame, the High Sheriff of Suffolk, which led ultimately to the passing of the act 7 & 8 Wm. III, c. 7, declaring it illegal for a sheriff to make a double return in the election of members of parliament. The points of the case are technical, but it excited keen political interest, and Atkyns's judgment, in which he differed from the majority of the court, marks the beginning of his separation from the party in power (reprinted in his Tracts, and in 6 St. Tr. 1074). In 1679 he retired from the bench in circumstances which lead one to believe that he was practically dismissed. Being questioned before a committee of the House of Commons in 1689, he mentioned several causes for his enforced retirement.

His judgment in Barnardiston v. Soame had given offence; he had declared against pensions to parliament men; he had quarrelled with Scroggs about the right to petition; and he had offended North by speaking against the sale of offices. "As to pensions, Lord Clifford took occasion to tell me 'that I had attended diligently in parliament, and was taken from my profession, therefore the king had thought fit to send me £500' I replied: 'I thank you. I will not accept anything for my attendance in parliament.' ... I did take occasion upon this to advise my countrymen 'that those who took pensions were not fit to be sent up to parliament again'". In fact, Atkyns was marked out as a disaffected man. He settled in Gloucestershire, with the intention of abandoning the law, but his political opinions again brought him into trouble. When the Oxford Parliament was summoned, he was persuaded, though unwillingly, to stand for Bristol, but was defeated by Sir Richard Hart and Thomas Earle,[7] both Tories. A strong party in the city, not content with his defeat, sought to force him to resign the recordership. The occasion was found in an illegality of which Atkyns along with others was said to be guilty in proceeding to the election of an alderman in the absence of the mayor, who was the same Sir R. Hart. The prosecution failed, but "Sir Robert Atkyns, on the Lord Pemberton's and his brother's persuasion, resigned his recordership; which was all that the city of Bristol aimed at by their indictment".[8] In the following year came the trial of Lord Russell; he could not appear by counsel, but his friends exerted themselves in the preparation of his defence, and applied to Atkyns, who wrote to them a statement of the law. "And the like assistance being afterwards desired from me, by many more persons of the best quality, who soon after fell into the same danger, I, living at some distance from London, did venture by letters, to find the best rules and directions I could, towards the making of their just defence, being heartily concerned with them".[9] Five years afterwards he published the letters, together with A Defence of the late Lord Russel's Innocency, a spirited and eloquent reply to an anonymous pamphlet called An Antidote against Poyson. To a rejoinder from the same pen, The Magistracy and Government of England vindicated, he wrote in answer The Lord Russel's Innocency further defended, assailing his opponent with abuse and almost expressly naming him as Sir Bartholomew Shower. In point of legal criticism, Atkyns's letters and pamphlets are effective and still worth reading, but they do not shake the received opinion that the law of treason was not strained against Lord Russell.[10] In 1684 we find his name associated with another great case, when Sir William Williams, the speaker of the House of Commons, was indicted for printing and publishing Dangerfield's narrative of the Popish Plot. Williams had acted under the orders of the House, so that the case raised the whole question of the powers and privileges of Parliament. Atkyns's argument in his defence is an elaborate review of the authorities, to show that the actions of Parliament, itself the highest court of the nation, were beyond the jurisdiction of inferior courts. Judgment was given against Williams, but in later cases, the decision has been described as disgraceful. The report in the State Trials says that Atkyns took part in the case, and even notices that he had to borrow a wig for the purpose; but in the other reports there is no mention of his name as counsel.

His steady attitude of resistance during these years of misgovernment met with recognition at the Revolution. In 1689 he succeeded his brother as chief baron, and in October of the same year, the great seal being in commission, he was appointed speaker of the House of Lords in the place of the Marquis of Halifax. He held the speakership until 1693, and for his services was recommended by the House to the king's favour. Towards the end of the following year he retired from the bench – through disappointment, it has been said, at not being chosen Master of the Rolls, but more likely owing to advancing age. Yet he still gave proof of continued vigour. In a pamphlet published in 1695, and "humbly submitted to the consideration of the House of Lords, to whom it belongeth to keep the inferior courts within their bounds," he renewed Edward Coke's protest against the insidious encroachments of the court of Chancery, tracing the growth of equitable jurisdiction, and suggesting how the common law might be restored. This was followed a few years afterwards by another tract, addressed as a petition to the House of Commons, in which, while repeating his complaint against the court of Chancery, and lamenting the uncertainty of the law, he argued from the history of Parliament that the exercise of judicial functions by the Lords was a usurpation. It should be read along with Skinner's case, in which the Lords failed in their attempt to exercise original jurisdiction, and Dr. Shirley's case, in which they maintained their right to an appellate jurisdiction. Atkyns had himself, while in parliament, taken a vigorous part in this struggle.[11] After 1699 we hear nothing more of him till his death. He spent his later years at Sapperton Hall in Gloucestershire, and died on 18 Feb. 1710, a few weeks before his 90th birthday. Lord Campbell calls him a "virtuous judge," in what was an age of judicial scandals.

Family

 
Monument to Sir Robert Atkyns, Sapperton Church

By his first wife Mary, he had an only son and heir, Sir Robert Atkyns the younger. Mary died in 1680. Sir Robert remarried in the following year Anne Dacres, who died in 1712. His son married in 1669 Louisa-Margaret (Louisonne) Carteret, daughter of Sir George Carteret, and died in 1741 without issue.[12] [13]

Works

  • Parliamentary and Political Tracts, collected 1734, 2nd ed. 1741. Besides those already mentioned it contains other tracts published in Atkyns's lifetime:
    • An Enquiry into the Power of dispensing with Penal Statutes, which sums up the whole history of dispensations and denies their antiquity
    • a reply to Chief Justice Herbert's review of the authorities in Hale's case, which raised the question of the dispensing power (see both tracts, 11 St. Tr. 1200)
    • a discourse on the ecclesiastical commission of 1686 (in 11 St. Tr. 1148)
    • a speech as chief baron to the lord mayor in 1693 (also in 2 St. Tr. 361), a word of warning as to Louis XIV's designs for a universal and arbitrary monarchy.
  • An Enquiry into the Jurisdiction of the Chancery in Causes of Equity, 1695
  • A Treatise of the True and Ancient Jurisdiction of the House of Peers, 1699. In many copies of this work is included the case of Tooke v. Atkyns, in which he was defendant, and which, as he allows, makes him write warmly on the subject of equitable jurisdiction.

References

  1. ^ J.P. Ferris, 'Atkyns, Robert (1620-1710), of Lincoln's Inn and Sapperton, Glos', in B.D. Henning (ed.), The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1660-1690 (from Boydell & Brewer, 1983), History of Parliament Online.
  2. ^ J. Greenberg, 'Atkyns, Sir Robert (bap. 1621, d. 1710), judge and politician', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (2004).
  3. ^ Epistle dedicatory to Atkyns's Enquiry into the Jurisdiction of the Chancery
  4. ^ Alexander Chalmers' General Biographical Dictionary i.60
  5. ^ Dyer, History of the University and Colleges of Cambridge, 2 vols, London, 1814, ii.437. ODNB agrees with Dyers, as does "Atkins, Robert (ATKS637R)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  6. ^ Catalogue of Oxford Graduates; Wood mentions this, but does not connect him otherwise with Oxford (Fasti, ed. Bliss, ii. 273)
  7. ^ Williams, William Retlaw (1898). The parliamentary history of the county of Gloucester. Hereford: Jakeman and Carver. p. 119. Retrieved 26 October 2011.
  8. ^ 2 Shower, 238; see Atkyns's argument, which is ingenious and learned, in 3 Mod. Rep. 3
  9. ^ Tracts, 334
  10. ^ They are reprinted in his Tracts, and, along with Shower's Magistracy and Sir John Hawles's Remarks on Lord Russel's Trial.
  11. ^ For a full account, see Francis Hargrave's preface to Matthew Hale's Jurisdiction of the House of Lords, and John Hatsell's Precedents, vol. iii
  12. ^ The family history is set out in detail in the report of a lawsuit in 1755 : Taylor d. Atkyns v Horde (1755) Note of Cases Argued and Adjudged in the King's Bench Vol. 1 p.143
  13. ^ Memorial to the younger Sir Robert Atkyns (1747-1711) [1]
Attribution

  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain"Atkyns, Robert (1621-1709)". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.

External links

Legal offices
Preceded by Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer
1689–1695
Succeeded by
Parliament of England
Preceded by
Not represented in the
Second Protectorate Parliament
Member of Parliament for Evesham
1659
With: Theophilus Andrews
Succeeded by
Not represented in the
restored Rump
Preceded by Member of Parliament for East Looe
1661–1673
With: Henry Seymour
Succeeded by
Henry Seymour
Walter Langdon

robert, atkyns, judge, robert, atkyns, 1620, 1710, english, lord, chief, baron, exchequer, member, parliament, speaker, house, lords, robert, atkynsdied18, february, 1710, 1710, aged, sapperton, gloucestershireburiedsapperton, churchwifemary, clarkeanne, dacre. Sir Robert Atkyns 1620 1710 was an English Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer Member of parliament and Speaker of the House of Lords 1 2 Sir Robert AtkynsDied18 February 1710 1710 02 18 aged 89 Sapperton GloucestershireBuriedSapperton ChurchWifeMary ClarkeAnne DacresIssueRobertAnneFatherSir Edward AtkynsOccupationbarrister MP and JudgeMemorialsSapperton Church Gloucestershire Contents 1 Early life 2 Parliamentary and judicial career 3 Family 4 Works 5 References 6 External linksEarly life EditHe was the eldest son of Sir Edward Atkyns one of the Barons of the Exchequer during the Commonwealth and the elder brother of Sir Edward Atkyns who preceded him as Lord Chief Baron There had been lawyers in the family for many generations He himself and his three immediate ancestors having been of the profession for near two hundred years and in judicial places and through the blessing of Almighty God have prospered by it 3 In The History of Gloucestershire written by his son Sir Robert Atkyns the record of the family is carried still further back in an unbroken legal line to a Richard Atkyns who lived at the beginning of the fifteenth century and followed the profession of the law in Monmouthshire Robert Atkyns was born in Gloucestershire in 1620 It is not certain whether he went to Oxford or to Cambridge Alexander Chalmers including him among the famous men of Balliol College 4 and George Dyer among those of Sidney Sussex College 5 Chalmers s statement may have originated in the fact that in 1663 Atkyns received from Oxford the degree of master of arts 6 In 1638 he was admitted to Lincoln s Inn and was called to the bar in 1645 Mention of his name is made in some reported cases Parliamentary and judicial career EditIn 1659 he entered Richard Cromwell s parliament as member for Evesham Probably he was already known to sympathise with the king s party for he was among the sixty eight who were made knights of the Bath at Charles s coronation His name does not appear in the list of members of Charles s first parliament but in that of 1661 he sat for East Looe speaking frequently upon legal questions and as appears from the record of the debates with acknowledged authority In 1661 he was made a bencher of his inn and a King s Serjeant and about the same time was appointed recorder of Bristol He served as one of the fire judges after the 1666 great fire of London On the death of Sir Thomas Tyrrell in 1672 he became a judge of the court of Common Pleas Along with Sir William Scroggs he was a judge in some of the trials arising from the Popish Plot but there is little trace of the part which he took According to Roger North who was an eyewitness to the Plot trials Scroggs entirely dominated the proceedings the other judges in his view were passive and meddled little Atkyns shared in the opinion that papists should be sternly dealt with yet to judge from his writings and his later life it is inconceivable that he could have shared in the passion of the time The chief civil case in which Atkyns took part during this period was that brought by Sir Samuel Barnardiston against Sir William Soame the High Sheriff of Suffolk which led ultimately to the passing of the act 7 amp 8 Wm III c 7 declaring it illegal for a sheriff to make a double return in the election of members of parliament The points of the case are technical but it excited keen political interest and Atkyns s judgment in which he differed from the majority of the court marks the beginning of his separation from the party in power reprinted in his Tracts and in 6 St Tr 1074 In 1679 he retired from the bench in circumstances which lead one to believe that he was practically dismissed Being questioned before a committee of the House of Commons in 1689 he mentioned several causes for his enforced retirement His judgment in Barnardiston v Soame had given offence he had declared against pensions to parliament men he had quarrelled with Scroggs about the right to petition and he had offended North by speaking against the sale of offices As to pensions Lord Clifford took occasion to tell me that I had attended diligently in parliament and was taken from my profession therefore the king had thought fit to send me 500 I replied I thank you I will not accept anything for my attendance in parliament I did take occasion upon this to advise my countrymen that those who took pensions were not fit to be sent up to parliament again In fact Atkyns was marked out as a disaffected man He settled in Gloucestershire with the intention of abandoning the law but his political opinions again brought him into trouble When the Oxford Parliament was summoned he was persuaded though unwillingly to stand for Bristol but was defeated by Sir Richard Hart and Thomas Earle 7 both Tories A strong party in the city not content with his defeat sought to force him to resign the recordership The occasion was found in an illegality of which Atkyns along with others was said to be guilty in proceeding to the election of an alderman in the absence of the mayor who was the same Sir R Hart The prosecution failed but Sir Robert Atkyns on the Lord Pemberton s and his brother s persuasion resigned his recordership which was all that the city of Bristol aimed at by their indictment 8 In the following year came the trial of Lord Russell he could not appear by counsel but his friends exerted themselves in the preparation of his defence and applied to Atkyns who wrote to them a statement of the law And the like assistance being afterwards desired from me by many more persons of the best quality who soon after fell into the same danger I living at some distance from London did venture by letters to find the best rules and directions I could towards the making of their just defence being heartily concerned with them 9 Five years afterwards he published the letters together with A Defence of the late Lord Russel s Innocency a spirited and eloquent reply to an anonymous pamphlet called An Antidote against Poyson To a rejoinder from the same pen The Magistracy and Government of England vindicated he wrote in answer The Lord Russel s Innocency further defended assailing his opponent with abuse and almost expressly naming him as Sir Bartholomew Shower In point of legal criticism Atkyns s letters and pamphlets are effective and still worth reading but they do not shake the received opinion that the law of treason was not strained against Lord Russell 10 In 1684 we find his name associated with another great case when Sir William Williams the speaker of the House of Commons was indicted for printing and publishing Dangerfield s narrative of the Popish Plot Williams had acted under the orders of the House so that the case raised the whole question of the powers and privileges of Parliament Atkyns s argument in his defence is an elaborate review of the authorities to show that the actions of Parliament itself the highest court of the nation were beyond the jurisdiction of inferior courts Judgment was given against Williams but in later cases the decision has been described as disgraceful The report in the State Trials says that Atkyns took part in the case and even notices that he had to borrow a wig for the purpose but in the other reports there is no mention of his name as counsel His steady attitude of resistance during these years of misgovernment met with recognition at the Revolution In 1689 he succeeded his brother as chief baron and in October of the same year the great seal being in commission he was appointed speaker of the House of Lords in the place of the Marquis of Halifax He held the speakership until 1693 and for his services was recommended by the House to the king s favour Towards the end of the following year he retired from the bench through disappointment it has been said at not being chosen Master of the Rolls but more likely owing to advancing age Yet he still gave proof of continued vigour In a pamphlet published in 1695 and humbly submitted to the consideration of the House of Lords to whom it belongeth to keep the inferior courts within their bounds he renewed Edward Coke s protest against the insidious encroachments of the court of Chancery tracing the growth of equitable jurisdiction and suggesting how the common law might be restored This was followed a few years afterwards by another tract addressed as a petition to the House of Commons in which while repeating his complaint against the court of Chancery and lamenting the uncertainty of the law he argued from the history of Parliament that the exercise of judicial functions by the Lords was a usurpation It should be read along with Skinner s case in which the Lords failed in their attempt to exercise original jurisdiction and Dr Shirley s case in which they maintained their right to an appellate jurisdiction Atkyns had himself while in parliament taken a vigorous part in this struggle 11 After 1699 we hear nothing more of him till his death He spent his later years at Sapperton Hall in Gloucestershire and died on 18 Feb 1710 a few weeks before his 90th birthday Lord Campbell calls him a virtuous judge in what was an age of judicial scandals Family Edit Monument to Sir Robert Atkyns Sapperton ChurchBy his first wife Mary he had an only son and heir Sir Robert Atkyns the younger Mary died in 1680 Sir Robert remarried in the following year Anne Dacres who died in 1712 His son married in 1669 Louisa Margaret Louisonne Carteret daughter of Sir George Carteret and died in 1741 without issue 12 13 Works EditParliamentary and Political Tracts collected 1734 2nd ed 1741 Besides those already mentioned it contains other tracts published in Atkyns s lifetime An Enquiry into the Power of dispensing with Penal Statutes which sums up the whole history of dispensations and denies their antiquity a reply to Chief Justice Herbert s review of the authorities in Hale s case which raised the question of the dispensing power see both tracts 11 St Tr 1200 a discourse on the ecclesiastical commission of 1686 in 11 St Tr 1148 a speech as chief baron to the lord mayor in 1693 also in 2 St Tr 361 a word of warning as to Louis XIV s designs for a universal and arbitrary monarchy An Enquiry into the Jurisdiction of the Chancery in Causes of Equity 1695 A Treatise of the True and Ancient Jurisdiction of the House of Peers 1699 In many copies of this work is included the case of Tooke v Atkyns in which he was defendant and which as he allows makes him write warmly on the subject of equitable jurisdiction References Edit J P Ferris Atkyns Robert 1620 1710 of Lincoln s Inn and Sapperton Glos in B D Henning ed The History of Parliament the House of Commons 1660 1690 from Boydell amp Brewer 1983 History of Parliament Online J Greenberg Atkyns Sir Robert bap 1621 d 1710 judge and politician Oxford Dictionary of National Biography 2004 Epistle dedicatory to Atkyns s Enquiry into the Jurisdiction of the Chancery Alexander Chalmers General Biographical Dictionary i 60 Dyer History of the University and Colleges of Cambridge 2 vols London 1814 ii 437 ODNB agrees with Dyers as does Atkins Robert ATKS637R A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge Catalogue of Oxford Graduates Wood mentions this but does not connect him otherwise with Oxford Fasti ed Bliss ii 273 Williams William Retlaw 1898 The parliamentary history of the county of Gloucester Hereford Jakeman and Carver p 119 Retrieved 26 October 2011 2 Shower 238 see Atkyns s argument which is ingenious and learned in 3 Mod Rep 3 Tracts 334 They are reprinted in his Tracts and along with Shower s Magistracy and Sir John Hawles s Remarks on Lord Russel s Trial For a full account see Francis Hargrave s preface to Matthew Hale s Jurisdiction of the House of Lords and John Hatsell s Precedents vol iii The family history is set out in detail in the report of a lawsuit in 1755 Taylor d Atkyns v Horde 1755 Note of Cases Argued and Adjudged in the King s Bench Vol 1 p 143 Memorial to the younger Sir Robert Atkyns 1747 1711 1 Attribution This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Atkyns Robert 1621 1709 Dictionary of National Biography London Smith Elder amp Co 1885 1900 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Robert Atkyns judge Wikisource has original text related to this article Atkyns Robert 1621 1709 DNB00 Legal officesPreceded byEdward Atkyns Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer1689 1695 Succeeded byEdward WardParliament of EnglandPreceded byNot represented in theSecond Protectorate Parliament Member of Parliament for Evesham1659 With Theophilus Andrews Succeeded byNot represented in therestored RumpPreceded byHenry SeymourJonathan Trelawny Member of Parliament for East Looe1661 1673 With Henry Seymour Succeeded byHenry SeymourWalter Langdon Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Robert Atkyns judge amp oldid 1152191921, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.