‘There are few instances in modern times of a rise equal to that of Sir Edward Sugden’, wrote Thomas Fowell Buxton* in 1836.
Before he entered Lincoln’s Inn Sugden had formed a liaison with Winifred (baptized, 2 Mar. 1783, as ‘Winifruite’) Knapp, his kitchen maid. They had at least four children, including Richard, the eldest son, who went to Oxford in 1820, before they married at St. Giles-in-the Fields in December 1808. They had their children Edward, Juliet and Laura baptized at St. Pancras Old Church on Christmas Day.
Sugden, who produced a tract on Surrender of Terms in 1819, took silk two years later. In 1825 he responded to attacks in the Commons on chancery administration by John Williams with a published Letter: he professed support for rational reform of its glaring defects, but deplored its portrayal as ‘an odious dungeon’ and opposed sweeping changes. In June 1825, when the Whig sitting Member announced his intended retirement at the next general election, Sugden declared his candidature on ‘constitutional principles’ for New Shoreham, the extended boundaries of which included his own property. In an unsuccessful bid to win the support of the duke of Norfolk he claimed to be ‘a decided friend of Catholic emancipation’; but in his address he asserted that ‘I have pledged myself, at the desire of a numerous body of you, to oppose the introduction of Catholics into Parliament’.
He made his début by opposing as too unsettling Brougham’s motion for inquiry into the state of the law, 29 Feb. 1828, when he approved the government’s proposal to set up separate commissions on the common law and the law of real property and stated his willingness to rationalize chancery procedure. He opposed Kennedy’s bill to alter the Scottish law of entail, 6 Mar., and Davies’s borough polls bill, 31 Mar., 23 May. Defying interruptions, he opposed inquiry into chancery administration, 24 Apr., when he said he was prepared to accept ‘cautious improvement’ but would never agree to the separation of bankruptcy administration. Sugden, who presented a Horsham petition against Catholic relief, 29 Apr., and voted thus, 12 May, gave an earnest of his wish to get rid of blatant chancery ‘anomalies’ by securing leave, 6 May, for a bill to amend the laws for facilitating the payment of debts out of real estate. Introduced on 19 May, it passed the Commons, 9 June, but had only a formal first reading in the Lords. He also brought in for consideration measures to reform the laws concerning estates vested in trustees, the property of infants and lunatics and illusory appointments. When seeking leave for the first, 20 May, he again had difficulty in holding the attention of the House, where his self-satisfied demeanour, rapid and monotonous delivery and squeaky voice made him fair game for the bored and unruly. More dominant than ever in the chancery court during Lord Lyndhurst’s early days as chancellor, he sustained a formidable workload there and in the Commons by virtue of his physical toughness and prodigious powers of apprehension and application.
On 12 Feb. 1829 Sugden announced in the House that he would support Catholic emancipation as a matter of expediency to avert ‘a general convulsion’ in Ireland, but exhorted ministers to crack down on political subscriptions and religious meetings and to promote the country’s economic development and moral improvement. He voted for the measure, 6, 30 Mar., and opposed Inglis’s amendment to the oath, 23 Mar. His insistence that Daniel O’Connell could not sit without taking the oath of supremacy led to a petulant clash with Brougham, 15 May; but three days later, while maintaining the same line, he complimented O’Connell on his ‘talent and temper’. He reintroduced his four real property law amendment bills, 13, 15 Apr., and had them printed for further consideration, 1 May. They passed the Commons, 11 May, and were formally introduced to the Lords the following day. He objected to Baring’s plan to apply money belonging to chancery suitors to payment of the unfunded debt, 8 May. He offered constructive criticisms of Kennedy’s tailzies reform bills, 11 May, and advocated the adoption of a more ‘cautious’ approach to the problem, 22 May 1829.
Sugden, whom Greville considered ‘a great rogue’, had been mentioned as the next solicitor-general in March 1829, and he duly succeeded Tindal on his promotion to the bench in June.
On 9 Nov. 1830 Sugden obtained leave to bring in a bill to amend the Statute of Frauds. Questioned by Hume and others, he declared his hostility to the idea of a ‘pocket-volume’ or ‘code’ of laws. He objected to O’Connell’s plan to repeal the Irish Subletting Act, 11 Nov., accusing him of wishing to deny cheap law to Irish landlords. He voted in the minority with his ministerial colleagues on the civil list, 15 Nov. Shortly before his removal from office he got leave, 19 Nov., to bring in a bill dealing with the attestation of instruments. He introduced it with his frauds bill, 14 Feb. 1831, but neither measure made any progress before the dissolution. He joined in attacks on the Grey ministry for dismissing Hart from the Irish chancellorship and creating pensions for him and chief baron Alexander, 9 Dec. 1830. On Hume’s demands for the abolition of sinecures, 13 Dec., he commented that while many were indefensible, it was necessary to retain some ‘as a remuneration for men who perform much useful business in the House’. As anticipated, he objected to Campbell’s scheme for a general register of deeds, 16 Dec.
Sugden condemned the proposed stock transfer tax, ‘as deliberate a violation of public faith as revolutionary France ever did’, 11 Feb. 1831. He opposed the emigration bill and failed to get leave to legislate to extend the law of mortmain to Ireland, 22 Feb. On 17 Mar. he supported Davies’s motion for inquiry into secondary punishments and brushed aside Hunt’s allegations of the maltreatment of reformers gaoled under the suspension of habeas corpus in 1817. According to Lord Ellenborough, he wanted to answer Jeffrey, the lord advocate, in the debate on the ministerial reform bill, 4 Mar.; ‘but Peel having first told Croker, who was next to him, to speak, Sugden took offence and would say nothing’.
At the ensuing general election Sugden abandoned Weymouth and stood on the duke of Buckingham’s interest for St. Mawes, having made terms with the duke on the basis of their common ‘political sentiments ¼ usually called moderate Whig or liberal Tory’, which recognized that ‘some reform must be conceded in the present excited state of the country’.
When seconding the killing amendment to the second reading of the revised reform bill, 16 Dec. 1831, Sugden said it had been framed to ensure ‘the entire elevation of the democratic over the landed interest’ and ‘for the purpose of bestowing on the political unions the masterdom of the country’. The reformers Ord and Spring Rice dismissed his speech as ‘feeble’ and ‘a lawyer’s rechauffé of many bygone arguments’.
Sugden wanted the general register bill to be considered in committee of the whole House rather than by select committee, 22 Feb. 1832. He thought there were grounds for investigating Lord Plunket’s alleged misdemeanours as Irish chancellor, 6 Mar. He deplored Irish Members’ encouragement of resistance to tithes collection, 25 Mar., and objected to the presentation of an anti-tithes petition which Grattan admitted he had not read, 13 Apr. In the debate on the ministerial crisis, 14 May, he defended Wellington against Russell’s attack, though he personally disclaimed ‘any idea of accepting office’, of which there was ‘not the shadow of a shade of a probability’. Le Marchant thought he spoke ‘in the style of a pettifogging attorney, and only plunged the cause deeper into the mire’.
St. Mawes was disfranchised by the Reform Act, and at the 1832 general election Sugden, having declined an invitation to stand for New Shoreham, unsuccessfully contested Cambridge. He failed again there in June 1834.
a very clever man, profound in conveyancing and case-law; waspish, overbearing, and impatient of contradiction. In Ireland, where everybody did homage to his superiority, he made a good judge; but in England, both as chancellor and in the House of Lords, the quality of his judgments suffered from his inability to endure a brother near the throne.
Lord Selborne, Mems. pt. I, vol. ii, p. 333.
While he resisted sweeping legal reforms, he instituted legislation to improve the lot of the indigent insane and penurious debtors.
