| Constituency | Dates |
|---|---|
| Edinburgh | 1780 – 23 Mar. 1781 |
Clerk of justiciary 1783; raised to the Scottish bench as Lord Glenlee 1795, res. 1840.
In 1774, Miller as a youth of 19 called James Boswell to account for charges of prejudice in the trial of John Reid levelled against his father, the lord justice clerk, in a pseudonymous letter in the London Chronicle. But the affair was eventually amicably settled through the mediation of Miller’s uncle Patrick, who said to Boswell:1Private Pprs. x. 34.
My nephew, though not yet known in the world is, I assure you, an uncommon young man. He is a thinking metaphysical fellow; and he will argue himself into a persuasion that he is in the right and though upon this occasion he has nothing to say he may keep a resentment in his mind and some years after this easily contrive to make a quarrel with you in which he shall be a principal. It was therefore to be wished that this affair were effectually settled that no bad blood may remain.
Possessed of a fortune independent of his father,2Pol. State of Scotland 1788, p. 31. whose politics he followed, Miller contested Edinburgh in 1780 on the Government interest against Sir Lawrence Dundas. On 1 Feb. 1781 Miller spoke in defence of Sir Hugh Palliser’s appointment to Greenwich Hospital.3Debrett, i. 400-2. Unseated on 23 Mar. 1781, he does not appear to have sought to re-enter Parliament.
He died 9 May 1846.
