Edward Somerton
Edward Somerton, or Somertoune was an Irish barrister and judge who held the offices of Serjeant-at-law and judge of the Court of King's Bench and the Court of Common Pleas. He was born in Ireland, possibly in Waterford, although he lived much of his life in Dublin. By 1426 he was a clerk in the Court of Chancery, and was paid 26 shillings for his labours in preparing writs and enrolment of indentures,. In 1427 he is recorded in London studying law at Lincoln's Inn. He returned to Ireland and was again in the Crown service by 1435, when he was ordered to convey lands at Beaulieu, County Louth to Robert Chambre, one of the Barons of the Court of Exchequer. He was appointed King's Serjeant for life in 1437; he also acted as counsel for the city of Waterford, a position subsequently held by another future judge, John Gough.
Serjeant-at-law
His duties as Serjeant were onerous, and he complained that his salary of £9 per annum was entirely inadequate, given his workload. The Crown agreed to his demand for an increase, noting that he was required to attend all Council meetings and sessions of Irish Parliament "wherever they should be held in Ireland" at his own expense, and that £9 a year was wholly inadequate for this purpose. Edward was to receive 4 shillings a day in wages, rather less than Chevir.His period as King's Serjeant, then the Crown's senior legal adviser, was one of great political turbulence, marked by fierce conflict between the rival Butler and Talbot factions, with both parties contending to dominate the Government. His name appears frequently in the Patent Rolls in connection with the various political controversies of the time. There is good reason to think that he personally tried to stay neutral in the conflict and to maintain friendly relations with men on both sides of the dispute. Although Robert Dyke, the Master of the Rolls in Ireland from 1436 to 1449, was a firm supporter of the Butler side in the feud and necessarily hostile to the Talbot faction, Somerton valued him highly as an "honest life and conversation"
who had given many years of good service to the Crown. It was on his nomination that Dyke was made Lord Treasurer of Ireland in 1444. Both of them were witnesses to the royal charter of 1446 whereby the liberties of Dublin Corporation were confirmed.