Sidney Smythe
Sir Sidney Stafford Smythe, PC was an English judge and politician.
Early life
Born in London, he was descended from Customer Smythe and Waller's "Sacharissa". His father, Henry Smythe of Old Bounds in the parish of Bidborough, Kent, died in 1706, aged 29. His mother, Elizabeth, the daughter of Dr. John Lloyd, canon of Windsor, then became the wife of William Hunt, and died on 6 October 1754.Smythe was admitted to St John's College, Cambridge, as a fellow-commoner on 1 July 1721, and graduated B.A. in 1724. Having entered the Inner Temple on 5 June 1724, he was called to the bar in February 1728, and joined the home circuit. In 1740 he was appointed steward of the court of the king's palace at Westminster, in place of Sir Thomas Abney, and in Trinity term 1747 he was made a King's Counsel, and became a bencher of the Inner Temple. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1742.
At the 1747 British general election Smythe was returned to the House of Commons for the borough of East Grinstead. He sat in the house for three sessions, and there is no record of any speech he made. In January 1749 he took part in the prosecution of the smugglers who were tried for murder before a special commission at Chichester.
Judge
Smythe was appointed a baron of the exchequer in place of Charles Clarke who died in 1750. He received the order of the coif on 23 June 1750, took his seat on the bench, and on 7 November was knighted. With Heneage Legge he tried Mary Blandy at the Oxford assizes in March 1752.While a puisne baron, Smythe was twice appointed a commissioner of the Great Seal. On the first occasion, from 19 November 1756 to 20 June 1757, he was joined in the commission with Sir John Willes and Sir John Eardley-Wilmot. On the second occasion, from 21 January 1770 to 23 January 1771, he was chief commissioner, his colleagues being Henry Bathurst and Sir Richard Aston.
Smythe succeeded Sir Thomas Parker as lord chief baron on 28 October 1772. Since Parker continued to enjoy good health after his resignation, while Smythe was often prevented by illness from attending the court, Lord Mansfield is said to have cruelly observed, "The new chief baron should resign in favour of his predecessor".