Henry Burnell

For the Irish politician, playwright and landowner, see Henry Burnell (author).

Henry Burnell (c.1540–1614) was an Irish judge and politician; he was briefly Recorder of Dublin and a justice of the Court of King's Bench. Though he was willing to accept Crown office, he spent much of his career in opposition to the Government. He was one of the leaders of the protest against the taxation policies of the Lord Deputy of Ireland, Sir Henry Sidney, in the late 1570s, and as a member of the Irish House of Commons in the 1580s he successfully opposed Sidney's successor, Sir John Perrot. In the early 1600s he was one of the leaders of the protest against strict enforcement of the Penal Laws. His professional reputation was gravely damaged in his last years when he was fined for having altered a deed concerning the Earl of Kildare's will. He was the grandfather of the playwright Henry Burnell.

Early life

He was born in Castleknock, County Dublin, son of John Burnell.[1] The Burnells were a long-established Dublin family, which originally settled at Balgriffin; they were descended from Robert Burnell, Baron of the Court of Exchequer (Ireland) between about 1388 and 1413.[2] An earlier John Burnell was briefly Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer in the 1490s. The family were staunchly Roman Catholic and their loyalty to the Crown was sometimes questioned. Henry's father had managed to retain the family estates after his cousin, another John Burnell, had been executed for his part in the rebellion of Silken Thomas; he was still alive, described as "very old", in 1577. Henry was at Lincoln's Inn 1561-2 and was one of the Irish students who compiled a book detailing the maladministration of the Pale. He retturned to Ireland to practice law about 1564.

In 1573 he was appointed Recorder of Dublin but resigned little over a year later. His motives are unclear but since he emerged soon after as legal adviser to the Earl of Kildare it is likely that he found private practice more lucrative.[3] Even Sir Henry Sidney, a stern critic of Burnell, admitted that there was no doubt of his great success at the Bar, which had made him a rich man.[4]

Cess controversy

The cess, a tax levied on the gentlemen of the Pale, supposedly for military purposes, had always been unpopular, and Burnell had denounced it as early as 1562. In 1576 the Lord Deputy of Ireland, Henry Sidney, announced ambitious plans to reform and extend it. The landowners of the Pale protested that the cost would be ruinous.[5] Burnell was one of a deputation of eminent lawyers chosen to petition Elizabeth directly against the cess, the others being Richard Netterville and Barnaby Skurlock. The mission went badly; Elizabeth took offence at the challenge to her royal prerogative and at Sidney's urging she imprisoned the three lawyers in the Fleet Prison. Given his family's previous association with Silken Thomas Burnell was vulnerable to accusations of disloyalty. Sidney, while grudgingly calling him the most honest of the three lawyers (if only he would stay out of politics), accused him of being a "perverse Papist" with "a great thirst to rid his country of the English."[6] As opposition to Sidney's plans mounted and he began to think of asking to be recalled to England, the tension eased and the three lawyers were freed in return for making an abject apology.[7]

Parliament of 1585

Burnell and Richard Netterville returned to their opposition role in the Parliament of 1585, to which Burnell had been returned as a knight of the shire for County Dublin. The new Lord Deputy, Perrot, like Sidney before him, had an ambitious reform program, but the opposition thwarted him at every opportunity, even insisting on examining his accounts, for which Perrot wished them "foul scorn". He imprisoned some of the opposition members but was unable to get his program passed.[8]

Somewhat surprisingly Burnell was once more appointed to the Bench in 1590 as third justice of the King's Bench.[3] However he served only for a single term, which may suggest that it was only a temporary office, or that doubts had been raised about his loyalty.

Penal laws

Burnell was a staunch Roman Catholic and strongly objected to the Anglican settlement; in 1605-6 he was one of the strongest supporters of Patrick Barnewall in his protest against the fines imposed for failure to attend Anglican service and the use of the Court of Castle Chamber to impose religious conformity. Yet again he was arrested but, probably because of his age, not imprisoned.[9]

Digby v Earl of Kildare

In his last years his professional reputation suffered from the reopening of the Kildare inheritance dispute of 20 years earlier. Lettice Digby, 1st Baroness Offaly was the granddaughter and heir general of Burnell's old client the 11th Earl of Kildare and his wife Mabel Browne. Lettice and her husband deeply resented the fact that the great bulk of the Kildare inheritance had passed first to her uncle and then to her cousin Gerald FitzGerald, 14th Earl of Kildare. By 1602 she had learned that a crucial deed supposedly executed by her grandfather, who died in 1585, might have been forged or tampered with by his widow. She and her husband Robert Digby then sued both the earl and the aged dowager countess. The case went on for over a decade and involved numerous hearings in several different courts.[10]

In 1608 the Court of Castle Chamber, the Irish equivalent of Star Chamber, began an inquiry into the forgery allegation, which had transformed a private lawsuit into a matter concerning the Crown.[11] The old countess admitted that she had consulted Burnell in 1585 about the deed, fearing that it did not adequately protect her jointure, that Burnell had advised that it did not give adequate protection but that he would make the necessary alterations.[12] Burnell himself admitted to having advised on making some alterations "but without offence" (presumably he meant without criminal intent). The Chamber acquitted the countess of any offence but found Burnell guilty of forgery, a "grave offence deserving severe punishment". He was subjected to a heavy fine and to be imprisoned at the Crown's pleasure, although it does not seem the latter penalty was carried out.[13]

Jon Crawford in his detailed analysis of the trial cautions against placing too much reliance on evidence from witnesses who were describing the events of more than 20 years past.[14] Nonetheless Burnell did admit to having advised that the deed could be altered. Such behaviour from an eminent lawyer, whom even his critics called an honest man, seems extraordinary, but the Kildares were his most important clients and he may have wished to retain the countess' business by obliging her in the matter of the deed.

Family

Burnell married into the O'Reilly family of Cavan; his wife died in 1605. Of their children only one son Christopher reached adulthood. Christopher was the father of Henry Burnell the younger, who was a leader of the Irish Confederacy and a well-known author, best remembered for his play Landgartha.[15]

Death and reputation

Burnell died at Castleknock in 1614. He was remembered as one of the best speakers and most eminent lawyers of his time. He was somewhat vain about his legal ability, and was said to boast of his power to persuade judges.[15]Despite the Kildare controversy, he was generally considered an honest man, as even Sir Henry Sidney, his sternest critic, admitted.[16]

References

  1. Ball, F. Elrington The Judges in Ireland 1221–1921 John Murray London 1926 p.223
  2. Ball p.223
  3. 1 2 Ball, p.223
  4. Richard Bagwell Ireland Under the Tudors London Longman Greens 3 Volumes 1885-90 Vol. II p.329
  5. Bagwell pp.328-9
  6. Bagwell p.329
  7. Nolan, Pierce Laurence "Richard Netterville" Dictionary of National Biography 1885–1900 Vol.40 pp.237–8
  8. Crawford, Jon.G A Star Chamber Court in Ireland -the Court of Castle Chamber 1571–1641 Four Courts Press Dublin 2005 p246
  9. Kenny, Colum The King's Inns and the Kingdom of Ireland Irish Academic Press Dublin 1992 p.66
  10. Crawford, p.493
  11. Something the Court came to regret, since the case was so complex that for two law terms it was unable to deal with anything else: Crawford pp.293-5
  12. Crawford pp.494–5
  13. Crawford p.496
  14. Crawford p.151
  15. 1 2 Ball p.224
  16. Bagwell p.329
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