Serle may have come from the family of this name which in the late 14th century quarrelled about the ownership of lands at ‘Morkyshulle’ in Devon,
Over the years Serle was often engaged in litigation both as a plaintiff and a defendant: in Henry V’s reign he sued John Hereward of Exeter in the court of common pleas for a debt of £20, albeit without success, and in 1429 he himself was charged with a trespass and required to appear in court at Plympton by the royal feodary, Thomas Wyse†. A more important case, brought into Chancery by Serle in 1438, followed on from an award intended to resolve his dispute with Richard Fortescue (brother of the future chief justice) over lands in Plympton Erle, ‘Plymphouse’ and Loughtor which had once belonged to John Brackley†. According to the terms of the award, Serle was to have possession of a messuage next to the ‘Yeldhalle’, but although Fortescue’s associate, John Silverlock†, was prepared to stand by the settlement, Fortescue himself refused to do so. In yet another suit, Serle claimed that he had been disinherited of property in Plympton Erle left him by Robert Solers.
Serle died before June 1454, when his widow and executrix, Alice, sued a tucker named William Hole in Chancery for 40 acres of land in Drewsteighton, her plea being that Hole had received £6 6s.8d. from Serle for a 20-year lease of the same, but had refused to allow him either tenure of the property or reimbursement of his money.
