Soon after Levinz’s return (see under his father, Levinz, William), he engaged in an affair with the wife of Sir George Savile, who complained that he could not venture on divorce proceedings because ‘Mr. Levinz was a Tory, and the lawyers of the spiritual courts were all such, and he had experience how far party governed their judgments.’
In 1747, owing to financial difficulties, Levinz entered into an agreement with Newcastle not to stand but to place his interest at Newcastle’s disposal, in return for a commissionship of customs, (£1,000 p.a.).
After Newcastle’s fall in 1762 Levinz appears to have come to terms with Bute, not only escaping the proscription of Newcastle’s friends, but being promoted to the post held by one of them, William Mellish, worth nearly twice as much as his own.
