A distinguished Victorian judge, best remembered for his contribution to the 1871 Trade Union Act, Erle’s service as an MP has received little attention. Incorrectly assumed to have been a silent Member, and widely regarded as one of the Reform Club’s first ‘nominees’, in 1841 he abandoned the Commons in order to pursue his legal career. The promotion of such a ‘thick-and-thin’ Whig by the Peel ministry raised eyebrows in 1844, and may have had ulterior motives.
Erle, descended from a ‘very ancient family’ in Somersetshire, had combined a lucrative but unspectacular legal career with an Oxford fellowship during the 1820s and early 1830s, prior to taking silk in July 1834 and marrying that September.
A steady attender, Erle gave loyal support to the Melbourne ministry on most major issues, but was in the radical minority for the removal of all religious barriers to municipal office holding, 4 Dec. 1837. Notwithstanding his earlier remarks, he avoted for the secret ballot, 15 Feb. 1838, 18 June 1839, for which he also brought up an Oxford petition, 16 Feb. 1838. He presented others for the abolition of slave apprenticeships, 2 Feb. 1838, and in support of the national education plan, 12 June 1839. In his first known speech, he successfully recommended leniency for a solicitor who had inadvertently altered a petition to the House, prompting charges of a breach of privilege, observing that ‘no fraud was intended, however gross the irregularity had been’, 28 May 1839.
On 21 Jan. 1840, in an influential speech on the Stockdale versus Hansard case, Erle challenged the views ‘generally entertained by the profession to which he belonged’ by upholding the supremacy of the Commons over the courts in cases of parliamentary privilege. ‘Any abandonment’ of this, he declared, ‘would be productive of the utmost inconvenience and danger to the House itself, and to the people it represented’. He was in the majority on the issue that day. He voted for inquiry into the corn laws, 26 May 1840, and with ministers on their poor law amendment bill, 8 Feb. 1841, Irish electors bill, 26 Apr. 1841, and was in their minority on the confidence motion, 4 June 1841. That day he presented an Oxford petition for a reduction of taxes on corn, sugar, tea and coffee.
By now Erle had already been passed over twice for legal promotion owing to the ministry’s concerns about the possible loss of his seat in the resulting Oxford by-election, first in December 1838, when he was mooted for an available judgeship in the court of common pleas, and again in January 1841, when a vacancy occurred at Queen’s bench. He had had little chance of either, it was reported, owing to Oxford not being ‘a sure card’.
The change of ministry ought to have put his prospects on hold, but on 6 Nov. 1844, in a move that caused an outcry in the Tory press, the Peel administration made him a judge in common pleas, following the resignation of Thomas Erskine. ‘Mr. Erle has been for many years a strong partisan’, and ‘without any sort of independence or discrimination’ supported ‘all the extreme and in some cases revolutionary changes proposed ... by the late ministry’, protested The Times.
In 1846 Erle was transferred by the new Russell ministry to queen’s bench, where he remained for almost thirteen years before returning to common pleas as chief justice, in which role it was said, ‘the urbanity of his manner added force and effect to the unquestioned impartiality of his decisions’.
Erle, who had allegedly declined the offer of a hereditary title on retiring from the bench, died childless at his Hampshire country home of Bramshott Grange, near Liphook, in January 1880.
