Ritte came from a minor gentry family with landholdings in the south-west of Devon, who derived their name from their original home at Rutt in Ugborough.
Ritte’s father, William, had made profitable marriage to Isabel, one of the coheiresses of the Holcombes of Hollacombe, but the partition of the inheritance between Isabel and her sister Agnes, the wife of Richard Fortescue, embroiled the Rittes in several decades of squabbling after Fortescue, ‘a grete meyntenour and oppressour in þe countrey’, laid claim to the lands under the terms of an entail of 1419. After a failed arbitration by Fortescue’s eldest brother Henry† and others in 1438, the parties submitted to the judgement of his second brother, Chief Justice (Sir) John Fortescue*, under whose award the disputed lands were to be divided between the parties, but litigation soon flared up again.
As William Ritte survived into the second half of the 1450s, John sought estates of his own through marriage to Joan Brightricheston. Instrumental in this enterprise was William, Lord Zouche of Harringworth, the girl’s joint guardian with Henry Pomeray, who, following the death of her under-age brother John, granted Ritte custody of her lands during her minority. But the inheritance proved to be as troubled as that of Ritte’s mother had been. Joan’s cousin Elizabeth, assisted by the influential Pomeray, challenged the couple’s possession of their lands before the justices of common pleas.
These quarrels aside, Ritte seems to have enjoyed generally cordial relations with his neighbours, for whom he occasionally acted as a mainpernor.
Although it is likely that Ritte’s local links and his standing in the area contributed to his return to Parliament for the borough of Totnes, his connexion with the lord of the borough, Lord Zouche, may have been instrumental, for Ritte’s old adversary John Pralle was of some consequence in the town. Although he never embarked on a public career beyond the occasional service on local juries, Ritte did take some interest in parliamentary affairs prior to his own election, standing surety for Thomas Asshenden* on the occasion of his election for Dartmouth in 1437.
In 1470 Ritte was among the members of a grand jury charged with inquiring into an act of perjury alleged by Ralph Trewyke, but he is not recorded thereafter.
