The MP was a namesake of the man who through marriage to Elizabeth Musard (d.1391), the widow of William Braybrook, acquired before 1386 an interest in the Wiltshire manor of Little Bedwyn. Under the terms of an arrangement made in 1397, that John Scott received a pension for life of five marks p.a. from his late wife’s estate, but the date of his death is not known.
Scott’s profession took him to the central courts at Westminster. Early in 1410 he stood surety in Chancery for the release of certain men arrested by the sheriff of Wiltshire to answer suits for trespass, and in December 1419 he offered mainprise in the Exchequer for Walter Henxtryg, assigned a lease of land in Somerset pertaining to the alien priory of St. Sever.
The full extent of Scott’s property is not known, but it would seem that his wife Joan brought him premises in Salisbury and land a dozen or so miles to the north, at Netheravon and Upavon. Her title was challenged by a mercer named William Knollys, who in 1435 accused the Scotts of breaking into his house in Salisbury, stealing goods worth £20 and assaulting his tenant; although the couple countered by alleging that Knollys had wrongfully taken crops growing on Joan’s land at Netheravon. Scott and his wife eventually backed down: in 1438 they formally conveyed five messuages and 30 acres of land to their adversary.
