A striking reference saves Sutton’s career from near total obscurity. When commissioners of oyer and terminer, headed by John, duke of Bedford, sat at Derby on 1 Apr. 1434, Sutton, described as ‘senior, of Derby, yeoman’, was indicted for having on the previous 29 May broken into the house of Richard Becham in the town and there murdered Becham’s wife, Anne, with a staff. Since Robert himself sat on the jury drawn from the town it is not surprising that it was left to one of the grand juries to make this presentment.
Sutton appears to have lived into the late 1440s or, at least, either he or a namesake was then active. On 2 Nov. 1447 he was a juror in the inquisition held at Derby on the death of Elizabeth, widow of William, Lord Deincourt, and Sir Richard Hastings*, and he attested the borough election to the Parliament of November 1449.
