Robert was the son of the wealthiest Lincoln merchant of his day, but since he died in his father’s lifetime his own career was brief and comparatively uneventful.
Sutton’s premature and childless death less than a year after the close of his second Parliament must have come as a blow to his father, who had used his marriage to extend further the already extensive Sutton estates. Robert’s bride, Agnes Hawley, was the heiress of a long-established and influential county family. Her father had been assessed at 40 marks p.a. in the tax returns of 1436, but this underestimated the value of the lands to which she stood heiress-apparent, for her uncles had life interests in parts of the Hawley properties.
Sutton’s will does not give the impression of wealth. His wish was to be buried in the family’s traditional burial place, the church of St. Andrew at Wigford on the western edge of the city of Lincoln. He bequeathed his sheep and household goods to his wife. His brothers, Hamon and John, had bequests of ten and five marks respectively; the former was also to have his halberd and a pair of black horses; and his father was bequeathed his hawk and white mantle. The greater part of the will was concerned with small bequests of clothes and money to his servants, one of whom was to have his woodknife. His father, wife and two brothers were appointed his executors. He died shortly before 18 Mar. 1452 when the will was proved.
