A fishmonger by trade,
The records of the court of common pleas show that Tame was also a defendant in a case that reached pleadings there in Trinity term 1447. The plaintiff, a merchant named Thomas Kyrkeby, alleged that he and 16 co-defendants, including William Mate* and Simon Rankyn*, had illegally maintained a suit brought by Richard Togood* in the borough court at Cambridge. Following out of court negotiations between the parties, there were further pleadings in Easter term 1448. At this point the parties agreed to a trial by jury but the case was still pending a year later.
Having sat in his only known Parliament, Tame remained active at Cambridge until at least the mid 1450s, disappearing from view after completing his final, apparently uneventful, term as a bailiff in 1456.
