A lawyer from a parish situated immediately north of Malmesbury, West sat in at least nine Parliaments of Henry VI’s reign, most of them consecutive.
In spite of the problems of identification, there are grounds for assuming that the John West of Wiltshire sworn to keep the peace in 1434 was the subject of this biography: those who took this widely administered oath were men of some substance in their respective counties and the MP was known as a ‘gentleman’.
Among those for whom West was a feoffee was John Nicoll II*, his fellow MP in the Parliament of 1422, but he was not to enjoy such a good relationship with Nicoll’s son, John Nicoll III*. At some stage after the elder Nicoll’s death, the younger began a suit in the Chancery, alleging that West had refused to make a release of a tenement in Malmesbury that he had held in trust for his late father.
By then West was very well acquainted with the two main common law courts, having practised as an attorney at Westminster for over a decade, from at least the mid 1420s in King’s bench and by the early 1430s in the common pleas.
Presumably the time West spent at Westminster had a bearing on the frequency with which he was returned to the Commons. It was the venue for every session of all his known Parliaments, meaning that it was no great inconvenience for him to sit as an MP. Before first entering the Commons, he attested the return of the knights of the shire for Wiltshire on more than one occasion, and immediately after the county’s election to the Parliament of 1420 he stood surety for one of the men elected, the previously mentioned John Rous. He was also a mainpernor for three other Malmesbury MPs: for John Gore*, following the latter’s election to the last Parliament of Henry V’s reign; for Thomas Drew* in 1426; and for William Palmer* in 1437.
It is not clear when West’s own parliamentary career came to an end. Given the 15-year gap between the Parliaments of 1435 and 1450, it is conceivable that the John West who sat for Malmesbury in 1450-1 was a son or another younger namesake. Yet this hiatus is not as definite as it might first appear, for the names of Malmesbury’s MPs in 1439-40 and 1445-6 are unknown. Also worth noting is the lack in the surviving manuscript evidence (such as it is) of any reference to two John Wests of Brokenborough, senior and junior, since sons commonly featured with their fathers in deeds and other records while both were still alive. If the subject of this biography did sit in 1450, he was no doubt the John West who stood surety for Thomas Hasard* upon the latter’s election as a burgess for Malmesbury to the Parliament of 1447, who attested the return of Wiltshire’s knights of the shire to the following assembly and who was commissioned to collect a tax in August 1449.
Whatever the case, West had at least one son, Robert, who sat for Malmesbury in 1449-50 and 1459 and likewise pursued a legal career. Of age by the mid 1430s, Robert was his father’s co-plaintiff at Westminster in 1435 when they sued a tanner for breaking into a close of theirs in the town. At the end of the same decade he stood surety in the common pleas for his father, then the defendant in a suit for debt brought by the vicar of Calne and an associate. Later, in the mid 1440s, John and Robert West were associated with John Dewall* and others as co-plaintiffs in another common pleas suit, this time over property near Malmesbury.
It is possible that West survived until about 1460. In 1457 John West and others from south-west England were associated with (Sir) John Fortescue* in a property transaction in Hertfordshire, apparently as Fortescue’s feoffees, and in Michaelmas term 1459 John West was appointed to act as an attorney in a Wiltshire suit in King’s bench. In a deed of 1 Jan. 1461, however, Robert West is referred to as the son and heir of John West, late of Brokenborough.
