In Hilary term 1442, when he was up at Westminster representing Lewes in Parliament, Wodefold, together with his wife Agnes, brought suits in the court of common pleas against the debtors of her former husband the merchant John Parker. These were for quite substantial sums of money, including one of £26. He also commenced pleas on his own account, but generally for the smaller amounts of four marks or £2.
Nothing is recorded about Giles’s participation in local government, but the Wodefold brothers undoubtedly occupied a prominent position in their home town, and their fellow burgesses not only returned Robert to the Parliament of 1447 but selected Giles to represent them for a second time two years later. Both brothers were executors of the will of their father William, and together with the latter’s widow Mary they brought suits in the common pleas in the Michaelmas term of 1450 in an attempt to recover debts owing to his estate. At the same time Giles and his wife were still pursuing the debtors of her former husband.
