Unlike his father, who was a draper engaged in the wool trade, Robert trained to be a lawyer. He first appeared acting on behalf of his father in suits for debt brought in the court of common pleas in 1433, and did so again in 1435. He also took briefs in these years for other litigants from his home county, and for men from Kent, both in that court and in the King’s bench.
Curiously, although Robert was appointed a commissioner of arrest in Sussex in 1452, he then played no further part in the administration of the region until very much later in his career, when he must have been an old man. Meanwhile, he had established himself as a landowner in his home county, perhaps through inheriting property from his father and brother. In Michaelmas term 1455 he brought a plea in person against a butcher named William Strode of Fletching for abducting his ward Thomas Cony at Ringmer. The dispute had apparently arisen over the arrangements for the ward’s marriage.
Naturally enough, Robert and his brother Giles were party to property transactions on behalf of Richard Sutton, who married their sister Margaret. In 1448 they were jointly enfeoffed with him of a tenement in the market at Lewes and an adjoining building called ‘Holtes Place’.
It seems likely that Wodefeld’s marriage to Margaret Weston was not his first, for it took place late in his life and after the birth of her son and eventual heir, John Welles (b.c.1476).
