More may be added to the earlier biography.
Woghere served on the jury at East Grinstead which in 1416 provided evidence at the inquisition post mortem of Thomas St. Cler†, a member of a prominent Sussex family.
Subsequently, Woghere appeared as a defendant in a number of lawsuits, for instance in 1433 for illegally seizing the goods of John Hasilden (although he claimed to be recovering rental arrears for the owners of a messuage in East Grinstead), and in 1435 when sued for a debt of £10 by the prior of Lewes. Then, in Hilary term 1440 he was attached in the King’s bench to answer for breaking into property at Mitcham in Surrey and abducting a servant. As a consequence of his failure to answer the charge he was outlawed, and some of his possessions were seized by the feodary of the duchy of Lancaster, to which East Grinstead pertained.
