Pyne was born at Micheldever, Hants, but grew up at a house in Tarrant Monkton subsequently bequeathed to him by his paternal grandfather.
Shortly after the 1626 Parliament’s dissolution, Pyne got into a brawl at Lincoln’s Inn with two fellow lawyers, the Somerset gentleman Sir Francis Dodington, and Harbottle Grimston*.
Pyne did not sit for Weymouth in the next Parliament, his place being taken by his father, who represented the borough until his death in November 1628. Now possessed of a substantial estate in Somerset, Dorset and Devon, Pyne settled at Cathanger, and became active in local government, but he never achieved his father’s prominence. He died childless and intestate in 1639, whereupon his lands descended to his sister Christabel, the wife of Edmund Wyndham*, though administration of his goods was granted on 20 July to his widow Grace.
