In July 1763 Sir Wyndham Knatchbull recommended Hey to Lord Hardwicke, nominally steward (i.e. recorder) of Dover for his deputy: he ‘attends always on this circuit’, and is reputed to have ‘very good abilities’.
Early in 1766 Charles Yorke, then attorney-general, recommended Hey for chief justice of Quebec;
At the general election of October 1774 he was returned unopposed for Sandwich on the government interest. On 27 Sept. he had sent in his resignation as chief justice,
resolved to return to Quebec in the character of chief justice although he should be under the necessity of relinquishing his seat in Parliament, which, however, we hope and think may be avoided.
Shortt Doughty, ii. 285-6.
In fact, he did not mean to return for long, and his stay was cut down still further: on 28 Aug. he wrote to Lord Chancellor Bathurst on the prospects in Quebec ‘as gloomy ... in point of security and in the ill humours and evil dispositions of its inhabitants ... as can be imagined’; he hoped that
ten years honest, however imperfect, endeavours to serve the Crown in an unpleasant and something critical situation deserve to be compensated with moderate and reasonable means of retirement.
In postscripts of Sept. 11 and 17 he described the province as about to fall into rebel hands: ‘I hold myself in readiness to embark for England where I possibly may be of some use ... I can be of none here.’
On 3 Oct. 1776 John Robinson wrote to the King referring to a commissionership of customs about to fall vacant, that when Hey ‘came in for Sandwich it was understood that he was soon after to quit Quebec and have office ... he has strenuously pressed for one of the commissionerships of excise or customs especially since he has been superseded in his office of chief justice of Quebec.’
He died 3 Mar. 1797.
