At Easter 1419, not long before his first return to Parliament, Topcliffe was associated with John Cappe and a local dyer in acquiring from John Hokington a messuage in Cambridge, for which they agreed to pay 33s.4d. a year during the lifetime of Hokington’s wife, but thereafter would hold rent-free. When, two years later, he was party to the purchase of eight acres of land on the outskirts of the town, he may have been acting on behalf of a fellow burgess, Richard Bush, but it was on his own account that he subsequently paid the local authorities rent for part of a close in ‘Alweneslane’
Topcliffe was elected to his third and last Parliament in 1423, immediately after completing his only recorded term as a bailiff of Cambridge.
