Charles Pepys, 1st Earl of Cottenham
Charles Christopher Pepys, 1st Earl of Cottenham (
April 29 1781 -
April 29 1851), a
lawyer,
judge,
politician, and eventual
Lord Chancellor of
England, was born in
London,
England. He was the second son of Sir William W. Pepys, a master in chancery, who was descended from John Pepys, of Cottenham, Cambridgeshire, a great-uncle of
Samuel Pepys the diarist. Educated at
Harrow and
Trinity College, Cambridge, Pepys was called to the bar at Lincolns Inn in
1804. Practising at the chancery bar, his progress was extremely slow, and it was not till twenty-two years after his call that he was made a kings counsel. He sat in
Parliament, successively, for Higham Ferrars and Malton, was appointed
Solicitor-General in
1834, and in the same year became
Master of the Rolls. On the formation of
Lord Melbourne's second administration in April
1835, the great seal was for a time in commission, but eventually Pepys, who had been one of the commissioners, was appointed
Lord Chancellor (January
1836) with the title of
Baron Cottenham. He held office until the defeat of the ministry in
1841. In
1846 he again became Lord Chancellor in
Lord John Russell's administration. His health, however, had been gradually failing, and he resigned in
1850. Shortly before his retirement, he was created
Viscount Crowhurst and
Earl of Cottenham. He died at Pietra Santa, in the duchy of
Lucca.
Both as a lawyer and as a judge, Lord Cottenham was remarkable for his mastery of the principles of equity. An indifferent speaker, he nevertheless adorned the bench by the soundness of his law and the excellence of his judgments. As a politician, though, he was somewhat of a failure; his only contribution to the statute-book generally considered important was the Judgments Act of 1838, which amended the law for the relief of insolvent debtors.
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|width="30%" align="center"|Preceded by:
New Creation
|width="40%" align="center"|Earl of Cottenham
|width="30%" align="center" rowspan="2"|Followed by:
Charles Edward Pepys
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