The only serious objection to his appointment to the High Court Bench was his health: from early middle age onwards he suffered badly from
gout, which became so severe that he was unable to perform his judicial duties for at least two years, and could only travel by coach, being unable to ride a
horse. He died, aged only about 50, in 1681, and was buried in
St. Audoen's Church, Dublin. In his
will, which, according to Elrington Ball, shows his kindly and charitable nature, he left money to the poor of St. Audoen's parish and of
Rathfarnham, for the relief of poor prisoners, and bequests to
the Bluecoat School at
Oxmantown and to the army
hospital at Back Lane, off
High Street, Dublin. The bulk of his estate was left to his widow Catherine, who remarried in 1683 the soldier and politician Colonel
Nicholas Cusack, son of James Cusack of
Cushinstown and Frances Talbot, and great-grandson of Sir
Thomas Cusack,
Lord Chancellor of Ireland. She and Adam had no children. She died in 1699, and was buried beside her first husband. Her second husband was
attainted for treason in 1691, fled to France and died, a
Jacobite exile, at
Saint-Germain-en-Laye in 1726. ==Rathgar Castle ==