The de Brantinghams were implicated in several scandals of the period: Sir
William de Brantingham, a
knight, was found to have used "chicaneries" to reassign property on the death of his
ward; and
Simon de Brantingham was dismissed as
steward of the Hospital of St John the Baptist in
Dorchester, Dorset, for having sold off the hospital's land and carried away
linens and
bedding from the hospital. Several Brantinghams found themselves in brushes with the law: • In 1341/1342, Randulph de Brantyngham, former rector of the church of
Hotham, was the defendant in the
Curia Ebor in an action brought against him for "violation of church rights" by Richard de Wath, his successor in the rectory. • On 28 January 1365, Emma, wife of the late
John de Brantingham of
York,
chaloner, was pardoned by
Robert de Thorpe,
Chief Justice of the Common Pleas, on her surrender to the
Fleet Prison. The case, heard at
Westminster, concerned Emma de Brantingham,
executrix of her husband's
will, for her
waiver in the
county of York for non-appearance before the
justices of the Bench to answer William de Wederhale of York,
pulter, touching a
plea that she render to him 10
l. 2
s. • On 10 September 1594, Richard Brantingham of
St Helen Auckland was
pardoned by
Elizabeth I for
burglary. ==Descent into penury==