In 1800 he was appointed
Chief Justice of the Irish Common Pleas and raised to the
Peerage of Ireland as Baron Norbury, of Ballycrenode in the County of Tipperary. His appointment to the bench was controversial and
Lord Clare, the
Lord Chancellor of Ireland, is said to have quipped: "'Make him a bishop, or even an archbishop, but not a chief justice'". Norbury's tenure as Chief Justice lasted for twenty-seven years, despite the fact that, the
Dictionary of National Biography opines, "his scanty knowledge of the law, his gross partiality, his callousness, and his buffoonery, completely disqualified him for the position. His court was in constant uproar owing to his noisy merriment. He joked even when the life of a human being was hanging in the balance." It has been said of him that he was "generally regarded as Ireland's most notorious judge with a penchant for hanging that ran even the infamous
Judge Jeffreys close." His most famous trial was that of Irish Republican leader
Robert Emmet. Norbury interrupted and abused Emmet throughout the trial before sentencing him to death. In spite of this, with his strong belief in the Protestant ascendancy, he is considered to have had great influence over the government in Ireland in the early part of the nineteenth century. However, Norbury's position eventually became untenable even to his strongest supporters, especially with the British government's aim of establishing a better relationship with the Catholic majority. His reputation was tainted in 1822, when a letter written to him by
William Saurin, the
Attorney-General for Ireland, was discovered, in which Saurin urged Norbury to use his influence with the Irish Protestant gentry which made up local juries against the Catholics (Saurin was dismissed soon afterwards). He found his greatest adversary in
Daniel O'Connell, to whom Norbury was "an especial object of abhorrence". At O'Connell's instigation the case of Saurin's letter was brought before the
British Parliament by
Henry Brougham. Norbury survived this as well as an 1825 petition drawn up by O'Connell, which called for his removal on the grounds of him falling asleep during a murder trial and later being unable to present any account of the evidence given. However, it was not until
George Canning became Prime Minister in 1827 that Norbury, then in his eighty-second year, was finally induced to resign. His resignation was sweetened by him being created Viscount Glandine and Earl of Norbury, of Glandine in King's County, in the Peerage of Ireland. Unlike the barony of Norbury these titles were created with remainder to his second son Hector John (his eldest son Daniel was then considered mentally unsound). ==Personal life==