He followed his father's path to the Middle Temple in 1695 and was
called to the Bar in 1698. He went to Ireland in 1699 as secretary to the Royal Commission on Forfeited Estates. He entered the
King's Inn the same year, and was elected to the
Irish House of Commons as member for
Lisburn in 1703. His practice at the
Irish Bar was extremely successful: out of his income, he was able to pay his brother William, who had become impoverished, a pension of £300 a year.
Judge The most powerful of his political allies was
James Butler, 2nd Duke of Ormonde, head of the great
Butler dynasty and twice
Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. Nutley is known to have been acting as his financial agent in 1703, endeavouring to raise money on the family estates (which were heavily encumbered with
mortgages), and afterwards became his steward. It was Ormonde's influence which led to Nutley's elevation to the
Court of King's Bench (Ireland) in 1711. He was a judge of notably strong
Tory views, which led to serious differences with his colleagues, even though they were generally also inclined to Toryism. They accused him of outright falsehood, and of twisting the law in his judgments for political ends. As early as 1712 his removal from the Bench was said to be imminent. Those years saw a bitter dispute between the Crown and Dublin Corporation concerning the appointment of the
Lord Mayor of Dublin and other officials: Nutley like all his colleagues on the Bench sided with the Crown, and signed a report justifying the Crown's stance in the matter. Nutley was sent to London in 1714 to explain the judges' conduct. Official business in Dublin reached a deadlock: much of the blame for the controversy was placed on the
Lord Chancellor of Ireland,
Sir Constantine Phipps. Elrington Ball, perhaps with some exaggeration, called Phipps "the pivot on which all debate turned". Nutley could not avoid being drawn into the attacks on Phipps, since the two men were politically very close: Nutley was unkindly called Phipps' "creature". In 1713 it was rumoured, wrongly, that the new Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, the
Duke of Shrewsbury, would make the dismissal of both Phipps and Nutley a condition of his taking up office. ==Later life==