Talbot's judicial colleague Nicholas Nugent was a grandson of the fourth
Baron Delvin: his family's influence, and the good opinion of some of his colleagues, secured for him high judicial office, first as a Baron of the
Court of Exchequer (Ireland) and eventually Chief Justice of the Common Pleas. Nugent was a hot-tempered and quarrelsome man who had been notorious for brawling in his
student days; his loyalty to the
English Crown was deeply suspect, and he was eventually executed for
treason, a unique fate for an Irish judge. In 1576 Talbot sued Nugent for riot and
unlawful assembly in the
Court of Castle Chamber. That Court had been set up in 1571 as a mirror to the English Court of
Star Chamber.
Riot and
judicial misconduct were two of its particular concerns, so that if it was satisfied that Nugent was guilty it might have been expected to impose a serious penalty. In the end, the case was dismissed in February 1577, apparently on the ground that one
eye-witness was not sufficient in a matter of such gravity. It may be that Castle Chamber, which was generally regarded as being much less effective than its English counterpart, was reluctant to penalise men of such high social standing, whatever their alleged misdeeds. Talbot's reaction to the verdict is unknown; he died later the same year. ==Family==