Like his brother Richard, Thomas was a strong supporter of the
Glorious Revolution. After
King James II, who had been deposed in the Revolution landed in Ireland in 1689, Thomas was
attainted by the
Patriot Parliament and his property was forfeited. He moved to England and apparently thought of settling there permanently; but in 1690, following the downfall of King James's cause at the
Battle of the Boyne, he returned to Ireland. He became Recorder of Dublin later the same year and entered Parliament as member for
Dublin in 1692. In 1693 he was appointed to the Court of King's Bench. In 1697 he was
Commissioner of the Great Seal of Ireland.
Hurley case In 1701 he presided over the celebrated case of
R v. Hurley. Patrick Hurley, a law student at
Gray's Inn, was charged with
conspiracy and
perjury in that he had fraudulently petitioned the Crown for £1000 as compensation for
malicious damage for money supposedly stolen from him by
highwaymen. The case aroused a degree of public interest which is not easy now to explain, since the accused, as far as is known, was neither rich nor socially prominent. The trial was treated as a serious one by the Crown, again for reasons which are not clear. The verdict was guilty, after the jury heard overwhelming evidence that Hurley had stolen the money himself. Coote, unusually in a criminal case at the time, sat as a single judge, rather than as one of a bench of two or three judges. The rule then was that no trial could go into a second day, and thus the burden on a single judge must have been very great, since it is clear that the court sat from early in the morning, and the jury did not retire until "the day was going out". According to Ball, the trial records indicate that Coote showed himself an active and conscientious judge, questioning all the witnesses vigorously, although Comyn states that his summing up was rather brief. The sentence- a £100 fine or imprisonment in default of payment - was, for the time, relatively lenient.
Controversies In 1705 he caused some controversy by delivering a charge to a
grand jury against seditious books, which was thought by his political opponents to be an attack on the
Tory party. In 1711, apparently fearing that he was about to be removed from the bench, he went to London to seek a testimonial to his character and political opinions from
Jonathan Swift. In the event he kept his office for another three years, and was drawn into the bitter feud between the Crown and
Dublin Corporation in 1713–4, on which, together with some of his colleagues, he signed a number of reports which were seen as partisan. Questioned years later about these reports in the Commons he defended himself on the ground that "all men make mistakes". ==Later career==