Sir Thomas Edlyne Tomlins (4 January 1762 – 1 July 1841) was an English legal writer.
Born inLondon, he was the eldest son of Thomas Tomlins (d. 1815),solicitor and clerk to the Company of Painter-Stainers, descended from the family of Tomlins in the neighbourhood ofLedbury inHerefordshire[1] and ofHereford. Thomas Edlyne was admitted a scholar atSt Paul's School, London on 21 September 1769. Hematriculated atThe Queen's College, Oxford, on 27 October 1778, and wascalled to the bar by the society of theInner Temple in theHilary term of 1783.[2]
For some years Tomlins was editor of theSt. James's Chronicle, a daily newspaper, and on 30 May 1801 he was appointed counsel to the chief secretary for Ireland. In the same year he becameparliamentary counsel to theChancellor of the Exchequer for Ireland, a post which he retained until the union of the British and Irish treasuries in 1816. He was knighted atWanstead House on 29 June 1814, on the recommendation of theDuke of Wellington, and in 1818 was appointed assistant counsel to the treasury. In Hilary term 1823 he was elected a bencher of the Inner Temple, and in 1827 he filled the office of treasurer to the society. In January 1831, on theWhigs coming into office, he retired from his post in the treasury.[2]
Tomlins died on 1 July 1841 atSt. Mary Castlegate,York.[2]
Tomlins was the author of:[2]
He also superintended several editions ofGiles Jacob'sLaw Dictionary; his last edition of it was joint work withAlexander Annesley.[3] He edited Josiah Brown'sReports of Cases on Appeals and Writs of Error determined in the High Court of Parliament (London, 1803), and, as sub-commissioner of the records, took a major part in editing theStatutes of the Realm (9 vols. 1810–24).[2] Jointly with his sisterElizabeth Sophia Tomlins he published a collection of short poems,Tributes of Affection by a Lady and her Brother, in 1797.
Elizabeth Sophia Tomlins (1763–1828) was his sister.Thomas Edlyne Tomlins (1804–1872) was his nephew.[2]