Talbot accused Gormanston, Gerald FitzGerald, 5th Earl of Kildare and the Prior of the Order of Hospitallers at Kilmainham, Thomas Le Boteller, of a treasonable conspiracy.
The prior, who was a professional soldier, removed himself from the conflict by going to fight at the Siege of Rouen, and died there two years later; but Kildare and Gormanston were imprisoned and subject to forfeiture of their lands.
This enmity may have been the first sign of the 30-year feud, which came to completely dominate Irish public life, between Talbot and his allies on the one hand, and James Butler, 4th Earl of Ormonde, who was the Prior's half-brother and Kildare's future son-in-law, on the other.
[3] The evidence of treason against Gormanston consisted mainly of his possession of the King's Coronation Oath, and also of a controversial 14th-century treatise, the Modus Tenendi Parliamentum, which had apparently belonged to his father.
[3] Although the treatise stresses the importance of Parliament's role in Government and (on an extreme view) could be taken as justifying the deposition of the King, Lord Gormanston's possession of it may simply indicate that he was interested in political reform.