Nicholas de Netterville (died after 1309) was a Crown official and judge in Ireland in the late thirteenth and early fourteenth centuries.
[1] He was employed for a time in the Exchequer of Ireland, and in 1299 rendered an account of the Crown's profits for County Dublin.
On an unspecified date, he acknowledged a debt of 20 silver marks to Sir John Mytheford.
[3] In 1306, the four brothers complained that they were the victims of a serious assault near their father's house at Kennagh in County Meath by a gang led by John le Petyt, whose name appears several times in court records as a local malefactor.
[8] The assault appears to be related to the gang's theft of sixty cattle from Nicholas's lands at Dowth.