[2] In accordance with the contract, which was confirmed in 1320 too, John and Peter were granted the western portion of Csetnek, along with the surrounding settlements Ochtina (Ochtiná), Rochfalva (Rochovce), Nagyszlabos (Slavošovce), Gencs (Honce), Gacsalk (Gočaltovo), Rozlozsnya (Rozložná), Somkút, Kövi and its castle (near present-day Rákoš), Nandrás (Nandraž), Vignye and Tarfalva (a predecessor of present-day Rákoš).
They were involved in a series of lawsuits against the Máriássy family over the possessions Berzéte (Brzotín) and Krasznahorka (Krásna Hôrka), which both estates they had lost under unclear circumstances in the late 13th century.
According to the verdict of Ladislaus, John and Peter from 1330, their brothers Dominic Bebek and Nicholas the Cuman arbitrarily seized the mine and they produced the lead only for themselves.
There, queen mother Elizabeth ordered Peter to return the confiscated horses and value to the Antonite monastery of Daróc (today Dravce, Slovakia), which he took unlawfully.
[8] In July 1351, a judicial letter of Nicholas Kont says that Peter was charged of killing Stephen Pásztói and the palatine sentenced him a payment of a fine of 200 marks, which could be completed in four installments.
Peter, as part of the banderium of Kónya Szécsényi, participated in the Neapolitan campaign in 1351, therefore he paid the first installment of fine in October in that year.
In order to pay the fine, Peter had to pledge his portion in Csetnek and two villages, Rochfalva and Nagyszlabos, to his nephew Nicholas (III) the Red.
When his brother John (I) died without male descendants in 1357 or 1358, Peter hoped to inherit his wealth (in accordance with the 1318–1320 agreements), but his nephews, Stephen and George Bebek claimed the castle of Kövi for themselves.
Representatives of the provostry of Jászó (now Jasov in Slovakia), which was entrusted to conduct the lawsuit, found Peter at John's manor in Kövi and ordered him to stop the unlawful seizure of his deceased brother's property and to share the inheritance according to the contract.
[9] His total indebtedness is shown by the fact that he owed his lord Kónya Szécsényi a significant sum of money (72 golden florins).