Sir Peter Warburton JP (c. 1540 – 7 September 1621) was a British judge.
A Justice of the Peace for Chester, he was recommended as a potential Member of Parliament for that seat, but after being rejected was instead elected for Newcastle-under-Lyme, later sitting for the City of Chester in the Parliaments of 1586, 1589, and 1597.
In 1593 he became a Serjeant-at-Law,[1] and on 24 November 1600 was made a Justice of the Common Pleas.
[2] As a Justice he was one of those who supported Sir Edward Coke's majority judgment in Dr. Bonham's Case,[3] and he discharged his duties as "an ancient, reverend and learned judge" until his death in office on 7 September 1621.
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