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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Walters v Olins [2008] EWCA Civ 782 (04 July 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/782.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Civ 782, [2009] Ch 212, [2008] WTLR 1449, [2009] 2 WLR 1 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
MR JUSTICE NORRIS
HC07C00688
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE DYSON
and
LORD JUSTICE MAURICE KAY
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HAROLD WALTERS |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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ANDREW ROBERT OLINS |
Respondent |
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Mr Michael Driscoll QC and Mr Mark Blackett-Ord (instructed by IBB) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 12th June 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Mummery :
"It has long been established that a contract between persons to make corresponding wills gives rise to equitable obligations when one acts on the faith of such an agreement and dies leaving his will unrevoked so that the other takes property under its dispositions. It operates to impose upon the survivor an obligation regarded as specifically enforceable. It is true that he cannot be compelled to make and leave unrevoked a testamentary document and if he dies leaving a last will containing provisions inconsistent with his agreement it is nevertheless valid as a testamentary act. But the doctrines of equity attach the obligation to the property. The effect is, I think, that the survivor becomes a constructive trustee and the terms of the trust are those of the will he undertook would be his last will."
Factual background
"This codicil is made pursuant to an agreement made between my husband and me for the disposal of our property in a similar way by mutual testamentary dispositions."
"The other main change to your Wills is at clause 2 of your Codicils. By clause 2 you agree that neither of you will, at any time in the future, seek to make any further changes to the testamentary arrangements for distributing your estates without the consent of the other. Obviously after one of you dies no changes at all will be possible. You told me that you wanted this agreement in place so that the survivor of you, especially if it is Grandma, does not come under any pressure from family members to change the testamentary arrangements."
The proceedings and the judgment
"10. ….The key task for me has been an assessment of the reliability of that recollection, and in that connection I have of necessity placed considerable reliance upon contemporaneous documents and the inferences that may properly be drawn from them, and the inherent probabilities weighed by reference to the characters of the participants as I measured them when they gave evidence."
"19. It is Andrew's evidence that at the meeting Mr Walters and the Deceased stated that after the first of them died they did not want the survivor to come under pressure to change the testamentary arrangements; in particular Mr Walters wished to protect the Deceased from such pressure (though he did not state from what direction the pressure might come.) He has a clear recollection of Mr Walters raising this topic. Andrew says that in the course of the next 10 minutes he advised that there was a method of dealing with that difficulty in such a way that the survivor could say "Back off: even if I change my will, it will make no difference." In layman's language he told them that they could make an agreement referred to in their wills which, once made, could not be changed after one of them died: but that while they were both alive they could do what they liked by agreement. He gives evidence that upon being instructed to implement such an arrangement he drafted clause 2 of the codicil in these terms..[see paragraph 10 above] . He then says that he sent an engrossment of this Codicil to Mr Walters and the Deceased under cover of the letter ….one paragraph of which reads [see paragraph 12 above]…"
"(g) The discussion led to an agreement between Mr Walters and the Deceased that the solution that Andrew offered should be adopted and that Andrew be asked to implement the arrangement under which their respective wills in the agreed form could only be changed by agreement during their joint lives and could not be changed by the survivor."
Appellant's submissions
Discussion and conclusions
Factual ground
Legal ground
"..that in return for T1 agreeing to make a will in form X and not to revoke it without notice to T2, then T2 will make a will in form Y and agree not to revoke it without notice to T1. If such facts are established then upon the death of T1 equity will impose upon T2 a form of constructive trust (shaped by the exact terms of the contract that T1 and T2 have made.) The constructive trust is imposed because T1 has made a disposition of property on the faith of T2's promise to make a will in form Y, and with the object of preventing T1 from being defrauded."
"Mutual wills provide an instance of a trust arising by operation of law to give effect to the express intention of the two testators."
Result
Lord Justice Dyson:
Lord Justice Maurice Kay: