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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Cooper, Re [2005] EWHC 2389 (Ch) (17 October 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2005/2389.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 2389 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge
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In the Matter of Florence Edith Cooper deceased |
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Mr David Matthias (instructed by Websters, Solicitors) for the Defendants
Hearing dates : 12th, 14th 15th July and 12th September 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
Miss Sonia Proudman QC:
Making of the 2001 Will
"BJW went through the contents of the Will carefully with Mrs Cooper to ensure that the instructions received were in accordance with her wishes (and no one else's). Mrs Cooper was frail and weak but understood fully what BJW was saying. She referred to one or two other people who were missing from the Will and Mr Emery indicated that he would "see them right". Their full names and addresses were not known- they were simply friends who she wished to thank in her Will."
"they had had plenty off her over the years and she was not inclined to leave them anything else. She wished to repay all those friends who had helped her though her life. In particular, she wished to see that Norman Emery and his wife Margaret received her house and contents".
The file note concludes:
"Mrs Cooper was perfectly aware of what was happening and was happy to sign the Will. She duly signed the same as well as initialling where necessary".
In evidence Mr Webster said,
" …I was satisfied that having discussed the will with her in detail she was mentally and physically capable of making a will".
"BJW again visited Mrs Cooper at about 4 pm on 11th August without Mr Emery being present. BJW said to Mrs Cooper that he wished to be sure that she was happy with the contents of the Will and had not been coerced into signing it. She said that she was happy with it and that it was her decision to do this. She said something about Norman Emery paying £10,000 for the house and I pointed out that this was not the case. She was giving him the house free of charge. No payment would be required from him. She said she would think about this and discuss it with Norman and if she wished to change the Will, she would tell Norman who would advise BJW as soon as possible.
On the way out of LOROS BJW bumped into Norman Emery and explained what Mrs Cooper had said. Mr Emery said that she was referring to a private arrangement he had come to with Mrs Cooper to the effect that he would pay £10,000 to one of the cousins (Elsa) but the other two cousins were not to know about it. Mrs Cooper and he felt it would be best to leave this out of the Will entirely.
BJW suggested there should be a separate note by Mrs Cooper just confirming the proposed arrangement which could be kept private and separate from the Will. Mr Emery said he would discuss this with Mrs Cooper and advise BJW".
Mr Emery's explanation to the Court was that he and Mrs Cooper had settled on a secret trust arrangement to compensate Mrs Allen for having been left out of an uncle's will. He says it was Mrs Cooper's original intention to pay each of the cousins £10,000 (hence the explanation for the sum of £30,000 which he mentioned to Miss Clarke) but Mrs Cooper changed her mind and decided that she only wanted to benefit Mrs Allen. In cross-examination Mrs Allen accepted that Mr Emery told her at the beginning of August 2001 that she was to have the sum of £10,000 "apart from anyone else". She also accepted that she was the only family member excluded from her uncle's will but said she could not remember if this was the reason Mr Emery gave for the payment.
"I had a discussion with the medical staff who advised me that in their opinion she was incapable of making a will in any event and even if she had wanted to change it they would not have been happy with me doing so".
Under cross-examination it appeared that Mr Eagle had only spoken to one member of staff (Nurse Harding) who had not made any formal assessment and was not in any event qualified to do so. Neither Mr Eagle's note nor the LOROS notes make any mention of possible lack of capacity.
"She appeared confused and perhaps a little restless in that she was picking at her bedclothes. When I asked her whether she was comfortable she confirmed that she was but gave no other sensible answers to routine questions, in my attempt to examine her mental state. My conclusion was that on that day she was not capable, as far as I could judge, of making any competent decisions. I am afraid that I cannot really make any objective comments about her mental state or competence in the previous few days."
Mrs Cooper died on 20th August 2001.
Testamentary Capacity
"It is essential…that a testator shall understand the nature of his act and its effects; shall understand the extent of the property of which he is disposing; shall be able to comprehend and appreciate the claims to which he might give effect"
"A solicitor has to make a judgment- if you have any doubts about testamentary capacity, you must get a medical opinion- if you have no doubts, you don't. I had no doubts…".
"The illness took its toll on Florrie, but not mentally. She was feeble, but she did not become forgetful".
Mr Martin too visited Mrs Cooper at LOROS on the day she was admitted. He said she was mentally fine and not confused, distracted or forgetful.
Want of knowledge and approval
"Probate proceedings peculiarly pose problems for the court because the protagonist, the testator, is dead and those who wish to challenge the will are often not able to give evidence of the circumstances of the will. The doctrine of "the righteousness of the transaction" whereby the law places a burden on the propounder of the will, in circumstances where the suspicion of the court is aroused, to prove affirmatively that the deceased knew and approved of the will which he was executing, is a salutary one which enables the court in an appropriate case properly to hold that the burden has not been discharged.
But "the righteousness of the transaction" is perhaps an unfortunate term, suggestive as it is that some moral judgment by the court is required. What is involved is simply the satisfaction of the test of knowledge and approval, but the court insists that, given that suspicion, it must be the more clearly shown that the deceased knew and approved the contents of the will so that the suspicion is dispelled. Suspicion may be aroused in varying degrees, depending on the circumstances, and what is needed to dispel the suspicion will vary accordingly. In the ordinary probate case knowledge and approval are established by the propounder of the will proving the testamentary capacity of the deceased and the due execution of the will, from which the court will infer that knowledge and approval. But in a case where the circumstances are such as to arouse the suspicion of the court the propounder must prove affirmatively that knowledge and approval so as to satisfy the court that the will represents the wishes of the deceased. All the relevant circumstances will be scrutinised by the court which will be "vigilant and jealous" in examining the evidence in support of the will (Barry v. Butlin (1838) 11 Moo PC 480 at p. 483 per Parke B.)"
Undue influence
"To be undue influence in the eye of the law there must be- to sum it up in a word- coercion…"
There is only undue influence if
"…the testator is in such a condition, that if he could speak his wishes to the last, he would say, 'this is not my wish, but I must do it'."
"I can readily accept that, if there is evidence showing the exertion of improper pressure in relation to the execution of a will, it will be easier- and sometimes very much easier-, where the testator is enfeebled in body or mind, and all the more so if he is enfeebled in both body and mind, to find that such influence was in all the circumstances undue and, to adopt Viscount Haldane's words, that it was by means of the exercise of that influence that the will was obtained. This is because…a lesser degree of pressure or inducement may suffice to produce the desired result where the testator is feeble in body or mind than would be required were he in vigorous health. But no amount of evidence of bodily or mental infirmity will of itself establish undue influence in the absence of some independent evidence tending to show the exercise of an improper influence."