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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 >> Walters & Anor v Smee & Anor [2008] EWHC 2029 (Ch) (25 July 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2008/2029.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 2029 (Ch), [2009] WTLR 521 |
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(Chancery Division)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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ALAN WALTERS (1) KAREN WALTERS (2) |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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GEOFFREY SMEE ENID SMEE |
Defendants |
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The 2nd Claimant appeared in Person.
Mr. A Child (instructed by Messrs. Stevens & Bolton) appeared on behalf of the Defendants.
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Crown Copyright ©
His Honour Judge Purle QC:
- For the will to be valid Mrs. Latimer needed to have understood that she was making a will and that it would have the effect of carrying out her wishes on death.
I have no doubt that that condition was satisfied in this case.
- Next, Mrs. Latimer must have understood the extent of the property she was disposing of.
Again, I have no doubt that Mrs. Latimer did so understand in this case.
- Thirdly, she must have recalled those who had claims on her, and understood the nature of those claims so that she could both include and exclude beneficiaries from the will.
She certainly recalled those who had claims on her, and I think she probably understood the nature of those claims, though it is said (and this is a situation that I will have to address) that her views of Mr. and Mrs. Walters were distorted by her mental state at the time.
- That leads me into the next point, which is the crucial one. No disorder of the mind should have poisoned her affections, perverted her sense of right or prevented the exercise of her natural faculties; and no insane delusion should have influenced her will or poisoned her mind.
It is that limb of the test which primarily arises for decision in the present case.
"We said that in her previous will she had given a bequest to her relatives. She was adamant that she did not wish any of her relatives to benefit, as they had not been to see her for years, and she said that Mr. and Mrs. Walters had been very kind to her and helpful".
We asked why Mrs. Latimer had sent for us. She broke down in tears. Again she reiterated it was kind of us to come. We asked if Alan Walters of 22 Five Acres, Tilehurst, Reading had been unkind to Mrs. Latimer or had been violent towards her, and Annie Latimer insisted that he had not. Mrs. Latimer did not have any bruises that showed that indeed Mr. Walters had been cruel to her.
She said that she relied on Mr. Walters completely but she did say that she had been a little bit upset because he had brought a prostitute into the house and the prostitute sat there looking at all her items and had taken things. We asked what things she had taken and she said she did not know but she had been told by Mr. Walters that apparently his lady friend whom he referred to according to Mrs. Latimer as a prostitute had taken large coffee canisters from a local supermarket. CW thought that perhaps this had been exaggerated as apparently Mrs. Latimer indicated that she would take from the supermarket ten canisters which Crystal Walker felt someone may have noticed'.
She then mentioned that Mr. Walters' wife had taken some of her jewellery. Later on Mrs. Latimer informed CW that she had a safe and CW together with Reverend Samantha Caton went to her bedroom and eventually located the safe. Annie Latimer was adamant that the safe should be taken out so that we could look into it carefully. We did so although this involved taking out other items that were on top of the safe which all took time. Opening the safe when we handed Mrs. Latimer her purse and in this there was all her jewellery. There was also a valuation which apparently Mrs. Walters had had done with Jacobs the jewellers. We asked why the valuation was with the jewellery and Annie Latimer informed us that she had requested Mr. Walters to value the jewellery.
The jewellery appeared to be intact, and the jewellery was put back into the safe and back into the wardrobe. Annie then said there were items of jewellery missing. When we asked her what items she did not know'.
Also with regard to any possibility of jewellery going missing it would appear that the jewellery was still in the safe. In the safe was also a copy of her latest Will.
After one hour of Mrs. Latimer crying and insistent that she did not wish Alan Walters to be upset, we asked Mrs Latimer to confirm that:-
It was therefore left that the will should remain as it was.
CW suggested that if perhaps Mrs. Latimer wished to move from the property or her mental state deteriorated that CW should be contacted'.
The note also records: 'It would appear that Mr. Walters collects her pension, does her shopping, but does not have an EPA [enduring power of attorney]'. The time recorded, including travelling, was two hours. It was a full meeting.
- First, that Mr. Walters was abusing her physically.
I have rejected that. I can see no basis upon which she can have thought that.
- Second, that he was abusing her verbally and, in particular, threatening to turn her out of her property into a nursing home.
I have rejected that, though there is plenty of evidence that that is what Mrs. Latimer actually thought, but she had no basis for thinking that.
- Third, that he was stealing her money.
He was not. The evidence is that Mrs. Latimer was a very generous person. It was important, as Mr. Smee did, to control her expenditure. It does not follow from that that Mr. Walters was stealing her money. He was not.
- Fourth, that Mrs. Walters had been stealing her jewellery.
As I have said, this does not seem to have been something present in her mind when she came to change the will because polite enquiries were being made or sought from Reverend Caton through Crystal Walker. However, she had no basis, in my judgment, for considering that Karen Walters had stolen her jewellery, and she had not.
- Fifth, that Mr. Walters was bringing prostitutes to the house.
I have found that the lady who stayed in the garage was not a prostitute, and that the incident with her boyfriend was blown up out of all proportion. Mrs. Latimer had no basis for believing the street gossip about prostitutes, but was incapable because of her dementia of readily separating fact from gossip.
She also embellished the allegations in her own mind, wrongly claiming that Mr. Walter's friend had been "taking things" and wrongly attributing to Mr. Walters the statements that his friend was a prostitute, and that she had taken coffee canisters from the supermarket. The supposed goings-on in the tent were an additional embellishment, being the product of her dementia, having no basis in fact.
- Sixth, inappropriate sexual behaviour by words and conduct.
I have found that over many years there were such occasions, but this was something which did not trouble Mrs. Latimer before the onset of dementia and had an insignificant effect upon her decision as to how to dispose of her estate.
- There is one further matter which I should consider. As I have said, Mrs. Webb's evidence was that she was told by Mrs. Latimer that the Smees had been caring for her for two years, when they had not. If Mrs. Latimer really thought that, which no-one suggests was true, that might suggest that she had an exaggerated sense of the Smees' claims on her bounty, and a correspondingly diminished sense of the Walters' claims.
However, I do not think Mrs. Latimer said that. I believe, as previously mentioned, that Mrs. Webb got hold of the wrong end of the stick.