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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 >> Vucicevic & Anor v Aleksic & Ors [2017] EWHC 2335 (Ch) (20 September 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2017/2335.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 2335 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
BRISTOL DISTRICT REGISTRY
2 Redcliff Street, Bristol, BS1 6GR |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
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Goran Vucicevic Stephen Anthony Richards Bond |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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Stanko Aleksic Vladika Amilofije The Serbian Orthodox Church (Montenegro Branch) The Serbian Orthodox Church (Head Office in Serbia) The Serbian Orthodox Church Sveti Sava (London) Vladan Aleksic The Attorney General Alex Dubljevic |
Defendants |
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Julia Beer (instructed by Direct Access) for the Fifth Defendant
The remaining defendants did not attend and were not represented
Hearing dates: 24 July 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
HHJ Paul Matthews :
Introductory
Problems with the will, in summary
"All three property. House in Djenovice to Serbian Ortodox Church in Montenegro. And in Cardiff. 8, Wordsworth Avenue. CF 24. 3FQ. And in London, 17, Fordwich Road, NW2. 3 TN. All to Serbian Ortodox Church.
Vladika Amfilohije to be in charge. Benefit from it to go to Kosovo, for the people in. Need. Especially children.
And all the money. Which is left (after Custom & Inland Revenue)
I am having full confidence in Vladika Amfilohije Radovic that is going in right place in Kosovo only. With the consultation and discussion. With Serbian Patrijarch and church authority in Kosovo, with one, condition. House in Djenovice not aloud to sell Till. 2040. Houses in the UK Britain Vladika is aloud to sell at any time, if he wish."
The legacy for cancer research
The legacy for Alex Dubljevic
"In my opinion, I have recovered conclusive evidence of a partial entry underneath the crossed out area on line 3 of page 2 of the will in item 1 which has since been obliterated by two different black ballpoint pen inks. The partial entry reads "£_000_Eigh_", where the underscored areas denote unclear characters. Please note that I am unable to determine if the final word reads 'eight' or 'eighty'.
I have also examined the text on the remainder of line 3 of page 2 of the will in item 1, and noted that the final entry "£2.000. TWO" has been written out in a different black ballpoint pen ink to the surrounding entries. Therefore, in my opinion, there is evidence to support the proposition that this entry has been added to the will at a later date."
This evidence was not challenged, and I accepted it.
The gift of the three houses
Who is the devisee?
Absolute gift or trust?
"There can be no doubt that equitable obligations, whether trusts or conditions, can be imposed by any language which is clear enough to show an intention to impose an obligation, and is definite enough to enable the court to ascertain what precise obligation is and in whose favour it is to be performed. There is also abundant authority for saying that, if property is left to a person in confidence that he will dispose of it in a particular way as to which there is no ambiguity, such words are amply sufficient to impose an obligation. … But still in each case the whole will must be looked at; and unless it appears from the whole will that an obligation was intended to be imposed, no obligation will be held to exist; yet, moreover, in some of the older cases obligations were inferred from language which in modern times would be thought insufficient to justify such an inference."
"The words which have been so much commented upon, 'in full confidence', are, in my opinion, neutral. I think it would be impossible to regard them as technical words in any sense they are words which may or may not create a trust, and whether they do so or not must be determined by the content of the particular will in which you find them."
"Having regard to the opinions already expressed it is impossible to say that a trust for the nieces, or at least for one of them selected by the wife, cannot be extracted from this will; but, personally, I think the construction adopted by Stirling LJ [in the Court of Appeal] is more in accordance with the language used than the construction contended for by the appellants. The wife was, in my opinion, intended to be the absolute owner, free from any legal or equitable obligation in favour of anybody and free from any executory gift over. I admit that a different construction can be put upon the will, but that does not appear to me to be the natural one."
The Montenegro house
"House in Djenovice not aloud to sell Till. 2040. Houses in the UK Britain Vladika is aloud to sell at any time, if he wish".
It is not known why the testator chose the year 2040. Nevertheless, he did. The English private international law rule is that the essential validity of a testamentary gift of immovable property is governed by the lex situs, that is, the law of the place where the land in question is. That is the law of Montenegro. For the purposes of English proceedings, it is therefore necessary to have evidence of what that law is. Otherwise, the assumption is made that it is the same as English law.
"Regarding this case, the provision of International Private Law Act … states that the law applicable to the succession as a whole shall be that of the state in which the deceased had his habitual residence at the time of his death. Testator may choose as the law to govern the succession as a whole the law of the state whose nationality he possesses or the law of the state in which he has habitual residence at the time of choice of applicable law or at the time of his death, while for the succession of immovable property testator may choose as the law to govern the law of the state in which the property is located.
The choice of law must be expressly determined or clearly inferred from the circumstances of the case and in the form of a disposition of property upon death (will, joint will or inheritance agreement). The existence and material validity of the choice of applicable law shall be governed by the determined law. The provisions of the aforementioned law appoint to the law of Great Britain as applicable. However, they also provide the possibility of applicability of Montenegrin law, which is not substantially different from the British law regarding the provisions of inheritance law which regulates inheriting according to the will."
Partial intestacy?
"avoids the absurdity of supposing that the testator meant to create an intestacy in the event which has happened, and it disposes of the estate in the way in which it appears to me, from the first limitation contained in the will he intended to dispose of it."
There can be no doubt that the desire of a testator making a will not to die partially intestate can be taken into account in construing the words used in that will. Statements to similar effect appear in other authorities, for example, in Re Cadogan (1883) 25 Ch D 154, 157, Re Adkins (1908) 98 LT 667, 668 col 2, and Re Taylor [1923] 1 Ch 99, 104.
"that a common translation of 'money' would encompass such assets as shares, unit trusts and the like".
Directions
Parties
Conclusion