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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 >> Richefond & Ors v Dillon & Ors [2023] EWHC 2796 (Ch) (10 November 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2023/2796.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 2796 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS
PROPERTY TRUST AND PROBATE LIST (ChD)
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) THEODORA RICHEFOND (2) LEE PETER RICHEFOND (3) LUCIA THERESA PHILLIPS |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) HOPE DILLON (2) JO-ANN MORRIS (3) LEONARD GRIZZLE (4) KYM LUCIA RICHEFOND (5) GARY RICHEFOND |
Defendants |
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Adrian Carr (instructed by Crown Law Solicitors LLP) for the First to Third Defendants
(The Fourth and Fifth Defendants not appearing or being represented)
Hearing dates: Written Submissions following Judgment given on 6 October 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
This judgment will be handed down remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email and release to The National Archives. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10:30 am 10 November 2023
Master McQuail :
(i) a gift of Kenneth's 50% of the property at Stanley Road to trustees to allow his partner, Theodora, to live there for as long as she wished, with the remainder interest to be divided between the three children of his family with Theodora, Lee, Kym and Gary (who is not Kenneth's child); and
(ii) a gift of residue to Theodora.
Costs- the Usual Rules
(i) the conduct of all the parties, including conduct before, as well as during the proceedings and whether it was reasonable for allegations or issues to be raised or pursued, the manner in which allegations or issues were pursued and whether a claim has been exaggerated;
(ii) whether a party has succeeded on part of his case, even if he has not been wholly successful; and
(iii) any admissible offer to settle made by a party not attracting the consequences under CPR Pt 36.
"1.1 A trustee or personal representative is entitled to an indemnity out of the relevant trust fund or estate for costs properly incurred. Whether costs were properly incurred depends on all the circumstances of the case including whether the trustee or personal representative ('the trustee') -
(a) obtained directions from the court before bringing or defending the proceedings;
(b) acted in the interests of the fund or estate or in substance for a benefit other than that of the estate, including the trustee's own; and
(c) acted in some way unreasonably in bringing or defending, or in the conduct of, the proceedings."
"An executor or a beneficiary under a will may, for his own protection (particularly in cases where doubts have been raised by those interested under another will or on intestacy), desire to prove the will in solemn form. By doing so they obtain a decision, which ensures that no future contest arises over the validity of the will and that a decision is obtained while the witnesses are still available. Executors should, however, remain neutral if the validity of the will is contested.
"In such cases the executor or beneficiary should issue a claim form and join as defendants the executor and principal beneficiaries of any immediately prior will who would be adversely affected by the proving of the will propounded. Where there are doubts as to the validity of the will immediately prior to that propounded, it may be advisable to join persons interested in a yet earlier will, or on intestacy. Any beneficiaries entitled to lesser interests in the will immediately before that propounded, if adversely affected, should be notified and given an opportunity to become parties. Where there is no other will those interested on intestacy should be made defendants."
Exceptions to the Usual Costs Rules in Probate Cases
"In deciding questions of costs one has to go back to the principles which govern cases of this kind. One of those principles is that if a person who makes a will or persons who are interested in the residue have been really the cause of the litigation a case is made out for costs to come out of the estate. Another principle is that, if the circumstances lead reasonably to an investigation of the matter, then the costs may be left to be borne by those who have incurred them. If it were not for the application of those principles, which, if not exhaustive, are the two great principles upon which the Court acts, costs would now, according to the rule, follow the event as a matter of course. Those principles allow good cause to be shewn why costs should not follow the event. Therefore, in each case where an application is made, the Court has to consider whether the facts warrant either of those principles being brought into operation.
"This statement of principle makes it clear, in my judgment, that a positive case has to be made out before departing from the general rule that costs should follow the event, and also that "the two great principles upon which the court acts" are neither exhaustive nor rigidly prescriptive. They are guidelines, not straitjackets, and their application will depend on the facts of the particular case. The important distinction between the two exceptions to the general rule is, of course, that where the first exception applies the unsuccessful party may be awarded his costs out of the estate, whereas if the case is merely one where "the circumstances lead reasonably to an investigation of the matter", the appropriate order is likely to be that each side will be left to bear its own costs.
First Exception - Was the Deceased "really the cause of the litigation"?
"reasonably clear … the touchstone should be whether it was the testator's own conduct which had led to his will "being surrounded with confusion or uncertainty in law or fact."
"Prima facie, an executor is justified in propounding his testator's will, and if the facts within his knowledge at the time he does so tend to show eccentricity merely on the part of the testator, and he is totally ignorant at the time of the circumstances and conduct which afterwards induce a jury to find that the testator was insane at the date of the will, he will, on the principle that the testator's conduct was the cause of litigation, be entitled to receive his costs out of the estate, although the will be pronounced against."
"… the trend of the more recent authorities has been to encourage a very careful scrutiny of any case in which the first exception is said to apply, and to narrow rather than extend the circumstances in which it will be held to be engaged. There are at least two factors which have in my judgment contributed to this change of emphasis. First, less importance is attached today than it was in Victorian times to the independent duty of the court to investigate the circumstances in which a will was executed and to satisfy itself as to its validity. Secondly, the courts are increasingly alert to the dangers of encouraging litigation, and discouraging settlement of doubtful claims at an early stage, if costs are allowed out of the estate to the unsuccessful party."
Second Exception - Did the Circumstances "lead reasonably to an investigation of the matter"?
"It is the function of this Court to investigate the execution of a will and the capacity of the maker, and having done so, to ascertain and declare what is the will of the testator. If fair circumstances of doubt or suspicion arise to obscure this question, a judicial enquiry is in a manner forced upon it. Those who are instrumental in bringing about and subserving this enquiry are not wholly in the wrong, even if they do not succeed. And so it comes that this Court has been in the practice on such occasions of deviating from the common rule in other Courts, and of relieving the losing party from costs, if chargeable with no other blame than that of having failed in a suit which was justified by good and sufficient grounds for doubt.
…
From these considerations, the court deduces the two following rules for its future guidance: … secondly, if there be sufficient and reasonable ground, looking to the knowledge and means of knowledge of the opposing party, to question whether the execution of the will or the capacity of the testator, or to put forward a charge of undue influence or fraud, the losing party may properly be relieved from the costs of his successful opponent.
Submissions on the Exceptions
Conclusions on the Exceptions to the Usual Rules
Conclusions on the Usual Rules
Conclusions