The outcome of a recent High Court case is a warning for anyone challenging a will.
As inheritances become more valuable, the number of disputes about wills have increased. Court cases rose by almost 50% to 188 in 2019 compared to the previous year according to the latest Ministry of Justice figures. Many more are settled or abandoned along the way. The cases which do reach the High Court tend to be those involving the ‘right’ mix of large sums and elevated emotions. An example that appeared in April 2021 is Miles v Shearer.
Tony Shearer died in October 2017, leaving nearly all of an estate worth about £2.2m to his second wife, Pamela. His two daughters, Juliet and Lauretta, born in the early 1980s to his first wife, received nothing. This prompted them to make a claim under the Inheritance (Provision for Family and Dependants) Act 1975.
Lauretta wanted a payment from her father’s estate to cover:
- The cost of a home, so that she could move out of her mother’s property;
- Fees for training as a dog behaviourist, to enable her to support herself; and
- The expenses of caring for her autistic daughter.
Juliet sought funds to:
- Reduce her mortgage by about £245,000, so that it would become affordable for her on a repayment basis: and
- Buy out her ex-husband’s share of a flat in which she was living – about another £100,000.
In 2008, shortly after his divorce, Tony gave £177,000 to Juliet and £185,000 to Lauretta. At the time he made clear there would be no further financial support to his daughters. This was an important factor in the case as it reinforced the decisions Tony made in the creation of his will.
The judge rejected the claims of both daughters, stating that neither had established a need for maintenance to be funded from their father’s estate.
Two lessons can be drawn from the case:
- Make your intentions clear in advance to try to reduce potential disappointment and the likelihood of legal action when a will is finally read.
- Tony’s will achieved what he wanted to happen. At the time he made the gift to his daughters in 2008, the English intestacy laws meant that Pamela would have received only £125,000 and personal chattels outright, with Juliet and Lauretta immediately jointly receiving half the residue (less about £285,000 of inheritance tax). By the time of his death in 2017, intestacy laws had changed so that Pamela would have received £250,000, still a fraction of the overall estate.
The Financial Conduct Authority does not regulate estate planning and will advice.
Content correct at the time of writing and is intended for general information only and should not be construed as advice.