Application in Respect of BH
Sheriff J A Baird
Glasgow Sheriff Court 23 December 2010
Nature of the Application
- This was an application under the
terms of the Adults with Incapacity (Scotland) Act 2000 for the appointment of a lay
individual to be welfare Guardian to a lady aged 87, and for a solicitor
to be her financial Guardian. The adult is an adult with incapacity as
defined by the Act, and is no longer capable of living in the community.
She is now resident in a Care Home. She owned her own house, but the need
to pay for care costs is such that her house will require to be sold in
order to fund the ongoing cost of care.
The Effect of the Sale on an Existing Prospective Beneficiary
- The adult had made a will in 2003,
when she still had capacity, in which she made a specific bequest
directing her executors that in the event of her death, they should convey
and make over to a named individual the house in which she then resided
(or any other house which she might then own and occupy as her principal
residence). She still owns the house in which she resided in 2003, but has
not now occupied it since January 2010, and is not capable of returning
there. She directed that the residue of her estate should be divided
equally between two charitable organisations.
- In two earlier cases, (T Applicant
2005 SLT (Sh Ct) 97 and JG 2009 SLT (Sh Ct) 122) I expressed views about the power of the
Court to authorise the alteration of a Will, either by adding a codicil or
by re-writing it completely, of an adult who had now lost capacity to make
any such alteration. Such action may be required by the effect of
intervening circumstances or the need to correct obvious errors. I
stressed that before doing so, the Court would need to have clear and
unequivocal evidence of the intention of the testator.
- The effect of the sale of the house
in the present case would be to defeat the specific bequest made by the
Adult in her Will. Of course, that is a step she could always have taken
herself, assuming she retained the capacity to do so, if, for example, she
had decided to sell her house and move into care, and so the bequest would
only ever have had effect if she had still been living in her own house at
the date of her death.
- When the application was received at
this court, it disclosed the provision in the Will and the need to sell
the house, but the applicants did not seek to have the Application
intimated to the individual named in the bequest. I thought it was
appropriate that it should be so intimated and ordered that it be done.
The house is valued at £140,000, and the potential loss of that bequest is
therefore substantial.
- At the date of the Hearing, there was
produced a letter from the prospective beneficiary, indicating that it was
understood that the need to make proper provision for the continuing care
was paramount, but it seemed unclear to me whether the individual
concerned appreciated the full implications of what was proposed. I was
shown the letter which had been sent to that person by the applicants'
solicitors, and, with respect, it did not seem to me that it spelled out
the potential consequences as clearly as it might have.
- Accordingly, I continued the Hearing
for another letter to be sent to that individual, and for that person to
be advised to seek independent legal advice. That was done.
- The individual did seek independent
legal advice and the outcome was a passage of letters between the
applicants' solicitors and the solicitors instructed by the potential
beneficiary, which letters I was subsequently shown.
- The initial response by solicitors on
behalf of the potential beneficiary was that the application, including
the grant of a power to sell the house which was the subject of the
bequest, was not opposed, recognising again the need for the adult's
future care costs to be fully met.
- However, the representation was then
made that it was clear that what the Adult had intended to do was leave
what was effectively the bulk of her estate to the proposed beneficiary.
The house represented approximately 70% of the value of the estate, and it
was represented that what should happen was that after the house was sold,
a codicil to the Will should be executed, altering the terms of the
residue clause so that instead of leaving all the residue (which would by
then of course include the free proceeds of sale) equally between the two
charities, it should instead provide for 70% of whatever remained of the
estate at the death of the Adult to pass to their client, the individual
who had originally been named in the specific bequest of the house, with
the remaining 30% being divided between the two charities.
- That raised two interesting
questions; (1) whether it was clear that that had been the intention of
the testator, and (2) more fundamentally, whether the court had any power
to do what was proposed, given that the solicitors suggested that the
court could "instruct" (which was the word used), the Applicants'
solicitors to execute such a codicil, even assuming that it did accurately
reflect the testator's wishes. They expressed a hope that the applicant
for financial guardianship would agree to proceeding in such a manner.
The Powers of the Court
- This raises a question as to whether
the Court, assuming it decided that some form of alteration to the Will by
way of codicil was justified in the circumstances, has the power ex
proprio motu to instruct the taking of any such step. In the absence
of any detailed argument on the subject, I have to say that I do not
regard the court as having any such inherent power.
- All of the principal sections which
give the court powers in the situations provided for by the Act all refer
to the need for there to be an application made by a relevant party.
Sections 53 (Intervention Orders) and 57 (Guardianship Orders) both begin
by referring to the need for an application to be brought by a person
claiming a relevant interest. Section 20, which gives the Court powers in
relation to the operation of a continuing or welfare power of attorney,
similarly begins by referring to the need for there to be an application
by a relevant party. I do not see in any of these sections any power given
to the Court ex proprio motu which would allow it to order that the
Will in question should be altered in the way suggested.
- If that is correct, then it would
mean that the particular matter which was raised by the solicitors for the
potential beneficiary could not be ordered to be done ex proprio motu.
It would have required an application to that effect by a relevant party,
and that means a formal application in the appropriate court process by a
person who was a relevant party to it. There was no such application here,
and so, even if I had been minded to "direct" the adding of a codicil as
desiderated, I had no power, in terms of the specific sections mentioned, to
do so.
- That left open the question of
whether the court has the power to do what was suggested in terms of
section 3 of the Act. As I have said before in other cases, I do not read
that section as allowing the court carte blanche.
- Again, without having heard
argument on the point, I have to say that my inclination is that the
provisions of section 3 would not have entitled me to "instruct" the
making of a codicil as suggested here. Section 3(1) says that in an
application or any other proceedings under the Act (and this was an
application under the Act) the sheriff may "make such consequential or
ancillary order, provision or direction as he considers appropriate". To
my mind, the adjectives "consequential" and "ancillary" must be taken to
qualify the nouns "provision" and "direction" in the same way as they
obviously qualify the noun "order". Assuming that to be correct, I do not
see how the proposed codicil altering the residue clause could be
considered to be "consequential" or "ancillary".
- There is of course a range of
specific powers then given to the court by section 3(2), one of which,
section 3(2)(c), allows the court to make such further inquiry or call for
such further information as appears appropriate and was the one which I
used in continuing the case for further information about the position to
be adopted by the potential beneficiary. I do not however read any of
those further specific powers as allowing me to "instruct" the making of a
codicil as suggested here.
Evidence of the Intention of the Testator
- That left the other question I
mentioned above. If there had been clear and unequivocal evidence that the
Adult had truly intended the potential beneficiary to benefit in the
manner suggested by the solicitors in correspondence, and if the applicants
had consented to it, it would still have been possible to authorise the
making of a codicil to the effect suggested. As I have said, it was now
being represented that the Adult had truly intended to make provision in
favour of the proposed beneficiary of a substantial percentage of her
estate, albeit it was explicitly accepted that the care costs must now
take precedence with the effect of diminishing the estate.
- The case then took a slightly
surprising twist. The applicants' solicitors, who had acted for the Adult
when the Will was executed in 2003, looked out their file in connection
therewith, and found a file note of the interview which the partner acting
had had with the Adult. That note, written in the manuscript of the
partner, but taken during interview with the client and clearly reflecting
the intention of the Adult, states the identity of the potential
beneficiary and then says "House only, not money if house sold". In
fact, in the original manuscript version, the word "not" is underlined
twice.
- They sent a copy of that to the
solicitors for the proposed beneficiary, who after further consultation
with their client, confirmed that their client had always expressed a
desire to respect the Adult's wishes, and accepted that these had been made
crystal clear in the terms recorded in the file note. The proposal to
alter the residue clause was accordingly abandoned. They did point out,
with some considerable force, that it would have been helpful if that
material had been produced in the first place.
- I should add that all of the
individuals involved here are thoroughly responsible professional persons,
all acting from honourable motives.
- The effect of the content of the file
note of course is that there now exists clear and unequivocal evidence
that the Adult did not intend to distribute her estate by
leaving the potential beneficiary the equivalent of 70% of her estate;
rather, she intended that person to inherit her house on her death, and
nothing at all if it transpired that she did not own a house at the time
of her death. There is therefore no question of authorising any alteration
to be made to the terms of the Will.
The Practical Effect
- There is a lesson to be learned. It
is that practitioners who are instructed by a client to prepare a Will
ought to make full and clear notes of the instructions given, perhaps
ought to canvass alternative destinations in the event of subsequent
changes in circumstances, and ought to give serious consideration to
retaining all such files for future reference.