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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Curati v Perdoni & Anor [2012] EWCA Civ 1381 (31 October 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/1381.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 1381 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
Mr Justice Sales
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MUNBY
and
LORD JUSTICE TOMLINSON
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Carmen Curati |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) Sylvana Marchant Perdoni (2) Roberto Perdoni |
Respondents |
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Mr Nigel Thomas (instructed by Debenhams Ottaway) for the Respondents
Hearing date : 9 October 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Tomlinson :
"I . . . DECLARE this to be my last Will –
"1. I DECLARE that this Will is intended to dispose only of my property and estate situate in England –
2. I DESIRE to be buried in Carpaneto Piacenza Italy –
3. IF my wife EMILIA MARIA CANDIDA CURATI survives me for a period of one month then I GIVE DEVISE AND BEQUEATH all my property whatsoever and wheresoever situate unto her absolutely and APPOINT her to be the sole Executrix of this my Will –
4. IN the event of my said wife predeceasing me or failing to survive me for the period of one month then:-
(i) I APPOINT Barclays Bank Trust Company Limited (hereinafter called "the Company") to be the Executor and Trustee of this my Will …
(iii) The Company shall hold my residuary estate UPON TRUST :
(a) To pay thereout my just debts and funeral and testamentary expenses;
(b) After payment as aforesaid for my niece and nephew SYLVANA PERDONI and ROBERTO PERDONI both now of 165 Wardour Street London W1 in equal shares absolutely upon their reaching the age of twenty-one years; …"
At the same time Mrs Curati made a will mirroring those terms. Silvana Perdoni and Roberto Perdoni are the niece and nephew of Mrs Curati, being the children of her brother. They were the Claimants in the action and are the Respondents to this appeal.
"There was no material inconsistency between them, save that had Mrs Curati not died before her husband she would have taken the whole of his estate by operation of the 1994 will, it being unnecessary and redundant in that situation to rely upon the 1980 will leaving the English part of his estate to her. In the circumstances which have in fact arisen, there is no inconsistency or incompatibility between the two wills. The 1994 will is silent about what should happen if Mrs Curati should die before her husband, whereas the 1980 will makes express provision for that eventuality so far as concerns the English estate of the Deceased."
Accordingly, the judge concluded that that part of the 1980 will which left the English estate of the Deceased to the Claimants/Respondents is valid and should be carried into effect, the Deceased's wife having predeceased him.
"18. In 2000 the Deceased suffered a stroke. From that time his health declined in other ways as well. He found it harder to cope with his business affairs. He managed to persuade Mr Bocelli to help him from 2002 to manage the portfolio of Italian properties, and in 2004 Mr Bocelli gave up his job to do that full time. It was from about this point that Mr Bocelli spent a good deal of time with the Deceased and Mrs Curati. However, Mr Bocelli was not willing to do the same in relation to the portfolio of English properties and the Deceased had not found a suitable manager for them. So in 2002/2003 the Deceased and Mrs Curati sold all their English properties, retaining only the marital home. They invested the proceeds in a variety of financial products. The Deceased also took steps from about 2002/2003 to improve and develop a house in Carponeto where he and Mrs Curati might be able to live in retirement, if Mrs Curati's cancer was completely cured, or where he could go to live if she died.
19. In October 2004 the Deceased suffered a second stroke. His mental capacities were now severely impaired. He suffered a personality change and became aggressive and paranoid. Mrs Curati could no longer cope with him at home and in 2006 he was moved into a care home.
20. Mrs Curati died on 10 July 2007. When she was in hospital shortly before her death she arranged for a solicitor, Miss Bridel (now Mrs McLagan), to visit her to discuss her and the Deceased's wills. Mrs Curati wanted to revoke her existing will in relation to her English estate and make a new one. She told Mrs McLagan that she and the Deceased had Italian property and had Italian wills to cover that property. She told Mrs McLagan that the new will should therefore not revoke her Italian will. On 22 June 2007, Mrs Curati made a new will in relation to her English estate, the terms of which made it clear that it did not apply in relation to her property in Italy and would not revoke any will relating to her Italian property. She left £500,000 to the Deceased and divided up the remainder of her English estate between various people, including the Claimants. The Deceased was suffering from dementia and did not have testamentary capacity at this stage, so he made no new will."
Governing law
"The construction of a will is governed by the law intended by the testator. In the case of a will of movables, this is presumed to be the law of the testator's domicile at the date of execution of the will, but this presumption is rebutted by any sufficient indication that the testator intended his will to be construed according to the law of another country. The testator's intention may be expressed in the will, or it may be implied from circumstances such as his use of a particular language, or of expressions known only to a particular law.
Prima facie, a will of immovables must be construed according to the law of the testator's domicile at the date of execution of the will, but this presumption may be rebutted by any sufficient indication that the testator intended to refer to some other law, as where he uses the technical language of the country where the immovables are situated."
(1) it is in the Italian language;
(2) it uses the Italian legal terminology "erede universale";
(3) it was made in Italy;
(4) it was made by an Italian citizen.
"6(vi) The intention of the Deceased to reside indefinitely in England was reinforced still further in 1992 when Mrs Curati was diagnosed with cancer and it became clear that she wished to be cared for by the NHS in England. The Deceased was inseparable from her, and from that time on there was no prospect that he would change the established pattern of his life and decide to return to live in Italy until she was fully recovered or died. As Mr Bocelli fairly put it in his oral evidence, in the period after 2002/2003 (when he spent more time with the Deceased and from discussion with him became familiar with his thinking) the Deceased was waiting for something to be resolved in order to make a decision about where to live;
(vii) The best direct evidence of the Deceased's state of mind up to about 2002 was the unchallenged evidence of Ms Perdoni that he said he regarded England as his home and considered himself to be British;"
Construction
"37. There was no express revocation clause in the 1994 will. The question whether the 1994 will revoked the 1980 will therefore depends on whether it did so by implication: "the question is whether the intention of the testator, to be collected from the instrument, was that the dispositions of the earlier will should remain in whole or in part operative" (Dempsey v Lawson (1877) 2 PD 98, 107).
38. Mr Thomas for the Claimants relied on Halsbury's Laws, vol. 102, "Wills and Intestacy" (2010), para. 98 ("Later inconsistent will"), where it is said "The mere fact of making a subsequent testamentary disposition does not … effect a total revocation of a prior will unless the later disposition expressly or in effect revokes the former, or the two are incapable of standing together", and authorities are cited. It should also be noted that at para. 99 ("Partly inconsistent wills") the editors also refer to "The presumption against implied revocation …". In my view, it is a fair summary of the position to say that there is a presumption against implied revocation, and that an implied revocation will only be found from looking at the terms of successive testamentary instruments where there is established to be a logical inconsistency between them."
He then set out a long passage from the judgment of Lord Penzance in Lemage v Goodban, to the opening sentence of which I have already referred at paragraph 9 above.
Lord Justice Munby :
Lord Justice Pill :