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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 >> Wharton v Bancroft & Ors [2012] EWHC 91 (Ch) (30 January 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2012/91.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 91 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
The Rolls Building Fetter Lane EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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Maureen Wharton |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1)Timothy John Bancroft (2) James William Douglas Bancroft (3) Victoria Wharton (4) Gina Fagan (5) Amanda Wharton |
Defendant |
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The First Defendant appeared in person
The Second Defendant did not appear
Mr Jeremy Cousins QC and Ms Michelle Stevens Hoare (instructed by Wright Hassall LLP) for the Third Fourth and Fifth Defendants
Hearing dates: 13 January 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Norris :
"While it will not be possible to limit the circumstances in which at testator is said to have promoted litigation by leaving his own affairs in confusion, I cannot think it should extend to cases where a testator by his words … has misled other people and perhaps inspired false hopes in their bosoms that they may benefit after his death. It does not seem to me that the Judges who, in the past, have laid down the practice that costs should be allowed out of the estate where the fault of the testator had lead to the litigation, had in mind such a situation as that."
Mr Cousins QC accepted that that was the general principle. But he submitted that what was said by Mr Wharton had particular significance because it formed part of a complex of interlocking features (including the behaviour of Maureen and of Mr Bancroft after Mr Wharton's death). The significance of these other features seems to me to make it less (not more) appropriate to say that Mr Wharton was the cause of confusion and uncertainty and that his estate should be depleted by all the costs of the case.
(a) she did not disclose that, at the time when Mr Wharton made the 2006 Will she too had made a mirror will:
(b) in the proceedings she did not disclose that will herself (and it is alleged that she did so because she was attempting to conceal any involvement in the will making process):
(c) She dealt with money in Spanish bank accounts without telling the authorities that Mr Wharton was dead:
(d) She was inaccurate in the information she provided about the Spanish bank accounts:
(e) She ignored, resisted and delayed the provision of information, for example about dealings by White Horse with its assets:
(f) She cut the Daughters out of her life and from any involvement or connection with Mr Wharton and his former home or possessions.
"it must surely be obvious to anyone who has studied the history of litigation in the Probate Division… that where pleas of undue influence and pleas of fraud are made, the probability, at any rate, if they are unsuccessfully made, is that people who make such charges and fail will be condemned in the costs not only of that charge but of the whole action".
My exercise of discretion in this case in fact accords with the probability there suggested.
(a) the nature of the case advanced;
(b) the manner in which the case was advanced;
(c) the extent to which the Daughters' solicitors engaged in irrelevant enquiry (e.g. as to the terms of Spanish conveyancing documents, as to the capital gains tax payable on the sale of Mr Wharton's boat, and as to the circumstances in which Maureen obtained a Spanish identity number);
(d) the way that the existence of the daughters CFA and ATE arrangements were deployed in correspondence against Maureen when she was herself personally funding the litigation.
(a) Which gives her the benefit of the doubt on any disputed question as to whether an item of costs was reasonably incurred or reasonably in amount? and
(b) relieves her of the obligation of demonstrating proportionality.
(a) The costs incurred by the Claimant were largely responsive to the case made against her by the Daughters. Her positive case (that the Will was duly executed by a competent testator) was not in fact in issue. She was responding to the case of want and knowledge of approval and undue influence made by the Daughters and it is not unfair to put upon them (particularly having regard to the way they conducted that case) the task of demonstrating that a response to their aggressively pursued case was in some measure unreasonable.
(b) This is not a case in which issues of proportionality could figure large. This was an "all or nothing" decision about a four million pound estate.
(c) The case of want and knowledge and approval was legally and factually weak to such a degree that the case lies outside the norm. If Mr Bancroft's detailed attendance note was accurate (and there was no suggestion that it was dishonestly concocted) then a man of unchallenged capacity announced what the intention was, proceeded to give direct oral instructions to his solicitor, listened as the solicitor provided some sort of commentary on his drafting, listened whilst the finished product was read back to him, affirmed that he understood what the will said and then signed it. The suggestion that he did not know and approve that he had left everything to his wife and that he did not know and approve that he had left nothing to his daughters was extraordinary.
(d) A case based on undue influence is one founded upon a very serious charge which ought not to be pleaded or pursued unless there is a proper factual foundation from which the necessary inference can be drawn. The cases are clear as to what those inferences are and as to the limited circumstances in which they may be properly drawn. The case pleaded and argued was in my judgment weak and outside the norm.
(e) The case was conducted in manner which was outside the norm with excessive enquiry into irrelevances which generated significant costs, which costs were then used as a means of emphasising to Maureen the great risk in costs to which she herself was exposed unless she settled with the Daughters by giving them most of the estate.
"If it was self evident that the offer made was merely a tactical step designed to secure the benefit of the incentives provided by the rule (eg an offer to settle for 99.9% of the full value of the claim) I would agree with Jonathan Parker LJ that the Judge would have a discretion to refuse indemnity costs".
"The question is whether they were really justified in separately appearing to protect their own interests".
He held that it was, and that
"The appellants' separate appearance was only cautious, and not in any way oppressive or embarrassing."
"…see no reason why they should not have joined in supporting the defendant and so fought the case as a whole".
The parties there were on the same side of the record. In the instant case Mr Bancroft was a defendant who was conscious of the need to control costs. He first indicated an intention to be a "passive defendant". He then indicated that once proceedings were issued he would review his position since he had "an extremely strong belief [Mr Wharton] had full testamentary capacity" (which was the challenge then made by the Daughters). When the proceedings were issued he indicated that he would not dispute the claim. The executors accordingly did not serve a Defence. In the course of the case Mr Bancroft provided extensive disclosure at the request of the Daughters' solicitors, and two witness statements. He did not appear by Counsel at the trial. He did not attend every day of the trial.