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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 >> Royal National Institute for Deaf People & Ors v Turner [2015] EWHC 3301 (Ch) (18 November 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2015/3301.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 3301 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
IN THE ESTATE OF DOROTHY PATCHETT WHELEN (DECEASED)
New Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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1) ROYAL NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR DEAF PEOPLE (A company limited by guarantee no. 00454169 and registered charity no. 207720) 2) ROYAL NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF BLIND PEOPLE (A company incorporated by Royal Charter no. RC000500 and registered charity no. 226227) 3) MARIE CURIE MEMORIAL FOUNDATION (A company limited by guarantee no. 00507597 and registered charity no. 207994) 4) THE INSTITUTE OF CANCER RESEARCH: THE ROYAL CANCER HOSPITAL (A company limited by guarantee no. 00534147 and registered charity exempt reference no. X90004) |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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ADRIAN ALAN TURNER |
Defendant |
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Simon Myerson QC and Benjamin Fowler (instructed by Kelsall & Company) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 2 6 November 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Judge Behrens:
1. Introduction
2. The facts
Background
The 1982 Wills
"Copy Wills original with Lake Parry & Treadwell (Godfrey)".
Relationship between Mrs Whelen, Mr Summers and Mrs Turner after Mr Whelen's death
Testamentary Intention
Mr Summers and Mr Isaacson
I discussed with you the arrangements for making a new will and understand that you will send me a copy of your existing will if you can locate it.
Don't hold your breath.
CSS and Mr Fellows
She said she wanted everything to go to her friend Mrs Turner and again would appoint Mrs Turner as exor with CSS. She said that she did not wish to leave anything to her family.
She realises she needs to make a will but at the present time really wants to give it more thought.
Alan and Philip Turner
"Oh, it's all going to your Mum, anyway. I don't care about my family up North, they never bother to visit me. Your Mum is my best friend."
Mrs Whelen's health
Mr and Mrs Turner's will
Dated this day of 19
Dated this day of (month) (year)
Mrs Whelen's will
Signed by the
testator/testatrix
in our presence and
by us in his/hers
Provisions
IN THE EVENT OF HAZEL TURNER'S DEATH THE ESTATE GOES TO HER ISSUE.
Forensic Examination
Mr Hallam's evidence
5. Some years ago Mrs Turner asked me to witness her will "because we have been friends for so long". I do not know exactly when this was, but it was certainly after the middle of 1998 when we moved to our new premises. It seemed a perfectly reasonable request in view of our long friendship. I remember distinctly that she asked me to witness her will and not her signature.
6. I have never previously witnessed a will for anyone and so I was not familiar with the procedure.
7. Mrs Turner works from 9.30 to 12.30, and she always comes to see me before she goes home. On this occasion she came to say goodbye and casually raised the subject of her will. She then produced it either from a bag or an envelope, I cannot remember which. She put it down on the counter in reception and I believe she covered the text leaving only the bottom part of the will visible. It is possible that she might only have pulled the bottom part of the will out of the envelope.
8. Mrs Turner asked me to sign at the bottom right hand corner. I did so without hesitation and without question. I did not ask to read the document before I signed because I considered the contents of her will might be of a private nature. I signed on the basis of total trust. There was no-one else present in the room at the time. It was all very casual and informal.
10. I do not recall noticing Mrs Whelen's signature, nor do I remember whether Mrs Turner covered it up. I am almost certain that Mrs Whelen's signature was not the will while I signed it. The whole episode only took a couple of seconds and was of relatively little significance to me.
Mrs Tomalin's evidence
2. Some years ago I recall [Mrs Turner] asking me quite casually if I would sign something for her. I think it was the following day that she said she would like me to witness a will. I assumed it was hers, although I cannot recall her saying that it was. I might have jumped to the conclusion that it was her will.
3 I remember that Hazel and I went into one of the classrooms together. I believe that there was someone else in the room, but I do not think it was Frank Hallam. I cannot recall who it was.
4. Hazel produced a piece of paper from her bag and put it on the teacher's desk. I have no recollection of her covering any part of it with a piece of paper or anything else. She might have covered parts with her hands, but this would have looked perfectly innocent. I was not interested in reading the document and I have no reason to suspect anything.
5. Hazel asked me to sign in the bottom corner, which I did, It was all over in a few seconds and so far as I was concerned it was an insignificant event.
6. I cannot recall whether Frank Hallam had already signed it, nor can I recall noticing the signature of the testatrix, Dorothy Whelen.
Mrs Turner's affidavits
3A During 1999 my husband and I decided to make our wills, and we did this using a pro forma printed form on which the formal parts of the will were printed, leaving the testator to complete the blanks and write the narrative of the will. My husband and I decided to have our wills witnessed at my place of work, The Richmond Language Training Limited School in Richmond upon Thames, the proprietor of which was Mr Frank William Hallam. My husband, being a rather more organised person than I am, had bought his will form first and made his will upon the 11th of August 1999 and his will was witnessed by a colleague, Helen Tomalin and another employee of the school. I also made my will, but I took my time to do so, and my will was witnessed by Mr Frank William Hallam and the said Helen Tomalin upon either 28th of September or 28th of October 1999. I knew that I could have my will witnessed at the school whenever I wished.
3B. In late October of 1999 Dorothy, having heard about our wills, also decided to make a homemade will, and as she lived alone and had no close friends other than myself, she asked me if she could have it witnessed at my workplace, just as I had done. Dorothy and I had a custom of meeting once a week for lunch at the school, and therefore it was most convenient to have Dorothy's will witnessed at the school. I believe, as far as I can remember, that the witnessing of the will was an unplanned occasion that coincided with Dorothy's and my weekly lunch date.
4. Upon the 1st of November 1999 1remember that I met my friend Dorothy outside in the street as was our custom and we both went into the school, into a classroom at the top of the building . I remember following Dorothy up the steps and going into a room at the top of the building. I can remember telling Dorothy to go up the steps and I followed behind her. I remember hoping that Mr Hallam and Helen Tomalin would make themselves available to witness the will. When we were in the room we sat down. I recall, fortuitously, Frank Hallam was in the room also and that Helen Tomalin was in the room as well. There were therefore the three of us in the room as well as Dorothy. I can remember Dorothy signing her will, and I can remember Frank Hallam and Helen Tomalin signing the will also. I believe that Dorothy signed the will first, Frank signed second and Helen signed third. However, I cannot be entirely sure of the exact sequence and it may be that Helen signed second and Frank signed third. I exhibit hereto a copy of Dorothy's wi11 of the 1st of November 1999 marked "HTl ". I remember that the atmosphere in the room was light hearted and we were joking and laughing. I also remember that the occasion was a very quick, casual event amidst the "controlled chaos" of the lunchtime activity at the school. Following the execution of the will, Dorothy handed the will to me in its envelope, which has Dorothy's handwriting of "executor" on the front. I can categorically confirm that my will and Dorothy's will were signed by the same witnesses on separate days as the dates of the wills clearly indicate.
5. I have been asked as to why the word "November" appears to be misplaced in the will, but I was not paying sufficient attention to the signatures to be able to explain this. Possibly the word "November" is misplaced because the signature of Helen Tomalin does not leave sufficient room in the line to insert the word "November". I do not know who dated the will, but from a comparison of Dorothy's signature and the words "First", ''November", and "1999", I believe that Dorothy dated the will. Similarly, I do not know why Dorothy's signature appears to below the signatures of Helen Tomalin and Frank Hallam; I can only speculate that this is because there is no obvious place for the testatrix to sign the will, save where Dorothy has in fact signed.
1. Mr Hallam denies that Mrs Whelen and Mrs Turner met at the school once a week for lunch. He points out that Mrs Turner never lunched at the school. He was there every day. He knew who lunched at and visited the school. He would have known if an elderly lady in her 80s had lunched at the school. He did, of course, accept that it was possible that they met once a week for lunch elsewhere in Richmond but he knew nothing of such an arrangement.
2. Mrs Turner had trouble walking up the stairs. Her classroom was on the first floor and she never had any reason to go to the top of the building.
3. Mr Hallam claimed that much of paragraph 4 is false. There was no meeting anywhere in the building. It is not true that the four persons mentioned were ever in the same room together.
4. In paragraphs 27 and 28 of her third witness statement Mrs Tomalin disputed paragraphs 3A and 4 of the affidavit and reasserted matters that are set out above.
Events after June 2005
Events prior to Mrs Whelen's death
Tiltyard Cottage
He has since received instructions to make regular visits to Tiltyard Cottage. He has ensured it has remained secure and has organised some limited gardening.
Events leading to the issue of proceedings
However, we never reached that stage due to the Frank Hallam statement trying to defeat the will altogether, and the fact that Dorothy was not present when the document was witnessed, held up any probate taking place on this last will and testament. (my underlining)
I take umbrage to the fact (although it was probably instigated by David Fellows) that on more than one occasion Royds made reference to the 1999 Will made and signed by Dorothy as being "fraudulent" Yes, it was witnessed badly and apparently Dorothy was not present when my Mum took the will to her school that day to have it witnessed by two teachers there. But fraudulent, never! As if her very best friend since childhood, both bridesmaids at each other's wedding, the one person she saw and spent unlimited time with throughout her entire life and trusted completely with everything, would instigate a fraudulent will. (my underlining)
I have spoken to my Mother who only recalls, and very clearly, the fact that Dorothy repeated to her several times prior to 1999 that it was her wish to leave her house - Tiltyard Cottage in Hampton Court - to her and that she wanted to have this in her last will and testament. She was not sure about the rest of the estate and told me that she never liked to ask Dorothy about this as she was a very private person and respected her friend too much to pry into her affairs.
She did not recall Dorothy mentioning either destroying or not having another will (with reference to the 1982 will of which Royds now possesses a copy).
The only person that Dorothy would have chosen to share the information you are asking about was my Mother, her best friend. Or perhaps with Robin Summers also, her financial adviser and a very good friend of both Leonard and Dorothy Whelen over a span of very many years.
I believe that both Frank Hallam and Helen Tomalin express in their statements that they both signed only one will. Hallam signed both Dorothy's and my Mother's wills in 1999 and Tomalin signed Dorothy's, my Mother's and my Father's wills so the statement in this regard at least, is erroneous.
3. Execution of the Will
The Law
"No will shall be valid unless
(a) it is in writing, and signed by the testator, or by some other person in his presence and by his direction; and
(b) it appears that the testator intended by his signature to give effect to the will; and
(c) the signature is made or acknowledged by the testator in the presence of two or more witnesses present at the same time; and
(d) each witness either
(i) attests and signs the will; or
(ii) acknowledges his signature,
in the presence of the testator (but not necessarily in the presence of any other witness), but no form of attestation shall be necessary."
6. The law in this field has recently been considered and discussed by this court in a case decided some two weeks after Judge Weeks gave his decision, namely Sherrington v Sherrington [2005] EWCA Civ 326. In giving the judgment of the court in that case, Peter Gibson LJ said this:
"40....
41. To similar effect was Lord Penzance in Wright v Rogers (1869) LR 1 PD 678 at p. 682. In this case the survivor of the attesting witnesses of a will, which was signed by the testator and the witnesses at the foot of an attestation clause, gave evidence a year later that the will was not signed by him in the presence of the testator. Lord Penzance said at p. 682 that the question was whether the court was able to rely on the witness's memory. He continued:
'The Court ought to have in all cases the strongest evidence before it believes that a will, with a perfect attestation clause, and signed by the testator, was not duly executed, otherwise the greatest uncertainty would prevail in the proving of wills. The presumption of law is largely in favour of the due execution of a will, and in that light a perfect attestation clause is a most important element of proof. Where both the witnesses, however, swear that the will was not duly executed, and there is no evidence the other way, there is no footing for the Court to affirm that the will was duly executed.'
42. Evidence that the witnesses have no recollection of having witnessed the deceased sign will not be enough to rebut the presumption. Positive evidence that the witness did not see the testator sign may not be enough to rebut the presumption unless the court is satisfied that it has 'the strongest evidence', in Lord Penzance's words. The same approach should, in our judgment, be adopted towards evidence that the witness did not intend to attest that he saw the deceased sign when the will contains the signatures of the deceased and the witness and an attestation clause. That is because of the same policy reason, that otherwise the greatest uncertainty would arise in the proving of wills. In general, if a witness has the capacity to understand, he should be taken to have done what the attestation clause and the signatures of the testator and the witness indicated, viz. that the testator has signed in their presence and they have signed in his presence. In the absence of the strongest evidence, the intention of the witness to attest is inferred from the presence of the testator's signature on the will (particularly where, as in the present case, it is expressly stated that in witness of the will, the testator has signed), the attestation clause and, underneath that clause, the signature of the witness."
7. There is good reason for the requirement that one must have "the strongest evidence" to the effect that a Will has not been executed in accordance with section 9 when, as in this case, it appears from the face of the Will that it has been properly executed in all such respects and where there is no suggestion but that the contents of the Will represented the testator's intention. Where a Will, on its face, has been executed in accordance with the section 9, and where there is no reason to doubt that it represented completely the wishes of the testator, there are two reasons, one practical and one of principle, why the court should be slow, on the basis of extraneous evidence, to hold that the Will was not properly executed.
8. The practical reason is that oral testimony as to the way in which a document was executed many years ago is not likely to be inherently particularly reliable on, one suspects, most occasions. As anyone who has been involved in contested factual disputes will know, people can, entirely honestly and doing their very best, completely misremember or wholly forget facts and events that took place not very long ago, and the longer ago something may have taken place the less accurate their recollection is likely to be. Wills often are executed many years before they come into their own.
9. Furthermore, when one is dealing with the recollection of witnesses to a Will, one is, as my Lord, Mummery LJ, pointed out in argument, often, indeed normally, concerned with the evidence of persons who have no interest in the document that has been executed, and therefore to whom the signing of the Will would not, save in usual circumstances, have been of particular significance.
10. The principled reason for being reluctant to hold that a Will, properly executed on its face, representing the apparent wishes of the testator, should be set aside on extraneous evidence, is that one is thereby declining to implement the wishes of the testator following his death. That would be unfortunate, especially in a case he has taken care to ensure, as far as he can, that his wishes are given effect in a way which complies with the law.
11. In these circumstances, it is not surprising that in relation to Professor Channon's Will, which had a full and valid attestation clause and represented his wishes, there has to be cogent and clear evidence, i.e. testimony which constitutes "the strongest evidence" before one can justify the conclusion that the judge reached.
12. As explained in paragraph 33 of the judgment in Sherrington, and as was understandably emphasised by Mr Robert Arnfield, who appears on behalf of the respondents, the claimants below, in this case, there is a competing point of principle. While one should be slow to find that a Will, valid on its face and representing the wishes of the testator, is nonetheless ineffective on grounds of failure to comply with section 9, this court, as an appellate court, should be slow to interfere with the findings of fact made by a trial judge, who heard directly relevant oral testimony and who has delivered a clear and reasoned judgment. However, it should be remembered, in the light of the law summarised in paragraphs 40 to 42 in Sherrington, that this is not a case where the judge simply had to carry out the normal exercise of deciding whether certain witnesses were to be believed or not. It was a case where he had to decide whether, in light of the evidence taken as a whole, he could reasonably conclude that there was "the strongest evidence", that the Will has not been legally executed. Allowing for the fact that that expression is somewhat hyperbolic in its terms.
43. So, in this kind of case, the court is faced with a situation where the execution of the will by the testator together with the attestation of his signature by the witnesses is regular on its face but one or both of the witnesses come to the court later and give evidence that it was not in fact duly executed.
44. Lord Penzance refers to the need for the "strongest evidence" before the court will hold that such a will was not duly executed. I accept that, as Mr Robert Arnfield, for the respondent, submits, the requirement for the strongest evidence does not mean that there could be no other evidence that could be stronger. If that were the meaning of the phrase used by Lord Penzance, there would be no case in which anything less than perfect recollection of execution in accordance of the attestation clause could satisfy section 9 of the Wills Act.
45. So the question of what constitutes the "strongest evidence" for the purposes of this kind of case remains to be explored. As I see it, there is a sliding scale according to which evidence will constitute the strongest evidence in one case but not in another. What constitutes the "strongest evidence" in any particular case will depend on totality of the relevant facts of that case, and the court's evaluation of the probabilities. The court must look at all the circumstances of the case relevant to attestation. The more probable it is, from those circumstances, that the will was properly attested, the greater will be the burden on those seeking to displace the presumption as to due execution to which the execution of the will and the attestation clause give rise. Accordingly the higher will be the hurdle to be crossed to meet the requirement of showing the "strongest evidence", and the stronger that evidence will need to be.
46. Likewise, if the evidence of due attestation is weak, then the burden of displacing the presumption as to due execution may be more easily discharged and the requirement to show the strongest evidence satisfied. Allegations that were not made, or were not pursued, and mere suspicion, have to be put on one side.
47. I turn to another point. In paragraph 41 of his judgment the judge said:
"I do not think it is necessary for me to speculate as to how the signatures came to be upon that document. There are various possibilities but it is not necessary for me to make any finding on what would be no more than a surmise.
48. With respect to the judge, it seems to me it will in general be necessary for the court to consider the possible reasons why a witness who signed the attestation clause now avers that it was not signed in the way that the attestation clause states. If the explanation is simply lack of recollection, that on its own may not be sufficient to satisfy the court, but evidence from both witnesses that they were nowhere near the place of execution stated in the attestation clause on the particular date would be likely to carry more weight.
49. In evaluating all the evidence the judge must bear in mind the policy reason identified by Lord Penzance, namely that the court should not, by its decisions in this field, cause "the greatest uncertainty in the proving of wills".
16. One of the most important lessons of such research is that in everyday life we are not aware of the extent to which our own and other people's memories are unreliable and believe our memories to be more faithful than they are. Two common (and related) errors are to suppose: (1) that the stronger and more vivid is our feeling or experience of recollection, the more likely the recollection is to be accurate; and (2) that the more confident another person is in their recollection, the more likely their recollection is to be accurate.
17. psychological research has demonstrated that memories are fluid and malleable, being constantly rewritten whenever they are retrieved. This is true even of so-called 'flashbulb' memories, that is memories of experiencing or learning of a particularly shocking or traumatic event. External information can intrude into a witness's memory, as can his or her own thoughts and beliefs, and both can cause dramatic changes in recollection. Events can come to be recalled as memories which did not happen at all or which happened to someone else .
18. Memory is especially unreliable when it comes to recalling past beliefs. Our memories of past beliefs are revised to make them more consistent with our present beliefs. Studies have also shown that memory is particularly vulnerable to interference and alteration when a person is presented with new information or suggestions about an event in circumstances where his or her memory of it is already weak due to the passage of time.
19.
20. Considerable interference with memory is also introduced in civil litigation by the procedure of preparing for trial. A witness is asked to make a statement, often (as in the present case) when a long time has already elapsed since the relevant events. The statement is usually drafted for the witness by a lawyer who is inevitably conscious of the significance for the issues in the case of what the witness does nor does not say. The statement is made after the witness's memory has been "refreshed" by reading documents. The documents considered often include statements of case and other argumentative material as well as documents which the witness did not see at the time or which came into existence after the events which he or she is being asked to recall. The statement may go through several iterations before it is finalised. Then, usually months later, the witness will be asked to re-read his or her statement and review documents again before giving evidence in court. The effect of this process is to establish in the mind of the witness the matters recorded in his or her own statement and other written material, whether they be true or false, and to cause the witness's memory of events to be based increasingly on this material and later interpretations of it rather than on the original experience of the events.
21. It is not uncommon (and the present case was no exception) for witnesses to be asked in cross-examination if they understand the difference between recollection and reconstruction or whether their evidence is a genuine recollection or a reconstruction of events. Such questions are misguided in at least two ways. First, they erroneously presuppose that there is a clear distinction between recollection and reconstruction, when all remembering of distant events involves reconstructive processes. Second, such questions disregard the fact that such processes are largely unconscious and that the strength, vividness and apparent authenticity of memories is not a reliable measure of their truth.
22. In the light of these considerations, the best approach for a judge to adopt in the trial of a commercial case is, in my view, to place little if any reliance at all on witnesses' recollections of what was said in meetings and conversations, and to base factual findings on inferences drawn from the documentary evidence and known or probable facts. This does not mean that oral testimony serves no useful purpose though its utility is often disproportionate to its length. But its value lies largely, as I see it, in the opportunity which cross-examination affords to subject the documentary record to critical scrutiny and to gauge the personality, motivations and working practices of a witness, rather than in testimony of what the witness recalls of particular conversations and events. Above all, it is important to avoid the fallacy of supposing that, because a witness has confidence in his or her recollection and is honest, evidence based on that recollection provides any reliable guide to the truth.
Submissions
Discussion and Conclusion
4. Want of knowledge and approval
The Law
"12. As for want of knowledge and approval of the contents of the 2007 Will, the scope of the inquiry indicated by a long line of authorities gives rise to other questions distinct from lack of mental capacity to make the will: Wintle v. Nye [1959] 1 WLR 284; Fuller v. Strum [2001] 1 WLR 1097; Gill v. Woodall [2011] WTLR 251. The relevant questions to ask in this case are
i) Do the circumstances of the 2007 Will arouse the suspicions of the Court as to whether its contents represent the wishes and intentions of the Deceased as known to and approved by her? The judge said "Yes."
ii) Has scrutiny of those circumstances by the court dispelled those suspicions? The judge said "No."
13 In answering those questions in a particular case the court has to consider and evaluate the totality of the relevant evidence, from which it may make inferences on the balance of probabilities. Although talk of presumptions and their rebuttal is not regarded as specially helpful nowadays, the courts realistically recognise that, for example, if a properly executed will has been professionally prepared on instructions and then explained by an independent and experienced solicitor to the maker of the will, it will be markedly more difficult to challenge its validity on the grounds of either lack of mental capacity or want of knowledge and approval than in a case where those prudent procedures have not been followed."
22. Where a judge has heard evidence of fact and expert opinion over a period of many days relating to the character and state of mind and likely desires of the testatrix and the circumstances in which the will was drafted and executed, and other relevant matters, the value of such a two-stage approach to deciding the issue of the testatrix's knowledge and approval appears to me to be questionable. In my view, the approach which it would, at least generally, be better to adopt is that summarised by Sachs J in the unreported case of Crerar v. Crerar, cited and followed by Latey J in Morris [1971] P 62, 78E-G, namely that the court should:
"consider all the relevant evidence available and then, drawing such inferences as it can from the totality of that material, it has to come to a conclusion whether or not those propounding the will have discharged the burden of establishing that the testatrix knew and approved the contents of the document which is put forward as a valid testamentary disposition. The fact that the testatrix read the document, and the fact that she executed it, must be given the full weight apposite in the circumstances, but in law those facts are not conclusive, nor do they raise a presumption."
5. The loss of the 1982 Will
6. S. 116 of the Senior Courts Act 1981