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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 >> Barnaby & Anor v Johnson (aka Smith) [2019] EWHC 3344 (Ch) (09 December 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2019/3344.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 3344 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
PROPERTY, TRUSTS AND PROBATE LIST (ChD)
In the Estate of Mrs Maudlin Bascoe (deceased)
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Mr Bradford Barnaby Mr Alphonso Constantine Wynter (as the personal representatives of the estate of Mrs Maudlin Bascoe deceased) |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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Ms Patricia Johnson (also known as Patricia Smith) |
Defendant |
____________________
The Defendant in person
Hearing dates: 26th, 27th and 28th November 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Deputy Master Linwood:
The Claim in Essence
a) Testamentary capacity;
b) Undue influence by Mr Barnaby;
c) Forgery of Mrs Bascoe's signature;
d) Want of knowledge and approval by Mrs Bascoe of the terms of the 2005 Will.
The creation of the Wills
The medical records
i) Her address of 29 Lambert Rd is constant throughout the records;ii) The notes refer to "daughter Patricia Johnson" and with especial frequency to "grandson Robbie" and "Robert Williamson, grandson…"
iii) There is a copy of her passport in the records with her proper date of birth stated.
i) Her date of death is accurately set out in a fax from the nursing home where she died to which is attached a certificate of death from a doctor.
i) The family felt confusion went back to early in 2008;ii) The diagnosis of vascular dementia was made by February 2009;
iii) Mrs Bascoe had capacity as of June 2011 to make a Lasting Power of Attorney;
iv) She did not have capacity to make a will as at April 2012.
The Witnesses
Ms Jayne Claire Middleton-Albooye
Ms Manal Fouad
Mr Alphonso Wynter
Mr Bradford Barnaby
Ms Fay Watson
a) It would have been possible to have produced Ms Watson at court but for the hospitalisation;
b) The statement was not contemporaneous;
c) There was no multiple hearsay;
d) Ms Watson had no motive to conceal or misrepresent matters;
e) There is no suggestion it is an edited account or made for another purpose;
f) The circumstances are not such as to suggest an attempt to prevent proper evaluation of its weight.
i) It accords with the evidence of Ms Middleton-Albooye and Mr Wynter which I accepted without reservation;ii) The act of attesting the signature of Mrs Bascoe is inherently likely in view of her unchallenged attestation of the 1998 will and personal acquaintance with Mrs Bascoe;
iii) I very much doubt Ms Watson's evidence could be undermined by Miss Johnson in cross-examination;
iv) The factors under s.4(2) above generally lend weight to this evidence.
Mr Owen Kerr
Mr Eric Brown
Miss Patricia Johnson
Mr Robert Williamson
Ms Faye Gayle
THE LAW AND MY FINDINGS OF FACT
Testamentary Capacity
"97. The burden of proof in relation to testamentary capacity is subject to the following rules.
(i) While the burden starts with the propounder of a will to establish capacity, where the will is duly executed and appears rational on its face, then the court will presume capacity.
(ii) In such a case the evidential burden then shifts to the objector to raise a real doubt about capacity.
(iii) If a real doubt is raised, the evidential burden shifts back to the propounder to establish capacity none the less."
Undue Influence by Mr Barnaby
"Undue influence in probate has been defined in a number of cases, but perhaps the best short definition is that of Sir J.P. Wilde in Hall v Hall: "Pressure of whatever character… if so exercised as to overpower the volition without convincing the judgment." Lewison J. in Re Edwards (deceased) provided a short summary of the law of undue influence in probate at [47] of his judgement, which provides a useful checklist for practitioners:
i) In a case of a testamentary disposition of assets, unlike a lifetime disposition, there is no presumption of undue influence;
ii) Whether undue influence has procured the execution of a will is therefore a question of fact;
iii) The burden of proving it lies on the person who asserts it. It is not enough to prove that the facts are consistent with the hypothesis of undue influence. What must be shown is that the facts are inconsistent with any other hypothesis. In the modern law this is, perhaps no more than a reminder of the high burden, even on the civil standard, that a claimant bears in proving undue influence as vitiating a testamentary disposition;
iv) In this context undue influence means influence exercised either by coercion, in the sense that the testator's will must be overborne, or by fraud.
v) Coercion is pressure that overpowers the volition without convincing the testator's judgment. It is to be distinguished from mere persuasion, appeals to ties of affection or pity for future destitution, all of which are legitimate. Pressure which causes a testator to succumb for the sake of a quiet life, if carried to an extent that overbears the testator's free judgment discretion or wishes, is enough to amount to coercion in this sense;
vi) The physical and mental strength of the testator are relevant factors in determining how much pressure is necessary in order to overbear the will. The will of a weak and ill person may be more easily overborne than that of a hale and hearty one. As was said in one case simply to talk to a weak and feeble testator may so fatigue the brain that a sick person may be induced for quietness' sake to do anything. A "drip drip" approach may be highly effective in sapping the will;
vii) There is a separate ground for avoiding a testamentary disposition on the ground of fraud. The shorthand used to refer to this species of fraud is "fraudulent calumny". The basic idea is that if A poisons the testator's mind against B, who would otherwise be a natural beneficiary of the testator's bounty, by casting dishonest aspersions on his character, then the will is liable to be set aside;
viii) The essence of fraudulent calumny is that the person alleged to have been poisoning the testator's mind must either know that the aspersions are false or not care whether they are true or false. In my judgment if a person believes that he is telling the truth about a potential beneficiary then even if what he tells the testator is objectively untrue, the will is not liable to be set aside on that ground alone;
ix) The question is not whether the court considers that the testator's testamentary disposition is fair because, subject to statutory powers of intervention, a testator may dispose of his estate as he wishes. The question, in the end, is whether in making his dispositions, the testator has acted as a free agent."
i
) Mr Kerr in cross examination admitted that the date namely 28th April 2005 must be wrong and that the visit was more likely to be at some point in 2007, and accepted his memory is not good.ii) Mr Wynter was not then at the offices of Wainwright & Cummins in 2005 – he was practising from his firm's offices at 379/381 Brixton Road where the 2005 Will was executed – see [46] above. The former's offices were in Acre Lane as shown by the document they certified in or about September 2008 – see [51] above.
i) In cross examination she admitted that "…the only time we knew of the 2005 Will was in 2015…";ii) She admitted that she had no recollection of the date 27th April 2005 but that she took it from the 2005 Will;
iii) She had no actual recollection of the events she alleged regarding her mother and she only actually saw the 2005 Will "…late last year".
Forgery of Mrs Bascoe's signature
Want of knowledge and approval by Mrs Bascoe of the terms of the 2005 Will
The "2013 will"
5. Initially Mr Winter (sic) produced an unsigned copy of this will."
"He showed me the will in May 2013. I noticed there was no indication in the will where Maudlin was to be buried. It stated that my late sister and I were worthless and we were 'johncrow' (which means in Jamaica a carcas eater)…my nephew returned the will to the solicitors at their insistence.
3.The will is not in my possession and has never been in my possession.
4. I have no knowledge of the whereabouts of the will at this time. I believe it must still be with the solicitors who took it back from my nephew Robert Williamson in 2013."
i) I accept the evidence of Ms Fouad that no such will was made by her.ii) The file of Ziades confirms instructions were taken from April 2012 until it was determined that Mrs Bascoe did not have capacity as confirmed by Ms Fouad in her letter to Mrs Bascoe of 13th August 2012, but no will is present in draft form nor is the drafting of it mentioned on that well kept file.
iii) Miss Johnson, having she says seen the 2013 will, says Mr Barnaby is the residuary – and majority – beneficiary. But in Ms Fouad's notes of her instructions from Mrs Bascoe the prime beneficiary was to be Mr Williamson – albeit she was found not to have capacity at that time.
iv) I do not accept that as Mr Williamson says there were demands made by Ms Fouad and Mr Wynter for the return of this will which he complied with and that accordingly they or at least one of them is in possession of this 2013 will. I find that no such demands were made and no will was handed over as I prefer their evidence to that of Miss Johnson and Mr Williamson.
v) There is no reference to "johncrow" in Ms Fouad's comprehensive file notes. It would have stood off the page had such a phrase been used.
Conclusion