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England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> Brown v HM Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother, The Executors of the Estate of & Ors [2007] EWHC 1607 (Fam) (05 July 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2007/1607.html Cite as: [2007] EWHC 1607 (Fam), [2007] WTLR 1129 |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
THE PRESIDENT OF THE FAMILY DIVISION
____________________
Robert Andrew Brown |
Plaintiff |
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- and - |
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The Executors of the Estate of HM Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother |
1st Defendant |
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-and- |
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The Executors of HRH the Princess Margaret Countess of Snowdon |
2nd Defendant |
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-and- |
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HM Attorney General |
3rd Defendant |
____________________
Mr Frank Hinks QC and Mr Jonathan Adkin (instructed by Farrer & Co) for the First and second Defendants
Mr John Lofthouse (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) for the Third Defendant
Hearing date: 27 March 2007
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Sir Mark Potter, P :
Introduction:
Legal and Procedural Framework
"All original wills and other documents which are under the control of the High Court in the Principal Registry or in any District Probate Registry shall be deposited and preserved in such places as may be provided for and directions given in accordance with Part 1 of Schedule 2 to the Constitutional Reform Act 2005; and any wills or other documents so deposited shall, subject to the control of the High Court and to probate rules, be open to inspection" (emphasis added)
"an office copy, or a sealed and certified copy, of any will or part of a will open to inspection under 124 or of any grant may, on payment of the fee prescribed by an order section 92 of The Courts Act 2003, be obtained –
(a) from the registry in which in accordance with section 124 the will or documents relating to the grant are preserved; or
(b) where in accordance with that section the will or such documents are preserved in some place other than a registry, from the Principal Registry; or
(c) subject to the approval of the Senior Registrar [Senior District Judge] of the Family Division, from the Principal Registry in any case where the will was proved in or the grant was issued from a district probate registry."
Section 127 makes provision for rules of court to be made in relation to probate, which are currently to be found in the NCPR.
"an original will or other document referred to in section 124 of the Act shall not be open to inspection if, in the opinion of a [District Judge or Registrar], such inspection would be undesirable or otherwise inappropriate."
"Will of member of the Royal Family
4.247. On the death of a member of the Royal Family, it is usual for application to be made to the President of the Family Division for an order that the will be sealed up. Application for such an order is made by summons, which is served on the Treasury Solicitor. The will and HMRC account are examined by an official of the Capital Taxes Office before the papers to lead the grant are lodged.
4.248. No copy of the will is annexed to the grant of probate: the grant bears annotation 'Probate granted without annexing a copy of the will by order of the President dated ...' The usual records of the grant are kept.
4.249. After the will has been sealed up it can be opened only by direction of the President"
See to similar effect: Williams, Mortimer & Sunnucks: at para 9 – 05
"19(1) The court may at any stage of the proceedings order to be struck out or amended any pleading or the indorsement of any writ in the action or anything in any pleading or in the indorsement, on the ground that –
(a) it discloses no reasonable cause of action or defence, as the case may be; or
(b) it is scandalous, frivolous or vexatious; or
(c) …
(d) it is otherwise an abuse of the process of the court;
and may order the action to be stayed or dismissed or
or judgment to be entered accordingly as the case may
be.
(2) …
(3) This rule shall, so far as applicable, apply to an originating summons and a petition as if the summons or petition, as the case may be, were a pleading."
The Procedural History.
"As regards to the sealing of the Royal Wills in question, the public interest was represented by the Attorney-General. In order for Mr Brown to apply to unseal those wills, he must therefore establish some form of private interest in having the wills unsealed.
Your client has been provided with an opportunity to establish such a private interest in the evidence he has been ordered to produce. Unless and until evidence of such an interest is produced (and none has so far been produced by your client) it is our view that Mr Brown does not have standing to pursue the application, and hence is not entitled to the disclosure of the documents and information that he seeks.
The appropriate course, therefore, is for your client to produce his evidence first, at which point our clients will consider his request for the information and documents sought."
The basis of the Plaintiff's claim
"I have not been told that I am the illegitimate child of Princess Margaret, or even that I was adopted. It is a conclusion I have arrived at be [sic] deduction."
At paragraph 2, he explains that process of deduction as follows:
"[M]y conclusion that I am the illegitimate child of Princess Margaret is based upon a jigsaw of personal recollections, events, circumstantial evidence, conversations, reactions and extensive research."
"This is the most difficult letter I have ever written. I have almost sat down to write it on a number of occasions, and have composed it endlessly in my head. I frequently question my motives and my 'sanity', complexes of grandeur, self-delusion etc. My conclusion is that if this letter proves to be misplaced, it would make a fascinating story, but [is] sometimes stranger than fiction. I have had to work 'in the dark' as enquires cannot be made of those who might know without setting a rumour mill in motion. I have tried to be discreet for the sake of your Majesty's family, and myself. There is no question well directed or not, this issue, if allowed to take flight would provide a comprehensive pile of fodder to feed the media pages.
…I have been aware that there was a possibility of not being who I thought I was for about ten years, hints of wrong side of the sheets and wider hints of blue blood as a result of a comment by a relative. I put this together with childhood memories, of comments and actions by Cynthia, events I remembered, significant or out of context with life, such as: (a small sample selection of many)
A vivid recollection of being told by Cynthia (mother?) that I could be a king one day; as a bright little chap of four or five I informed Cynthia that was a silly suggestion, I knew what a King was I could clearly not be one (sic)".
The letter then set out a string of recollections and reminiscences similar to or consistent with those set out in the Plaintiff's affidavit.
"Robert's bizarre quest to uncover the truth about his background began a few years ago at the wedding of a cousin in Wales.
'For a long time I felt that I did not quite belong,' he says. 'My parents had always been quite distant, and seemed much fonder of my younger brother. It wasn't until this wedding that I began to guess at the reason why.'
The wedding was a grand affair, with guests including a large number of titled people – Lords and Ladies, Earls and Countesses. Looking at the seating plan, Robert noticed that he was more or less the only Esquire.
'When I mentioned this to my uncle he gave an embarrassed half-laugh and said: "wrong side of the sheets." '
As the evening wore on, mulling this strange comment over, Robert began to think the unthinkable: could the couple who he had regarded all his life as his natural parents actually have brought him up on behalf of someone else?
Brown believes that only if he is of royal descent can he account for some curious, and otherwise inexplicable events that gnaw at him. Chief amongst these are his very first memory."
The article then proceeds to recount incidents spoken to by the Plaintiff, to most of which I have referred above, and none of which is probative or corroborative of his belief in any way.
The nature and effect of the former President's decisions.
The Plaintiff's interest
"The general rule is that a private person is only entitled to sue in respect of interference with a public right if either there is also interference with a private right of his or the interference with the public right would inflict special damage on him …"
"If [the applicant] fails to show, when he applies for leave, prima facie case, or reasonable grounds for believing that there has been a failure of public duty, the court would be in error if it granted leave. The curb represented by the need for the applicant to show, when he seeks leave to apply, that he has such a case is an essential protection against abuse of legal process. It enables the court to prevent abuse by busybodies, cranks and other mischief-makers." (emphasis added)
See also per Lord Wilberforce at 630 C-D.
"The first stage test, which is applied upon the application for leave, will lead to a refusal if the applicant has no interest whatsoever and is, in truth, no more than a meddlesome busybody. If, however, the application appears to be otherwise arguable and there is no other discretionary bar, such as dilatoriness on the part of the applicant, the applicant may expect to get leave to apply, leaving the test of interest or standing to be re-applied as a matter of discretion on the hearing of the substantive application".
"…the concept of 'private life' is a broad term not susceptible to exhaustive definition. It covers the physical and psychological integrity of a person. It can sometimes embrace aspects of an individual's physical and social identity…. Article 8 also protects a right to personal development, and the right to establish and develop relationships with other human beings and the outside world."
"The personal autonomy protected by Art 8 embraces the right to decide who is to be within the 'inner circle', the right to decide whether that which is private should remain private or whether it should be shared with others. Article 8 thus embraces both the right to maintain one's privacy and, if this is what one prefers, not merely the right to waive that privacy but also the right to share what otherwise would be private with others or, indeed, with the world at large. So that the right to communicate one's story to one's fellow beings is protected not merely by Art 10 but also by Art 8."
"1. Everyone has the right to freedom of expression. This right should include freedom to hold opinions and receive and impart information and ideas without interference by public authority and regardless of frontiers…"
Conclusion