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Scottish Sheriff Court Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Sheriff Court Decisions >> EF and JF, Re [2008] ScotSC 9 (11 January 2008 URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotSC/2008/9.html Cite as: [2008] ScotSC 9 |
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DECISION BY SHERIFF J. BAIRD
AW 214/07
Application by EF and JF
On
For the avoidance
of doubt, all of the criteria of the Act were satisfied in this case, and the
adult had an extended family with whom he had always had the closest of
relationships. It was clear that the applicants (and other members of his
extended family) had actively supported the adult for years in a relationship
of complete mutual respect and trust. They were manifestly suited for appointment as guardians. The value of the
adult's estate, including his house, was £520,000 and I required to fix caution
in that sum, to be found within 12 weeks.
When I say I
"required" to do so, I explain that at the time of granting the application,
and even at the time of writing, that is a mandatory requirement under the Act,
and can be dispensed with only if the guardians are unable to find it but are
otherwise suitable. Even if it were not, and I had discretion, (and such a provision
will come into force at some time), I would not have exercised that discretion
in this case. An estate of that size
being administered by other persons ought to be protected by insurance.
I also point out
that the extended period of 12 weeks fixed to find caution is to allow for the
routine inordinate and unexplained delays which insurance companies take to
process these applications.
At the time I did
so, I had just published an opinion (RL
AW114/07 - Scottish Courts Website 28 December 2007) which dealt with the
problems in dealing with insurance
companies which are being encountered by those who are trying to operate this
Act in accordance with the plain intention of Parliament. I said then that
while I accepted that insurance is a
risk based business, the attitude of the insurers was subverting the intention
of Parliament. I advised the solicitors acting in the present case of the
potential difficulty they would encounter in obtaining caution for their
clients.
That has proved
to be correct. They have now reverted to me and produced letters from the only
two insurers who offer cover in this area,
The letter from
Zurich, dated 31 January 2008, states
that they are unable to assist in providing a bond of caution for the adult
(which incidentally betrays a fundamental misunderstanding - the bond is not
for the adult, it is to insure the
actings of the court appointed guardians in their administration of the estate of
the adult), and suggest that the company may be in a position to assist if a
partner of the firm of solicitors who act for the guardians becomes a joint
signatory on any relevant bank accounts that the adult owns or has or that will
be opened during the [guardians'] appointment and also have joint control over
any investments. They ask for an irrevocable undertaking from the solicitors
countersigned by the guardians to confirm that, and conclude, blithely, that
they understand that both the solicitors and their clients may have to return
to Court to have additional powers granted to allow a joint signatory on the
adult's accounts.
This, frankly, is
absurd. The solicitors have no power to act in such a way, nor should they have
to seek such powers. The plain intention of Parliament was to move away from
the old system whereby such estates were always managed by accountants or
solicitors and replace it with one which empowered lay people to take control
of the assets of family members who have lost capacity to do so, and to enable
them to do so without having to act jointly with professionals at all times. Of
course, such lay persons routinely crave power to seek appropriate professional
advice where necessary, but to require the system envisaged by
Furthermore, it
will hugely increase the cost of administration. Lay applicants routinely do
not seek to be paid for administering the estates of others; professional
advisers always do seek, and are fully entitled to, remuneration for so doing.
Also, such a scheme could create considerable difficulties with the existing
insurance arrangements of solicitors. There is no basis on which solicitors should
seek to be involved in such an arrangement.
The RSA wrote, on
11 March 2008 (which illustrates the point made earlier about inordinate delay
in dealing with these matters by insurers - they begin by referring to emails
and letters of 23 and 30 January and 19 February and apologise for the very
long delay in replying).
They then say
this:-" I regret to say that we will not be able to offer this bond. This is
simply because of the size of the Adult's estate and the caution amount that
has been set. For lay guardians only, that is family members or friends of the
adult currently we will not normally offer bonds if the estate or the caution
amount is over £500,000 and indeed we are very reluctant to do so if the estate
or the caution amount is over around £425,000. If a solicitor or chartered
accountant was professional (sic)
appointed as the sole financial guardian for a case this size then we normally
would have no problem offering a bond."
As I have said
before, and repeat, the result of this attitude is that the plain intention of
Parliament is being defeated. The result in the actual case is that the
guardians approved and appointed by this court are unable to find caution and I
have now had to waive the requirement to find it, with the inevitable
consequence that an estate of this size is uninsured.
I said at the end
of the opinion in the case of RL (supra) that this matter needs to be
addressed. I am saying that again. I will have to keep saying that until
someone listens and does something to remedy the situation.