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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 >> Perdoni & Anor v Curati [2011] EWHC 3442 (Ch) (20 December 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2011/3442.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 3442 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
GENERAL
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
SYLVANA MARCHANT PERDONI ROBERTO PERDONI |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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CARMEN CURATI |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr Robert Grierson (instructed by Cree Godfrey & Wood) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 8-9/12/11
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Sales :
Introduction
Factual background
"1. I DECLARE that this Will is intended to dispose only of my property and estate situate in England
2. I DESIRE to be buried in Carpaneto Piacenza Italy
3. IF my wife EMILIA MARIA CANDIDA CURATI survives me for a period of one month then I GIVE DEVISE AND BEQUEATH all my property whatsoever and wheresoever situate unto her absolutely and APPOINT her to be the sole Executrix of this my Will
4. IN the event of my said wife predeceasing me or failing to survive me for the period of one month then:-
(i) I APPOINT Barclays Bank Trust Company Limited (hereinafter called "the Company") to be the Executor and Trustee of this my Will
(iii) The Company shall hold my residuary estate UPON TRUST :
(a) To pay thereout my just debts and funeral and testamentary expenses;
(b) After payment as aforesaid for my niece and nephew SYLVANA PERDONI and ROBERTO PERDONI both now of 165 Wardour Street London W1 in equal shares absolutely upon their reaching the age of twenty-one years; "
Domicile
"(1) The domicile of origin adheres - unless displaced by satisfactory evidence of the acquisition and continuance of a domicile of choice; (2) a domicile of choice is acquired only if it be affirmatively shown that the propositus is resident within a territory subject to a distinctive legal system with the intention, formed independently of external pressures, of residing there indefinitely. If a man intends to return to the land of his birth upon a clearly foreseen and reasonably anticipated contingency, e.g., the end of his job, the intention required by law is lacking; but, if he has in mind only a vague possibility, such as making a fortune (a modern example might be winning a football pool), or some sentiment about dying in the land of his fathers, such a state of mind is consistent with the intention required by law. But no clear line can be drawn: the ultimate decision in each case is one of fact - of the weight to be attached to the various factors and future contingencies in the contemplation of the propositus, their importance to him, and the probability, in his assessment, of the contingencies he has in contemplation being transformed into actualities. (3) It follows that, though a man has left the territory of his domicile of origin with the intention of never returning, though he be resident in a new territory, yet if his mind be not made up or evidence be lacking or unsatisfactory as to what is his state of mind, his domicile of origin adheres. And, if he has acquired but abandoned a domicile of choice either because he no longer resides in the territory or because he no longer intends to reside there indefinitely, the domicile of origin revives until such time as by a combination of residence and intention he acquires a new domicile of choice.
There remains the question of standard of proof. It is beyond doubt that the burden of proving the abandonment of a domicile of origin and the acquisition of a domicile of choice is upon the party asserting the change. But it is not so clear what is the standard of proof: is it to be proved beyond reasonable doubt or upon a balance of probabilities, or does the standard vary according to whether one seeks to establish abandonment of a domicile of origin or merely a switch from one domicile of choice to another? Or is there some other standard?
What has to be proved is no mere inclination arising from a passing fancy or thrust upon a man by an external but temporary pressure, but an intention freely formed to reside in a certain territory indefinitely. All the elements of the intention must be shown to exist if the change is to be established: if any one element is not proved, the case for a change fails. The court must be satisfied as to the proof of the whole; but I see no reason to infer from these salutary warnings the necessity for formulating in a probate case a standard of proof in language appropriate to criminal proceedings.
The formula of proof beyond reasonable doubt is not frequently used in probate cases, and I do not propose to give it currency. It is enough that the authorities emphasise that the conscience of the court (to borrow a phrase from a different context, the judgment of Parke B. in Barry v. Butlin [(1838) 2 Moo.P.C.C. 480, PC]) must be satisfied by the evidence. The weight to be attached to evidence, the inferences to be drawn, the facts justifying the exclusion of doubt and the expression of satisfaction, will vary according to the nature of the case. Two things are clear - first, that unless the judicial conscience is satisfied by evidence of change, the domicile of origin persists: and secondly, that the acquisition of a domicile of choice is a serious matter not to be lightly inferred from slight indications or casual words."
i) On the evidence the Deceased came to England in 1955 to reside here for an indefinite period to work to improve his economic situation. He did not at that stage have an intention to return to Italy "upon a clearly foreseen and reasonably anticipated contingency" (in the language used in Fuld). He had that in mind only as "a vague possibility", if he made his fortune or as a possibility to return there at the end of his life;ii) His intention to make England his home and reside here indefinitely was quickly and considerably reinforced by marrying Mrs Curati, who was a British citizen (albeit of Italian heritage) born and brought up in England, and by receiving the business of the Camden restaurant as a gift from Mrs Curati's parents. The running of the business of that restaurant was the centre of the business activities of the Deceased for many years;
iii) He and Mrs Curati established what was originally their sole marital home in England, and it remained their primary marital home even after they acquired properties in Italy, up until Mrs Curati's death in 2007;
iv) When the Deceased first acquired property in Carponeto by inheritance, he did not retain it for his own use but let it out to third parties. When, later on, he and Mrs Curati acquired further properties in Italy, those which they retained for their use were in the nature of holiday homes, and did not replace their main home in England;
v) After the Camden restaurant was sold, the main focus of the Deceased's business activities remained in England. The proceeds from the sale of the restaurant were principally invested in a property portfolio in England;
vi) The intention of the Deceased to reside indefinitely in England was reinforced still further in 1992 when Mrs Curati was diagnosed with cancer and it became clear that she wished to be cared for by the NHS in England. The Deceased was inseparable from her, and from that time on there was no prospect that he would change the established pattern of his life and decide to return to live in Italy until she was fully recovered or died. As Mr Bocelli fairly put it in his oral evidence, in the period after 2002/2003 (when he spent more time with the Deceased and from discussion with him became familiar with his thinking) the Deceased was waiting for something to be resolved in order to make a decision about where to live;
vii) The best direct evidence of the Deceased's state of mind up to about 2002 was the unchallenged evidence of Ms Perdoni that he said he regarded England as his home and considered himself to be British;
viii) From 2002, the clearest and most precise evidence about the Deceased's state of mind was from Mr Bocelli. I accept his evidence that from that time the Deceased appeared to indicate a wish, for his own part and leaving to one side the position of his wife, to return to live in Italy. However, even then the Deceased had not made up his mind to do so in any definite way: see sub-paragraph (vi) above. In any event, against the background of the other evidence and matters to which I have referred, I do not find it possible to infer from the statements made by the Deceased in this last period of his life, when he was ill and starting to make preparations for the end of his life, that he had not had the requisite intention to reside indefinitely in England at the critical time in 1994.
Italian law
"[A] This Court has already affirmed that, if a testator issues a number of successive wills and does not expressly revoke any of the earlier wills in the most recent version, only the testamentary dispositions that, further to a specific investigation, are found to be incompatible with the most recent will must be considered null and void in accordance with article 682 of the Civil Code, which lays down the principle of preservation of last wills of an earlier date (see also Cassation, no. 423 of 1983; Cass., no. 6745 of 1983; Cass., no. 12113 of 1991; Cass., no. 12285 of 2002).
Article 682 of the Civil Code lays down that when a subsequent will does not expressly revoke any preceding will, only the dispositions of the preceding will that are in contrast with the subsequent will are revoked. This is evidently inspired by a general principle of preservation of prior dispositions and coexistence of them with those of the subsequent will, in order to limit as much as possible the lapse of the previous dispositions and to achieve the result of the implicit revocation of the entire contents of a preceding will only when there is found to be the impossibility of the survival of the remaining dispositions pursuant to changes arising from a comparison with the contents of any subsequent will (Cassation, no. 12113 of 1991; Cass., no. 12649 of 2001).
The Court of Appeals adhered to these principles. After comparing the testamentary dispositions relevant to the present case, the Court reached the conclusion of the incompatibility of the testamentary disposition that instituted the wife of the testator as heir and the disposition, contained in the immediately preceding testamentary disposition, that provided for the substitution of the named heir with another person, in the event that the wife of the testator should die at the same time as the testator, which was therefore tacitly revoked.
[B] The Court of Appeals sufficiently explained the grounds leading it to ultimately reach this conclusion. Specifically, the regional Court assessed whether the two successive testamentary dispositions were objectively compatible in terms of the different function of each. The Court has preliminarily found that the chance that a provision for the substitution of the heir, normally set forth in the same will, performs its function is contingent on the fact that the instituted heir would not be able to receive the estate. Therefore, "in view of the fact that the substitution aims to prevent issues of representation, accretion and intestate succession in the event that the first institution of heir does not work, it is easy to understand the fundamental difference between the two wills in question ( ): with the subsequent will, as there were no substitutions of heir provided, and as the named heir predeceased the testator, the estate must be devolved as required under the law of intestate succession. This result, arising from the decision of the testator to not designate any other person in the event that his wife were unable or unwilling to accept the estate, is clearly irreconcilable or legally incompatible with the devolution of the estate to another heir, based on a substitution not set forth in the same will, but previous to it, in relation to a different institution of heir".
The regional Court then added the additional consideration that "the devolution of the estate to the person named as substitute is not complete but conditioned, and implies that the substitute to the succession has no rights to the estate as long as the call of the instituted heir remains effective. It follows that the substitute nature of this conditional institution of heir had exhausted its function in relation to the first will, expressed in that will: the testator's failure to set forth such a substitution in a subsequent will implies, in the event that the only instituted heir should predecease the testator, the application of the law of intestate succession".
[C] From this perspective, the Court of Appeals deemed that the already significant functional incompatibility of the subsequent testamentary dispositions was confirmed even in terms of the intentional or subjective incompatibility, which, in conformity with the established case law issued by this court, the Court of Appeals affirmed also in light of a literal interpretation of article 682 of the Civil Code. The subjective incompatibility was assumed by the Court of Appeals from the actual contents of the dispositions contained in the two subsequent wills, based on the finding that "since in both wills, the wife was named the universal heir, the only purpose that could be attributed to the subsequent will ( ) is to revoke the substitution set forth in the will dated 11 January 1986 and with it, the legacies devolved only in the case that the substitution would prove necessary". From this perspective, the regional court then noted how, in another document issued subsequent to both wills, [the deceased] and his wife had stipulated that two interest-bearing certificates be given to an individual who had been named as a legatee in the will dated January 11 1986, which also contained the disposition of the substitution; the regional Court assumed from this the clear and evident intention of the testator to consider unequivocally superseded and therefore revoked the bequeath previously devolved to that individual who had been named as legatee exclusively on charge of the substitute heir and with it, the designation of said heir as such."
English law
"Cases of the present character are properly questions of construction, and in deciding upon the effect of a subsequent will on former dispositions, this court has to exercise the functions of a court of construction. The principle applicable is well expressed in Mr. Justice Williams' book on Executors. He says, "The mere fact of making a subsequent testamentary paper, does not work a total revocation of a prior one, unless the latter expressly, or in effect, revoke the former, or the two be incapable of standing together; for though it be a maxim that as no man can die with two testaments, yet any number of instruments, whatever be their relative date, or in whatever form they may be (so as they be all clearly testamentary), may be admitted to probate, as together containing the last will of the deceased. And if a subsequent testamentary paper be partly inconsistent with one of an earlier date, then such latter instrument will revoke the former, as to those parts only, where they are inconsistent." This passage truly represents the result of the authorities. The will of a man is the aggregate of his testamentary intentions, so far as they are manifested in writing, duly executed according to the statute. And as a will, if contained in one document, may be of several sheets, so it may consist of several independent papers, each so executed. Redundancy or repetition in such independent papers, will no more necessarily vitiate any of them, than similar defects if appearing on the face of a single document. Now it was argued that in the case of more than one testamentary paper, each professing in form to be the last will of the deceased, it is necessary for the court, before concluding that they together constitute the will, to be satisfied that the testator intended them to operate together as such. In one sense this is true, for the intention of the testator in the matter is the sole guide and control. But the "intention" to be sought and discovered, relates to the disposition of the testator's property, and not to the form of his will. What dispositions did he intend?not which, or what number, of papers did he desire or expect to be admitted to probate,is the true question. And so this court has been in the habit of admitting to probate, such, and as many papers (all properly executed), as are necessary to effect the testator's full wishes, and of solving the question of revocation, by considering not what papers have been apparently superseded by the act of executing others, but what dispositions it can be collected from the language of all the papers that the testator designed to revoke or to retain." (emphasis in original)
Conclusion