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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 >> Kassim v Saeed [2019] EWHC 2763 (Ch) (06 September 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2019/2763.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 2763 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN LIVERPOOL
PROPERTY, TRUSTS & PROBATE LIST (ChD)
IN THE MATTER OF ABDULLA NAGI KASSIM DHALEI (Deceased)
35 Vernon Street Liverpool L2 2BX |
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B e f o r e :
sitting as a Judge of the High Court
____________________
Ms NUHA ABDULLA NAGI KASSIM | ||
& 13 Others | Claimants | |
-v- | ||
Mrs IMAN AHMED ABADI SAEED | Defendant |
____________________
MR DAVID GREEN (instructed by Patricia Burge Solicitors, Southport) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
JUDGE HODGE QC:
B: The deceased and his family
C: The trial and the witnesses
F: The defendant's submissions
However, this division is for structural reasons and for ease of exposition only. I make it clear that each section of this judgment has informed other sections of the judgment.
B: The deceased and his family
C: The trial and the witnesses
"A testator must know and approve of the contents of his will. This is because a will must be the result of a testator's own intelligence and volition, though its contents need not originate from the testator provided he understands and approves them. Thus a will is invalid if its contents originate from another person and the testator executes it in ignorance of its contents... In Gill v Woodall [2011] Ch 380, the Court of Appeal confirmed that the correct approach to considering knowledge and approval is asking a single question: did the testator understand (a) what was in the will when he signed it, and (b) what its effect would be. That question should be considered in the light of all the available evidence and the appropriate inferences to be drawn from that evidence. Lord Neuberger MR held that where a will had been professionally prepared by a solicitor, duly executed, and read over to a testator before signing, there was a strong presumption that the will represented the testator's instructions at the point of its execution. However, this was not conclusive. In the unusual circumstances of that case the burden on the propounder to prove knowledge and approval had not been discharged. The testatrix suffered from a severe anxiety disorder and agoraphobia. This was unlikely to be picked up by a solicitor meeting the testatrix for the first time. In all the circumstances she had not known and approved of the contents of the will... In McCabe v McCabe [2015] EWHC 1591 (Ch) the single stage test was described as whether there was satisfactory proof that the contents of the will had been brought home to the testator."
"A party who puts forward a document as being the true last will of the deceased must establish that the testator knew and approved of its contents at the time when he executed it. The testator's knowledge and approval of the contents of the will are part of the burden of proof assumed by everyone who propounds a testamentary document. In ordinary circumstances the burden of proof is discharged by proof of testamentary capacity and of due execution from which knowledge and approval by the testator of the contents of his will are assumed; but in the kinds of circumstances considered below knowledge and approval must be proved affirmatively by those propounding the will."
At paragraph 10-29 on page 202 the point is made that:
"A reading over of the will must be proper and sufficient if it is to show knowledge and approval. It might not be a proper reading of the will by the testator if he were merely to cast an eye over it, or if a draft has been sent to him for his perusal accompanied by a letter to the effect that there had been no material departure from his instructions. In Inchport v Inchport [2016] EWHC 3215 (Ch) the evidence was that the testator had been told what the will would contain, was taken through the draft before execution and then again told of its terms after execution. The court at first instance had no hesitation in concluding that the testator was aware of the nature and effect of what he was doing when he executed his will. Clearly, reading over the will at such a speed as to make it virtually impossible for the testator to follow it would not be enough. Nor, in the case of a somewhat deaf man, would it suffice to read it over in such a low voice that the testator could not properly hear it."
"If instructions are given by a deaf and dumb person by signs and not in writing, the court will require to be satisfied that the testator made his meaning clear and that his intentions are embodied in his will. Where a testator cannot speak or write or is paralysed the court must be satisfied that the deceased knew and approved of his will. Where the will of a blind or illiterate person contains no statement to the effect that the will was read over to him, the court must also be satisfied as to knowledge and approval. Although it is preferable that the will should have been read over to such testator, or at least the substance of it explained to them, this is not essential in all cases. If the court is satisfied that the testator gave instructions for his will and that these instructions were embodied in it the will may be upheld, although it was not read over... In an appropriate case proof of the requisite knowledge and approval can and will require proof that the testator understood not just the nature of the testamentary provision he was proposing to make but also its effect."
JUDGE HODGE QC:
F: The defendant's submissions
MR GREEN: Thank you, my Lord. My Lord, yes; I would ask for that declaration to be made, as sought in the counterclaim ---
JUDGE HODGE: Yes.
MR GREEN: --- so that there is no dispute about that matter.
My Lord, can I just raise one issue, potentially, in case this matter goes any further, which may be an inaccuracy of fact in your Lordship's judgment, and it simply relates to the three joint properties that you referred to.
JUDGE HODGE: Yes.
MR GREEN: I think in your judgment, you indicated that those properties had been transferred from the deceased into the joint names of the deceased and the defendant.
JUDGE HODGE: I thought that that was the case.
MR GREEN: No. In fact, the documents show they were transferred by the defendant ---
JUDGE HODGE: Oh; right.
MR GREEN: --- into the joint names of the deceased and the defendant.
JUDGE HODGE: Right.
MR GREEN: So, she transferred properties which were in her sole name into joint names at that point.
JUDGE HODGE: Right.
MRS PRESTON: That was where the question of whether that was done for tax reasons was raised by your Lordship, if your Lordship recalls, to reduce her estate. So a trans ---
JUDGE HODGE: Well, actually, I thought it was the other way round.
MRS PRESTON: Oh.
JUDGE HODGE: It was to reduce his estate; so ---
MRS PRESTON: No; it was to redu ---
JUDGE HODGE: No; it was a mistake on my part.
MRS PRESTON: Yes.
JUDGE HODGE: But it doesn't affect ---
MRS PRESTON: No.
MR GREEN: I don't think it affects ---
MRS PRESTON: No.
JUDGE HODGE: --- the ---
MR GREEN: --- your judgment, but ---
JUDGE HODGE: --- the reasoning or the ---
MR GREEN: No.
JUDGE HODGE: --- substance of it.
MR GREEN: Indeed. Just so that that is clear. My Lord, subject to that ---
JUDGE HODGE: I mean, in the light of my findings ---
MR GREEN: Yes.
JUDGE HODGE: --- they would have been purchased by the defendant with money derived ---
MRS PRESTON: Yes.
JUDGE HODGE: --- from the deceased ---
MR GREEN: Indeed.
MRS PRESTON: Yes.
MR GREEN: That may well be.
MRS PRESTON: Yes.
JUDGE HODGE: --- in the first place.
MR GREEN: Indeed, my Lord. As I say, I don't ask you to push in further than that.
JUDGE HODGE: No.
MR GREEN: It is simply that it is recorded that they were transferred from her to joint names.