Head 6: Testaments Flashcards
What is a testament?
A testament is the Scottish name for a will. This says what is to happen to the granter’s estate on death.
What is a trust and disposition testament?
A ‘trust disposition and settlement’ is a testament that contains a clause conveying the estate to the executors as trustees for the beneficiaries. There is no difference between these two in modern law.
What are the conditions required to be met for testaments to be effective?
- Must be 12 years old to write a valid will (Age of Legal Capacity (S) Act 1991 s 2(2))
- In order to carry out a valid juridical act (including making a will) you must have legal capacity
Adults with Incapacity (S) Act 2000 t
Under this act there is a detailed code about how the representatives of someone who is an incapax can deal with the property of the incapacitated person. There are also cases concerning the powers this Act grants
G Applicant 2009
In this case an elderly man (82) had become incapacitated and there was an application for the appointment of a guardian. One of the powers that had been asked for was the power to execute a will on behalf of the incapax. The incapax had written a will himself in 2004 when he did have capacity. But the will was defective mainly because it appeared to disinherit the main beneficiary. The guardian asked for power to execute a new will based on the true intentions of the testator when he wrote the 2004 will. The court held that this was allowed. This is one of the few occasions that a sheriff court has exercised testamentary power on behalf of an incapax. The soundness of the decision is uncertain.
T Applicant 2005
an 81 year old lady suffered from Alzheimers. The son (her guardian) asked the court to allow his solicitor to execute a codicil (an amendment to a will) to ensure that the will represented the spirit of the testament (because in this case the will was predicated on the idea that the son would receive the house which was the biggest asset but the house was having to be sold to pay for healthcare etc, thus the will was going to be undermined by this sale). The court allowed the codicil on the basis that it allowed the true intention of the lady when she wrote the will to be realised.
H, Applicant 2011
the court refused a similar application to T above. Again there was an application to grant a codicil amending the will (which had left the house to the applicant and the residue to charity.) The incapax’s house was needing to be sold and therefore the applicant was not going to get anything. So the applicant asked the court to grant a codicil allowing 70% of the estate to go to the applicant and 30% to the charities. But during the hearing it emerged that the file note (the note that all solicitors keep when preparing wills etc) disclosed that the incapacitated person had clearly said that they only wanted the house to go to the applicant – there was no indication of a general intention to benefit. It just so happened that the house was the biggest asset – but there was no evidence to suggest the incapax wanted the applicant to receive the biggest portion of the estate. In this situation the court would not rewrite the will.
Summary Application Under the Adults with Incapacity (S) Act 2000
⁃ The representative had gone to the court when there was no testament at all and asked if it was possible to execute a testament on behalf of an incapax. The Sheriff Principle held that this required an examination of the Adults With Incapacity (S) Act 2000.
⁃ Under s 1(4)(a) - this gives the Sheriff Principle power to intervene in certain circumstances. It was held that this could cover executing a will on behalf of someone who was incapax (i.e. creating a will when there was no preexisting will).
⁃ However the Sheriff Principle refused to go far as he was invited to by the solicitor, holding that although the court would be willing to grant the power to execute the will, there must have been evidence of testamentary intention before the incapax lost their capacity. Thus the court will not permit the applicant to draw up a will on the basis of what they think the deceased might have wanted.
What does execution of a will mean?
Simply means creation
How is the execution of a will regulated?
RW(S)A 1995
How is a will deemed valid?
- The first requirement for a valid testament is valid writing (s 1(2)(c))
- Under s 2(1) a testament must be formally subscribed to be valid
- Under s 7(1) the definition of ‘subscribed’ is given as meaning ‘signed at the end of the last page’. Under s 7(2) ‘signed’ can either be
⁃ 1) Full name
⁃ 2) Surname plus forename/initials
⁃ 3) Other name, description, initial or mark and usual method of signing; or intended it as signature.
[No subscription, no will].
How is a will deemed probative?
⁃ This is the presumption that a testament was validly signed.
⁃ So for the purposes of probativity, the testament must bear to be subscribed by the granter under s 3(1)(a).
⁃ The testament must also be signed[ The witness need not subscribe the testament - so the witness doesn’t need to sign at the end of the document.] by a witness to be probative (s 3(1)(b)).
⁃ Under s 3(2), if the testament is more than one sheet[ One sheet is e.g one piece of paper. One sheet can have two pages. While the requirement is simply that one side is required to be signed, in practice, the granter will be suggested to sign each page (side).] it must be signed by the granter on each sheet.
⁃ NB the final sheet requires “subscription” (i.e. signing at the bottom of the page) but all the other sheets only require “signing”. By signing, the location of the signature on the other sheets is not important, however it cannot be by the longstop ((c), I think, method of signing).
- If a testament is importable, there is a special affidavit procedure for establishing that it was validly executed (RWSA s 4).
Draper v Thomason 1954
Widow had sent a letter to her sister which said: “By the way while speaking of dying! Should anything happen to me, (which it will one day) I haven’t made a Will, but everything I have is for Billy. Knowing that he will do the right thing.” This letter was signed “Connie”. The court held that this was a valid signature and thus this was a valid ‘will’.
Rhodes v Peterson 1972
Mother sent the following to her daughter: “Dearest Dorothy, I am so glad you are coming up for a break next month and it will be lovely to see you again. I have been thinking a lot about you recently and I am concerned about your future. Security especially as you have no him you can call your own…Now I feel better having at least got this down on paper. Do not lose this letter…Lots of love, Mum.” This was held to be a valid subscription and thus a valid will.
McLay v Farrell 1950
Despite the lenient attitude in Draper and Rhodes, the courts can be more strict in some circumstances:
⁃ The testament was “I leave to Lizzie McLay Farrell £50, C Herken £50, Robert Farrell £20, signed Jane McLay. All to Anne McLay”
⁃ The problem here is that the signature did not take place at the end of the document, since after the signature it states “All to Anne McLay”. The court held that the subscription was the end of the testament so everything which follows this is not considered to be part of the testament. So the final legacy (“All to Anne Mclay” was not valid since it came after the subscription).
⁃ The reason for the decision in McLay is that otherwise it would be too easy for third parties to add things in.
What is adoption of a document?
In certain circumstances you can ‘adopt a document.’ [ I.e. Although you didn’t execute a document you can execute a document which adopts another document)]’
Davidson v Convy 2003
The deceased had handwritten on a single piece of paper, a number of testamentary instructions. Crucially she had not subscribed or signed this piece of paper. She then placed the paper in an unsealed envelope and wrote on the envelope “My Will, Agnes Bessie Smith.” The court held that this was a valid adoption of the contents of the envelope. So although she hadn’t subscribed the paper itself, since she’d put it inside an envelope and subscribed this, it was held that this was a valid adoption of the document inside.
What is a codicil?
A codicil is a later document that alters an existing testamentary document (e.g. amending a will). Codicils still must be in writing and be subscribed since they are a form of testamentary writing.
The problem with codicils is that they can be very difficult to keep track of.
⁃ Burn’s Trs v McKenna 1940 - 49 codicils which purported to amend the testament.
So it is better to execute a new will instead of using codicils.
What is notarial testament?
Sometimes a testator is mentally capable but physically unable to execute. In these circumstances they can ask a notary public to execute on their behalf under s 9(1) RW(S)A.
What is a mistaken signature?
In Scotland it is said that there is no such thing as a mistaken signature - this rule comes from the following case:
⁃ Williamson v Williamson 1997
⁃ The testator’s name was R Williamson. The witness’s name was D Wilson. The witness signed as DCR Williamson. The case went to court and the parties tried to argue that D Wilson had mistaken his signature.
⁃ The court disagreed and held that there is no such thing as a mistaken signature.
⁃ Look up this in a book - not sure of the result
Lauder v Briggs 1999
The custody of the testament (i.e. who has the testament) is important.
⁃ Testator made a will in 1978 which was to be kept with the solicitors. The testator then moved house in 1989 and took possession of the will in her house. In 1995 she died. The will could not be found anywhere.
⁃ A potential beneficiary under the will sought to ‘prove the tenor’[ Where you’re trying to prove that the contents of a will should be given effect to] of the will by using a copy of the will which the solicitors still had.
⁃ However, the court held that the presumption that if a deceased person was known to be in possession of a testament and then at their death the testament couldn’t be found then the presumption was that they destroyed it themselves. (Therefore the custody of a testament is very important).