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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Mundil-Williams v Williams & Ors [2021] EWHC 586 (Ch) (16 March 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2021/586.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 586 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN WALES
PROPERTY, TRUSTS AND PROBATE LIST (ChD)
In the Estate of John Williams deceased (Probate)
2 Park Street, Cardiff, CF10 1ET |
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B e f o r e :
sitting as a Judge of the High Court
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TIMOTHY MUNDIL-WILLIAMS |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) RICHARD JOHN WILLIAMS (2) THOMAS OWEN WILLIAMS (3) WILLIAM IFOR WILLIAMS (4) SUSAN WILLIAMS |
Defendants |
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Gareth Thomas (instructed by Everett Tomlin Lloyd and Pratt) for the First and Fourth Defendants
Hearing dates: 9 and 10 March 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
JUDGE KEYSER QC:
Introduction
The Law
"What is involved is simply the satisfaction of the test of knowledge and approval, but the court insists that, given that suspicion, it must be the more clearly shown that the deceased knew and approved the contents of the will so that the suspicion is dispelled. Suspicion may be aroused in varying degrees, depending on the circumstances, and what is needed to dispel the suspicion will vary accordingly. In the ordinary probate case knowledge and approval are established by the propounder of the will proving the testamentary capacity of the deceased and the due execution of the will, from which the court will infer that knowledge and approval. But in a case where the circumstances are such as to arouse the suspicion of the court the propounder must prove affirmatively that knowledge and approval so as to satisfy the court that the will represents the wishes of the deceased. All the relevant circumstances will be scrutinised by the court which will be 'vigilant and jealous' in examining the evidence in support of the will (Barry v Butlin (1838) 11 Moo PC 480 at p. 483 per Parke B.)."
In the same case, Chadwick LJ summed the matter up at [65]: "The question is whether the court is satisfied that the contents do truly represent the testator's testamentary intentions." (Cf. his detailed analysis of this question at [66]-[72].)
"12. As for want of knowledge and approval of the contents of the 2007 Will, the scope of the inquiry indicated by a long line of authorities gives rise to other questions distinct from lack of mental capacity to make the will: Wintle v Nye [1959] 1 WLR 284; Fuller v Strum [2001] 1 WLR 1097; Gill v. Woodall [2011] WTLR 251. The relevant questions to ask in this case are-
i) Do the circumstances of the 2007 Will arouse the suspicions of the Court as to whether its contents represent the wishes and intentions of the Deceased as known to and approved by her? The judge said 'Yes.'
ii) Has scrutiny of those circumstances by the court dispelled those suspicions? The judge said 'No.'
13. In answering those questions in a particular case the court has to consider and evaluate the totality of the relevant evidence, from which it may make inferences on the balance of probabilities. Although talk of presumptions and their rebuttal is not regarded as specially helpful nowadays, the courts realistically recognise that, for example, if a properly executed will has been professionally prepared on instructions and then explained by an independent and experienced solicitor to the maker of the will, it will be markedly more difficult to challenge its validity on the grounds of either lack of mental capacity or want of knowledge and approval than in a case where those prudent procedures have not been followed.
14. I should add a statement of the obvious in order to dispel any notion that some mysterious wisdom is at work in this area of the law: the freedom of testation allowed by English Law means that people can make a valid will, even if they are old or infirm or in receipt of help from those whom they wish to benefit, and even if the terms of the will are hurtful, ungrateful or unfair to those whose legitimate expectations of testamentary benefit are disappointed. The basic legal requirements for validity are that people are mentally capable of understanding what they are doing when they make their will and that what is in the will truly reflects what they freely wish to be done with their estate on their death."
"14. Knowing and approving of the contents of one's will is traditional language for saying that the will 'represented [one's] testamentary intentions' – see per Chadwick LJ in Fuller v Strum [2002] 1 WLR 1097, para 59. The proposition that Mrs Gill knew and approved of the contents of the Will appears, at first sight, very hard indeed to resist. As a matter of common sense and authority, the fact that a will has been properly executed, after being prepared by a solicitor and read over to the testatrix, raises a very strong presumption that it represents the testatrix's intentions at the relevant time, namely the moment she executes the will.
15. In Fulton v Andrew (1875) LR 7 HL 448, 469, Lord Hatherley said that
'When you are once satisfied that a testator of a competent mind has had his will read over to him, and has thereupon executed it, … those circumstances afford very grave and strong presumption that the will has been duly and properly executed by the testator'.
This view was effectively repeated and followed by Hill J in Gregson v Taylor [1917] P 256, 261, whose approach was referred to with approval by Latey J in In re Morris deceased [1971] P 62, 77F-78B Hill J said that 'when it is proved that a will has been read over to or by a capable testator, and he then executes it', the 'grave and strong presumption' of knowledge and approval 'can be rebutted only by the clearest evidence.' This approach was adopted in this court in Fuller [2002] 1 WLR 1097, para 33 and in Perrins v Holland [2010] EWCA Civ 840, para 28.
16. There is also a policy argument, rightly mentioned by Mrs Talbot Rice, which reinforces the proposition that a court should be very cautious about accepting a contention that a will executed in such circumstances is open to challenge. Wills frequently give rise to feelings of disappointment or worse on the part of relatives and other would-be beneficiaries. Human nature being what it is, such people will often be able to find evidence, or to persuade themselves that evidence exists, which shows that the will did not, could not, or was unlikely to, represent the intention of the testatrix, or that the testatrix was in some way mentally affected so as to cast doubt on the will. If judges were too ready to accept such contentions, it would risk undermining what may be regarded as a fundamental principle of English law, namely that people should in general be free to leave their property as they choose, and it would run the danger of encouraging people to contest wills, which could result in many estates being diminished by substantial legal costs.
17. Further, such disputes will almost always arise when the desires, personality and state of mind of the central character, namely the testatrix herself, cannot be examined other than in a second-hand way, and where much of the useful potential second hand evidence will often be partisan, and will be unavailable or far less reliable due to the passage of time. As Scarman J put it graphically in In the Estate of Fuld, deceased (No 3) [1968] P 675, 714E; 'when all is dark, it is dangerous for a court to claim that it can see the light.' That observation applies with almost equal force when all is murky and uncertain."
The Facts
Events before 2014
"4. I Give all my share and interest in the farming partnership at present carried on with my son Richard John Williams subject to payment of any inheritance tax chargeable thereon to my son Richard John Williams absolutely. For the avoidance of doubt the land farmhouse and buildings known as Little Cwmdowlais Farm, Llanbadoc, are not to be treated as an asset of the said partnership.
5. I Give all the rest of my estate whatsoever and wheresoever to my Trustees Upon Trust either to retain or sell it an[d],
(a) to pay thereout my debts, any other inheritance tax chargeable thereon and funeral and testamentary expenses,
(b) to divide the residue between those of my sons William Ivor (sic) Williams, Richard John Williams, Thomas Owen Williams and Timothy Wood Williams who survive me in equal shares …
6. I Direct that my son Richard John Williams shall have an option for a period of ten years immediately following my death to purchase my land farmhouse and buildings known as Little Cwmdowlais Farm, Llanbadoc, Usk, Gwent, which is subject to an agricultural tenancy in favour of the said partnership carried on by myself and my son at its subject to tenancy value at the time the option is exercised. …"
- Timothy's evidence was to the effect that it was known that the testator wanted Richard to remain at the Farm and take over the farming business, but that Richard would be given time to exercise an option to buy out his brothers' shares in the Farm. Timothy attributed this understanding to what his father had told him shortly after the execution of the 1980 Will, but that is at best doubtful: first, Timothy was only 17 years old when the 1980 Will was executed; second, at that time Thomas was also a partner in the farming business; third, the option was first included in the 1990 Will, of which Timothy denied any knowledge.
- Richard's written evidence was to the effect that the testator had told him that the Farm would be his and that the testator would also leave him his savings so that he could "pay it to the boys" (first witness statement, paragraph 6). This appeared to mean that Richard would be enabled to buy out his brothers' interests in the Farm, a meaning made clear by a later passage of the same statement, where Richard recounted a conversation in which he expressed the belief that he would be left the savings "to pay the boys (my brothers) out". However, in his oral evidence, which was at times confused and confusing, Richard said, first, that his father meant that he had saved some money to "give to the boys" (that is, the other brothers), and then he said that his father had told him to "save some money to pay the boys out"; he then denied that the testator had mentioned "pay[ing] the boys out". The most likely conclusion is that Richard expected to have to "pay out" his brothers for their share in the Farm, whatever that share might be.
- In the course of cross-examination, Thomas mentioned his understanding before the 2014 Will was made that he would receive a 25% share in the Farm. That piece of evidence was not challenged, although in fairness it was given in the context of a line of questioning concerning Thomas's understanding of the 2014 Will.
Events surrounding the 2014 Will
"He does not want to keep the furniture legacies in his existing Will. He said that Richard and his wife have been living with him for years and he wants them to keep them.
If there is anything left over from his ISAs he wants them to be divided equally between his sons.
He wants to leave a small gift to Sue, his daughter-in-law (Richard's wife)—he will need to confirm how much or what that is to be.
The residue is to be divided as follows:
50% to Richard—he should get the tenancy and half of the Estate
50% to be divided between all four sons.
The option for the ten-year period at clause 4 of his existing Will should be reduced to five—Richard should be able to get a mortgage easily enough."
Ms Gillard recorded in the file note that, because she usually dealt with simple wills, she would pass the matter to one of her colleagues.
"Richard tenancy + ½ estate
½ ÷ four sons
Speak to accountant (Oakleys)
10 years reduced to five (RW) may be able to get mortgage now
[space]
Thomas still partner + but working".
"I have four sons.
The eldest Richard and his wife Sue live with me looking after me and running the arm at above address.
William Ifor & family lives at [address].
Thomas Owen & family lives at [address].
Timothy Wood & family live at [address].
Myself, Richard & Thomas formed a partnership & tenancy agreement in 1979 for tax reason.
Thomas was still paid wages, but left in less than a year.
Ifor, Thomas & Timothy all helped on the farm for a while but were paid a wage.
I am obliged to pay my ex wife £30 per wk until the end of her days.
Richard only received what he required & the balance went into the farm business. He now runs the farm himself.
Considering he has worked on the farm for most of forty-four years, I wonder if the shares quoted in previous will is fair & correct.
I would like to leave a small amount to Sue for looking after me so well over many years.
Please check with our accountant – address enclosed."
"The client said that he wanted to give his share in the partnership to his son Richard. The client explained that he owned the farm and the house in his sole name and that he let the farm and the house out to the partnership to carry on the business. He also wanted to give his house and land (the farm) known as Little Cwmdowlais Farm to his son Richard. The client then went on to say that he wanted to give the following:
- His ISAs held with NFU Insurance to be split equally among his four sons.
- £10,000 to his daughter-in-law Sue as a token of appreciation for looking after hi[m] after his divorce from his wife
- 50% of his residuary estate to his son Richard
- 50% of his residuary estate to be sh[a]red equally among his four sons including Richard (meaning that Richard would gain 62.5% of the residuary estate and the other children would stand to receive 12.5% each)."
"As you have chosen to leave a larger share of your residuary estate to your son Richard (including the house and farm), I have prepared a Letter of Wishes for you to have stored alongside your Will which details the reasons for this and your decision to leave your daughter in law, Sue a cash gift of £10,000. This is because, just in case your other children decide to bring a claim against your estate (not that we are suggesting that this would ever happen, but just as a precautionary measure) your Letter of Wishes will inform your Executors and Trustees as to why you have chosen to distribute your estate in the manner set out in your Will. This means that they can then make the court aware of your reasons if such a claim ever arose.
In your Will, you have also chosen to give your sons the sum standing to your credit in your NFU Insurance accounts at the date of your death equally.
The remainder of your estate has then been split so that 62.5% of it will go to Richard and the rest of your sons will receive 12.5% each. However, if any of them pass away before you, the share of your residuary estate (excluding the NFU monies which would fall back into an[d] form part of your estate) that they would have received will pass to any children that they may have living at the date of your death in equal shares once they have reached the age of twenty one.
Please take the time to read through your draft Will carefully to ensure that it clearly expresses your wishes and instructions. Thereafter, I would be grateful if you would telephone me so that we can discuss any required amendments or additions and arrange an appointment for you to call at the office to sign the engrossment copy."
"[Miss Campbell] asked the client whether the draft will that he received was ok and the client said that it was.
The client stated that he understood that, as it stood, if this will took effect that he was leaving his land and farm as well as his 1/3 share in the partnership to his son, Richard. However, the client said that he would like to revise the partnership agreement and make sure that Richard received the partnership in full.
[Miss Campbell] said that she would speak with her colleague tomorrow and try to get this matter referred across to the relevant department to try and resolve this issue for him.
In the meantime, the client was happy for [Miss Campbell] to amend his draft will with the correct address which is Llangybi near Usk, not Llanbadoc and to amend his Letter of Wishes to state that his son Ivor (sic) who is a Baptist minister was able to participate in his funeral / plan or arrange his funeral if he wished as he knew that he did not see eye to eye with his one brother. [Miss Campbell] said that she would incorporate this into his LoW for him.
[Miss Campbell] advised the client … that she would get back to him regarding an appointment for him to come in and sign his final will."
(In the event, the address was corrected in the 2014 Will, but, apparently by oversight on the part of Miss Campbell, the Letter of Wishes was not redrafted to include mention of Ifor.)
"[Miss Campbell] noting that the client understood everything that was in his will and asked for his son to be present in the room with him even though [Miss Campbell] explained that everything in his will was confidential. The client said that this did not matter and that he wanted his son present. [Miss Campbell] noting that she did not feel as though there was any undue influence etc, as the client's son remained silent throughout the whole meeting apart from asking what one clause was. After a brief explanation, he did not say anything else. [Miss Campbell] noting that she is confident that the client's instructions are his own and that he knew exactly what it was that he wanted to do.
[Miss Campbell] noting that the client signed and dated his will in front of her and her colleague Tracy Gillard who then witnessed his will.
… The client also expressed an interest in giving half of his farm and house to his son Richard during his lifetime. AEC [Miss Campbell] noting that she said she could refer him on to the relevant department or get her colleague to discuss the same with him. AEC noting that the client saw David Lewis straight after her in relation to a partnership agreement he has in place regarding his farm. AEC ntoging that during that appointment the client mention[ed] transferring half of his property to his son during his lifetime for tax planning purposes. DL advised that PL may be able to advise initially, so AEC said that she would see what he had to say on the matter when he was back in the office."
"4. (a) IN THE exercise of the power in my partnership agreement dated 14 December 1979 I GIVE my son RICHARD JOHN WILLIAMS of [address] my share and interest in that partnership or the price payable for it …
(b) This gift includes my share of all the assets of the business …
5. I GIVE all of my legal and beneficial interest in my land and property known as Little Cwmdowlais Farm, Llangybi, Near Usk, NP15 1TH ('my house') along with the furniture, carpets, curtains and other items of household use and ornament ('the effects') to my son RICHARD JOHN WILLIAMS of [address] absolutely and I DIRECT that any mortgage shall be discharged out of my residuary estate and I DECLARE that this gift is not conditional on Richard acting as executor and trustee of this my will
6. I GIVE the amount standing to my credit in my ISA accounts held with NFU Insurance at the date of my death equally among [Richard, Ifor, Thomas and Timothy] in equal shares …
7. I GIVE the sum of £10,000 (ten thousand pounds) to my daughter-in-law SUE WILLIAMS of [address] absolutely.
8. MY TRUSTEES shall hold the rest of my estate on trust for sale with power to retain or postpone such sale and
(a) (i) to pay my debts, funeral and executorship expenses
(ii) to pay any inheritance tax in respect of property passing under this Will
(b) to divide and pay the residue of my estate ('my residuary estate') among the following in the shares specified:
(i) As to 62.5% thereof to RICHARD JOHN WILLIAMS of [address] absolutely
(ii) As to 12.5% thereof to WILLIAM IFOR WILLIAMS of [address] absolutely
(iii) As to 12.5% thereof to THOMAS OWEN WILLIAMS of [address] absolutely
(iv) As to 12.5% thereof to TIMOTHY WOOD WILLIAMS of [address] absolutely
…"
"I have chosen to leave my son Richard John Williams the farm and the house known as Little Cwmdowlas (sic) Farm in Llangybi, Near Usk because he has taken over the farming business from me and has been running it on his own for approximately 40 years. Also, Richard and his wife Sue live with me and I feel as though they should receive the house as well as the farm when I pass away.
I have also chosen to give Richard a larger share of my residuary estate than my other children for the reasons mentioned above.
I have chosen to give my daughter in law, Sue £10,000, because since my divorce, she has looked after me and has been very kind. This gift is a token of my appreciation to her for her kindness."
1) Miss Campbell had two reasons for making the telephone call to the testator on 18 June 2014. First, some weeks had elapsed before the file had been passed to her and she felt it appropriate to apologise for the delay and to ensure that his instructions still stood after a month had passed since his meeting with Ms Gillard. Second, she had not taken the initial instructions from the testator and considered that it would be professional to speak to him directly before drafting his will.
2) Before the telephone call on 18 June 2014, there had been no intimation from the testator that the instructions he had given to Ms Gillard no longer represented his intentions.
3) The telephone call on 18 June 2014 was made without appointment or prior warning. Miss Campbell asked if it was convenient to speak about the will and told the testator that she could speak to him at another time if he preferred, but he was content to speak then.
4) In her oral evidence, Miss Campbell said that she had gone through the instructions received by Ms Gillard with the testator, though she accepted that the attendance note did not record that she had gone through that exercise; it rather says that she had asked the testator to tell her how he wanted to dispose of his assets.
5) Miss Campbell acknowledged that the instructions she recorded were different from those recorded by Ms Gillard. She confirmed that the testator did not tell her in terms that he was giving different instructions from those he had given to Ms Gillard or that the instructions he had given to Ms Gillard no longer held good. She was uncertain whether she had pointed out to him that the instructions were different: initially she accepted that she had not told him that these were different instructions from those he had given previously; in a subsequent answer she said that she was not sure whether or not she had told him they were different; later again, she said that, although she had not recorded telling the testator that his instructions were different from those previously given, "to the best of [her] belief" she would have raised the point with him. Towards the end of her evidence Miss Campbell said that she would probably have discussed with the testator his change of mind within a matter of weeks, although she could not remember whether she had asked him why he had changed his mind.
6) Miss Campbell's evidence was that the testator was clear and unequivocal in his instructions to her and that, when she asked him about the instructions, he explained his reasoning in a manner that she subsequently incorporated into the Letter of Wishes. The key point that she focused on in her evidence was the testator's "overarching concern" to ensure that Richard and Susan were "okay" and his insistence that he wanted to leave the Farm and farmhouse to Richard. When answering questions, she several times referred to the Farm and farmhouse being left "entirely" or "absolutely", though she acknowledged that she could not say that the testator had used either word; he had said he "wanted it all left to them."
7) Miss Campbell acknowledged that she had made no record of what assets would fall into the residuary estate, that the effect of the will she drafted was that there was nothing or practically nothing in the residuary estate, and that she had made no record of informing the testator of that fact. She said that the fact that three of the sons would receive practically nothing under the will was something she "would have discussed" with the testator at the time. In answer to a boldly leading question in re-examination, Miss Campbell was happy to accept a somewhat dismissive attitude to clauses dealing with residuary estate as a "mopping up" exercise. In answer to me, she acknowledged that now, as a qualified solicitor, she would be careful to ascertain what would be comprised in the residuary estate; however, she noted that the estate was known to consist mainly of the Farm.
8) Miss Campbell acknowledged that the words in her letter of 19 June 2014, "As you have chosen to leave a larger share of your residuary estate to your son Richard (including the house and farm)", were misleading and that the letter did not point out that there would be nothing in the residuary estate. But she said that, if a client tells you that he wants to leave his entire property to a particular person, that is clear enough.
9) As for the meeting on 21 July 2014, when the 2014 Will was executed, Miss Campbell said that her file note was correct in recording that Richard was present when the will was executed. She acknowledged that the file note did not record that she had read the will to the testator before he signed it, but she said that she always did so and would have done so on this occasion.
"I said that I thought they [the ISAs] were going to be left to me to pay the boys (my brothers) out, but he said not to worry, he could always take the money out (out of the ISAs, I presumed he meant) and that if it wasn't there they couldn't have it. I did not know the other contents of the Will …"
Subsequent conversations
1) Timothy's evidence as to the conversation was to this effect. He called at the farmhouse on one of his visits to see his father; he used, at that time, to visit once every two or three weeks on average. On this occasion, Richard and Susan were present during the roughly hour-long conversation; Richard left the room on a couple of brief occasions but was present for the substance of the conversation. The testator quickly brought the conversation around to the question of his will; it appeared that he had intended to take the opportunity to raise the matter. The testator said that he had decided to reward Richard for the effort and time he had put into the farm business by increasing Richard's share in the farm and buildings to 62.5%; the remaining brothers would share equally the remaining 37.5% (that is, each would have 12.5%). The testator said that he expected Richard to find money to buy out his brothers' shares by selling another property that he owned, Hill Farm, which adjoined the Farm and had been left to Richard by its previous owner. The testator also said that Richard was also to have the furniture at the Farm. Timothy said that his father had not shown him the 2014 Will but had no difficulty in giving this explanation of it. Timothy said that he promised his father that he would tell Thomas and Ifor what he had been told.
2) The evidence of Timothy, Thomas and Thomas's partner, Jill Woodland, was to the following effect. After he had spoken to his father, Timothy made a telephone call to Thomas. However, Thomas was unavailable and the call was taken by Ms Woodland. Timothy told her that he had some good news to tell Thomas, but he did not give her any details. Later that day, Timothy called again; this time he spoke to Thomas and told him that Timothy, Thomas and Ifor would each receive 12.5% of the value of the Farm under the will and that Richard would sell Hill Farm to enable him to buy out their shares. Thomas was pleased at this news: the inheritance was less than the 25% share he had understood he would get under previous wills, but he also understood that Richard had worked on the Farm for a long time; he would have been surprised and disappointed to receive nothing under the will, but he was content with the prospect of 12.5%. This evidence was not materially challenged.
3) Richard gave a different account of what must have been the same meeting between Timothy and the testator. According to Richard, he and Susan were in a different room for most of the time that Timothy was talking to the testator and they heard no conversation about the 2014 Will. In his second witness statement, Richard also gave evidence of what the testator told him of his conversation with Timothy:
"At some point after this, my father told me that he had shown his Will to my brother Timothy and that Timothy had left with a big grin on his face. My father remarked that he would not be surprised if Timothy contested the Will. My father stated that as I had worked and paid for everything, I should not give in to Timothy if he did contest the Will."
4) Susan did not mention the testator's conversation with Timothy in her witness statement. In cross-examination, she said that Timothy and the testator had been in the living room, while she and Richard were in the kitchen and heard none of the conversation. A day or two later, the testator told them that he had showed the will to Timothy. However, Susan also commented that it had seemed very quiet in the living room and that she had assumed that Timothy was reading the will to himself. She acknowledged that she was unable to give an answer to the question why she had assumed that, when she had not then known that the testator was going to show the will to Timothy. Susan appeared to have very little idea of the matters to which this case relates, and I am not persuaded that she has any genuine recollection of anything that is in any way relevant to the issues.
1) In consequence of his conversation with his father, Timothy (a) was happy as to the provision that he believed had been made for him and (b) believed that the provision included 12.5% of the Farm. Conclusion (a) is confirmed by Timothy, by the evidence of his report to Thomas, and by Richard's evidence that the testator said he had left with a grin on his face. Conclusion (b) is confirmed by Timothy, by the report that he gave to Thomas, and by the fact that he could only have been happy if the 12.5% related to the Farm: 12.5% of nothing is nothing.
2) Although there is no reason to doubt that the testator perceived that Timothy was happy, it is improbable that Richard's evidence that the testator anticipated a dispute over the 2014 Will is correct. If the evidence were correct, it would mean that the testator had made a point of apprising Timothy of the terms of the 2014 Will but knew that Timothy had misunderstood it and did not correct his misunderstanding but allowed it to continue until an anticipated dispute after his death. That is scarcely credible, and Richard himself acknowledged in cross-examination that his father was an honest man who would want his sons to understand the effect of his will.
3) Whether Timothy's belief was the result of what he was told by the testator or the result of his own (mis-)reading of the 2014 Will, it is probable that it was shared by the testator. This conclusion follows from the following: (a) Timothy believed he had cause to be happy; (b) Timothy's happiness must have involved a belief that he was going to inherit 12.5% of the Farm; (c) the testator would probably have known if Timothy were unhappy, and Richard himself says that the testator saw that Timothy was happy; (d) the testator would have sought to correct any misapprehension on Timothy's part if he had been aware of it; (e) it is improbable that the testator could have believed that Timothy was happy and not under a misapprehension, unless he too believed that the 12.5% related to the Farm. As mentioned above, this third conclusion must at this stage remain tentative.
Discussion
Disposition
"5. I GIVE all of mylegal and beneficial interest in my land and property known as Little Cwmdowlais Farm, Llangybi, Near Usk, NP15 1TH ('my house') along with thefurniture, carpets, curtains and other items of household use and ornament ('the effects') to my son RICHARD JOHN WILLIAMS of [address] absolutelyand I DIRECT that any mortgage shall be discharged out of my residuary estate and I DECLARE that this gift is not conditional on Richard acting as executor and trustee of this my will".
The effect of the omission of these words would be to place the Farm (subject to the agricultural tenancy) in the residuary estate. The 2014 Will would then accord entirely with the instructions given to Ms Gillard, save only that the 5-year option would not be included.
"[T]he case is one in which the court has power to rectify, using that word in a broad sense, so far as it can. Which is the proper course? To pronounce against the instrument in its entirety? or to exclude part and admit the rest?
Certainly to reject the whole instrument would come much nearer to giving effect to the testatrix's dispositive intentions (both in the number of beneficiaries and in the amounts involved) than would the admission of the whole instrument.
But is the instrument severable, and can one get nearer still by excluding part? In my judgment, I can."
"The court also has power, if it is satisfied as to the testator's clear intention, to omit certain words from probate which are there by inadvertence or by misunderstanding, or anything of that sort.
… [I]f the obvious facts militate against such an intention as expressed in the document the court can act upon the real intention as found by the court. It can do so in this case (and there is authority for it) by omitting certain words. The court cannot, of course, remake a will for a testator, but it can omit words which have come in by inadvertence or by misunderstanding if their omission gives effect to the true intentions of the testator as found by the court."
"It is as though a proviso were to be inserted to the effect that the discretion of the trustees was not to be exercised in favour of a charitable object unless it was also benevolent. The result would be that the one thing as to which the intentions and instructions of the testatrix were clear would be defeated.
"Does the jurisdiction of the Court of Probate extend to the making of an alteration having this result? In our opinion it does not. It appears to us that so to alter a will as, under the guise of omission, to affect the sense of words deliberately chosen by the testator or his draftsman is equivalent to making a new will for the testator, and on principle we do not consider that this is permissible."
The reasoning of the Court of Appeal with regard to the facts of the particular case before it has come in for criticism, but the principle is not in doubt that the court cannot omit words from a will if the effect of doing so would be to alter the sense of the rest of the will.
"43. The appellant's case under this head rests on two propositions. The first is that, in order to be a valid will, the testator must have known and approved of its contents: see Fuller v Strum [2002] 1 WLR 1097 quoted in para 16 above. There is a rebuttable presumption that the testator knew and approved the contents of a regularly executed will with unexceptional provisions. However, that presumption may be rebutted by evidence of the circumstances in which the will was prepared or executed. It can also be rebutted where the will is so worded as to cast doubt on whether the testator can have known or approved of its contents. In the present case, the will, as literally interpreted, plainly did not represent Mr Rawlings's intentions: accordingly, he cannot have known or approved of its contents, as it stood.
44. The second proposition invoked in the present connection is that, where the testator did not know or approve of only part of a will, that part can be notionally excised by the court, with the remainder being valid and admitted to probate as described in the last sentence quoted from Fuller's case in para 16 above. Examples of such cases are cited in Theobald on Wills, 17th ed, para 3-028.
45. On this basis, Mr Ham ingeniously argued that the will can be validated by deleting (i) the opening sentence, (ii) clause 2, (iii) the first phrase of clause 3, and (iv) the reference to Mrs Rawlings at the end of the will. If this were permissible, it would simply leave the will as stating that the signatory, Mr Rawlings, revokes his previous wills and leaves his entire estate to the appellant.
46. In my view, this argument must be rejected. The most typical case where only part of a will is rejected on the ground that it was not known and approved by the testator, is where that part is self-contained—e.g. a particular clause or subclause. One such example is in In the Goods of Oswald (1874) LR 3P & D 162, 164, per Sir James Hannen. However, it is also true that, in some cases, a simple word or expression can be deleted 'if shewn to have been inserted by mistake'—per Jeune J in In the Goods of Boehm [1891] P 247, 250.
47. However, it is quite inappropriate to invoke this principle in order to justify selecting phrases and provisions for deletion from a will intended to be signed by someone else, to enable the will, effectively by happenstance, to comply with the testator's intentions. I note that Sir James Hannen and Barnes P took the same view in, respectively, In the Goods of Hunt (1875) LR 3P & D 250, 252, and In the Estate of Meyer [1908] P 353, 354. Further, as Jeune J pointed out in the Boehm case [1891] P 247, 251, there is obvious 'difficulty [in] rejecting words where their rejection alters the sense of those which remain'.
48. The appellant's proposed exercise in deletion summarised in para 45 above would involve converting what is a simple and beneficial principle of severance into what is almost a word game with haphazard outcomes. That is well illustrated by the fact that, in this case, the suggested deletions from the will only achieve the intended result because Mrs Rawlings pre-deceased her husband, because clause 2 is deleted: therefore, if Mr Rawlings had pre-deceased his wife, this argument would not work.
49. I would accordingly reject the argument that the will can be treated as a valid will by making the deletions suggested on behalf of the appellant."