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(In
the Matter of the Application of
(ANDRAE MCKENZIE ROE AND
(ALISTAIR MCKENZIE KING |
APPLICANTS |
BETWEEN |
(
(AND
(
|
|
|
(BLANCA
LIDIA VEGA KING
(AND
(In the matter of the Mutual Wills of
(ISABELLA TOLMIE KING ERIC WILLIAM KING |
RESPONDENT |
Supreme
Court
Civil Action No. 444 of 2001
8th May, 2002.
Awich, J.
Mrs. Denise
Courtenay, for the Applicants
Respondent in Person.
J U D G M E N T
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Notes:
Mutual will: Mutual will cannot be revoked or varied
after the death of the first testator/testatrix may be
revoked or varied on notice to the other testator/testatrix
during lifetime; subsequent marriage of the testator/testatrix
does not revoke his/her mutual will, second spouse after
the death of the first is entitled to his/her share of
investment and or contribution to the new matrimonial
property and his/her share of the matrimonial property
does not form part of the estate of the testator, the
subject of mutual will.
- The
Facts: The Two Wills of Husband and Wife Made Simultaneously.
Mr. Eric
William King, the testator, and his wife, Isabella Tolmie
King, the testatrix, each made a will on 15.12.1978. The wills
were identical except, of course, for the description of the
makers as the testator or the testatrix, their names and signatures.
Each will appointed the surviving spouse and their children,
Andrae McKenzie Roe and Alistair McKenzie King, the executors
and trustees of the will. And each will, after directing payment
of funeral expenses and debts of the testator or testatrix,
gave "all real and personal property whatsoever and wheresoever...
upon trust to the wife (or husband)..." and in the event
that the wife or husband should predecease, "upon trust
for ... the two children," of the testator and testatrix.
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Paragraph 2 in each will stated the reason for making the
two simultaneous wills and proceeded to spell out the legacies.
I set out here paragraph 2 in Mr. King's will as an example;
it stated:
"2.
WHEREAS my wife Isabella Tolmie McKenzie King and I have agreed
with one another (sic) to execute wills of even date and in
similar terms and have further agreed that such respective
wills shall not hereafter be revoked or altered either during
our joint lives or by the survivor after the death of one
of us, now in reliance upon such agreement I HEREBY give all
my real and personal property whatsoever and wheresoever including
my property at No.5 Orchid Gardens, Belmopan Belize, and any
property over which I may have general power of appointment
or disposition by will to my trustees upon trust to sell,
call in and convert the same into money with power to postpone
the sale calling in and conversion thereof for so long as
they shall in their absolute discretion think fit, without
being liable for loss, and to hold the proceeds of such sale
calling in and conversion and my ready money (hereinafter
called my residuary estate) upon the following trust:
(a)
Upon trust to pay thereout my debts and funeral and testamentary
expenses and subject thereto upon trust for my wife TOLMIE
MCKENZIE KING absolutely.
(b)
If my wife ISABELLA TOLMIE KING nee MCKENZIE should die
in my lifetime then upon trust for my two children by my
wife TOLMIE MCKENZIE KING, ANDRAE MCKENZIE ROE, nee KING
and ALISTAIR MCKENZIE, in equal shares;
(c)
If any of my two children hereinbefore mentioned has already
died or shall die during my lifetime, but leaving a child
or children alive at or born after my death who shall attaint
the age of eighteen years or marry under that age, then
such child or children shall take absolutely and if more
than one, in equal shares the share or shares in my residuary
estate which such deceased child of mine would have taken
if he or she had lived to attain a vested interest.
IN WITNESS
whereof I the said ERIC WILLIAM KING have to each sheet
of this my will in this and the preceding sheet of paper
contained set my hand this FIFTEENTH day of DECEMBER,
1978."
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Isabella
died in 1987 leaving her will unrevoked. Thereafter Eric
lived with Blanca Lidia Vega, the Respondent, who had
been the couple's domestic helper, and eventually married
her on 6.3.1999. On 29.12.1997, some 19 years after his
will of 15.12.1978, Eric made a document he described
as; "a Codicil to the joint will of Isabella
(Sybil) Tolmie King nee McKenzie (now deceased) and Eric
William King, dated 15.12.1978." The terms of the
document departed from those in both the earlier wills
by devising certain interests in immovable property to
Blanca and by bequeathing to her some monies that he regarded
as due to her by reason of her past employment as a domestic
helper. The interests in property devised to Blanca were:
(1) 25 acres of land, block 23 in the BBC Agric. Layout
in the Mount Pleasant Area, free of encumbrances; (2)
leasehold interest in lot 2062, San Martin, Belmopan,
presently held by Blanca, to be "bought as freehold"
and (3) living in right in No. 5 Orchid Gardens, Belmopan,
until she decides to leave. The monies that Eric directed
to be paid to Blanca or in her favour were: (1) employment
severance pay at $150.00 per week due on employment commenced
in February 1987; (2) gratuity of $5000.00; and (3) payment
of the loan in the name of Blanca at the Holy Redeemer
Credit Union, out of the estate.
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Erie
also directed that $5,159.25 spent by Alistair for purchases
made on behalf of the testator be paid to Alistair. Otherwise
Eric left the rest of the will unchanged, which meant
that the rest of the estate would go to the children as
was in his original will and that of his deceased wife,
Isabella.
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Eric
died on 27.7.1997, a little short of two years of making
the "Codicil." He was survived by his second
wife, Blanca and his two children Andrae and Alistair,
the applicants herein.
- The
Application to be Decided (the Applicant's Case.)
Andrae
and Alistair have challenged the "codicil" on the
grounds that the will made by the testator, their father,
on 15.12.1978 and that made by the testatrix, their mother,
on the same day were mutual wills, and so, the testator could
not change the terms of his mutual will by the "codicil"
to the extent that any provision in the "codicil1 was
inconsistent to those in the testator's mutual will, nor could
the remarriage of the testator to the Respondent revoke his
mutual will, and further, that as the consequence of the mutual
will, the estate of the testator is now held on trust for
the benefit of the applicants in accordance with the terms
in the testator's mutual will. They have applied by originating
summons for the declarations of this Court to effect their
claim in the following terms.
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"(1) The Mutual Will of Eric William King deceased,
dated December 15th, 1978 and his Codicil dated December
29th, 1997 together constitute; his last will and intention
and are entitled to probate.
(2)
The said Will is subject to a trust for the performance
of an agreement arising from the Mutual Wills dated December
15th, 1978 and executed by the said Eric William King,
deceased, and Isabella Tolmie King, deceased, respectively.
(3)
Under the said trust Executors and Trustees of the estate
of the said Eric William King, deceased, hold all his
real and personal property, subject to the payment of
taxes, funeral, testamentary and administration expenses,
and debts upon trust for Andrae McKenzie Roe and Alistair
McKenzie King in equal shares.
(4)
The portion of the said "Codicil" inconsistent
with this trust shall be excluded from probate."
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The
Respondent's Case.
The originating
summons was directed to Blanca Lidia Vega who was called upon
to enter appearance. She attended the hearing in person. It
was, of course, beyond her to present any legal argument.
She made the simple factual points that she looked after Isabella
(the testatrix) during her long illness and consorted with
Mr. King even before Isabella died, with her approval. Further,
that when Eric was widowed she worked hard to assist in Eric's
business which was not doing well anymore, she even lent her
name for the purpose of borrowing money from the Holy Redeemer
Credit Union for Eric's business because Eric was a proud
man who did not wish to be known to borrow money. She in particular
urged the Court to consider her right in one immoveable property,
lot 2062 San Martin, Belmopan, which she said was acquired
and improved through money she raised by selling food; she
now lives on the property. She asserted that she was the "exclusive"
owner. She also said that the 25 acres of property at Mount
Pleasant was acquired in 1988, after the death of the testatrix,
and suggested that the claim of "the children" would
be for the properties acquired when their mother, Isabella,
was alive.
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Determination:
(Identifying
the Deceased Estate of King and Identifying Portion of Matrimonial
property to which Blanca is Entitled).
The difficulty
in this case is not in the points of law that arise because
of the two wills and the "codicil," rather, it is
in identifying what may be regarded as belonging to the estate
of Eric King from what may be viewed as property or part of
property which is the result of investment or which accrued
to both Eric and Blanca, because of cohabitation, first as
man and woman partners, and subsequently as husband and wife,
and out of the joint; cohabitation property and matrimonial
property, the share of Blanca alone. Eric's share will of
course be included in the deceased estate. The Court raised
that difficulty at the hearing. Mrs. Courtenay, learned counsel
for the applicants, answered that this case was about the
estate of Eric King, not about what belonged to Blanca which
definitely would be given to her. Mrs. Courtenay was technically
correct, nevertheless, the difficulty about what belongs to
Blanca will loom large at the stage of gathering the estate
and drawing up the liquidation and distribution accounts of
the estate and in the actual distribution of the estate. Related
to that difficulty will be the difficulty in getting the non-legalistic
mind of Blanca to comprehend that intricate' difference, a
matter of points of law.
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What
belongs to Blanca, and something must, as the result of
her contribution and cohabitation with Eric as his partner
and later as his wife, is a claim to part of what I shall
describe as the "cohabitation property" and
matrimonial property, as opposed to property of the deceased
which has become the deceased estate of Eric William King
and is the subject of his will.
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About
property acquired during marriage or cohabitation of unmarried
partners, I wish to point out that the law has developed
to a point where even property acquired by unmarried couple
is now regarded as property held in trust for sale in
the event of termination of the cohabitation without marriage
- see Ever's Trust Papp v Ever's [1980] 3 All ER 399.
The point was mentioned in this Court in, Dana Vega
V Margarita Vega, Supreme Court of Belize Action No.520
of 2000, at paragraph 18.
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I
hope that Blanca's share will be ascertained and given
to her. Her entitlement includes her share of cohabitation
property or matrimonial property, and payments due on
her employment. In addition she may claim, like any creditor
upon proof of claim, payment from the estate for the loan
that she testified' was obtained in her name, but for
the used of Eric. Those items of Blanca's entitlement
do not depend for their validity on the "codicil,"
although some contents of the "codicil" may
provide some evidence to prove some of the claims such
as payments due on employment and loan taken in her name
at the request of Eric for his use. The "codicil"
may even provide evidence of what may be identified as
matrimonial property acquired during Blanca's cohabitation
and marriage to which she is entitled to part.
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It
was after the hearing had concluded that I thought this
was a case that might have warranted legal assistance
and maybe an amicus curiae would have been of help to
the Court and Blanca, because of the difficulty in the
case.
- Determination:
(The
Two Wills)
As far
as the two wills of Eric and Isabella are concerned, it is
my view that the evidence that Eric and Isabella entered a
binding agreement, a contract, to make separate, but binding
mutual wills have been clearly set out at paragraph 2 of each
will in identical words as follows:
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"WHEREAS
my wife, Isabella Tolmie King, nee McKenzie, (or my husband,
Eric William King) and I have agreed with one another
(sic) to execute wills of even date and in similar terms
and having agreed that such respective wills shall not
hereafter be revoked or altered during our joint lives
or by the survivor after the death of one of us, now in
reliance upon such agreement I hereby give all real and
personal property whatsoever and wheresoever
to my trustee upon trust
"
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It
follows that the two wills, of Eric and of Isabella respectively,
made on 15.12.1978 were binding and were mutual wills;
the law of constructive trust must apply to the mutual
wills to enable otherwise non parties, Andrae and Alistair,
to enforce the terms of the contract in the mutual wills.
I must emphasize, however, that their rights are derived
from the trust created, a matter of trust and not of contract.
I must also point out that the agreement to revoke or
alter the wills enjoins the testatrix and the testator
not to revoke or alter their wills only upon the death
of one of them, it does not enjoin them during the lives
of both of them, provided the person who wishes to alter
or revoke his or her will has given notice to the other.
The Common Law liberty to make, alter and revoke a will
cannot be taken away by agreement.
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I
accept that the law regarding the trust created by mutual
will is as stated in a case in England, Re Goodchild
(deceased) Goodchild and Another v Goodchild [1996] 1
All ER 669, the case cited by Mrs. D. Courtenay.
The statement of the law therein is that: "Under
the doctrine of mutual wills, if it was established that
there was a clear agreement in the wills or elsewhere,
that (the wills) were to be mutually binding
,
the law would give effect to that intention by way of
a floating trust which became irrevocable following the
death of the first testator and crystallized on the death
of the second. The floating trust created was not destroyed
by the remarriage of the second testator after the death
of the first."
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The
facts in Goodchild were similar to the facts in
this case. The facts were as follows: On 12.12.1988 the
mother and father of the first plaintiff each simultaneously
made a will identical to the other in which each devised
and bequeathed property to the survivor of them and thereafter
to their son, the first plaintiff; and his wife, the second
plaintiff. The mother died first and the father proved
her will and took benefit thereunder. The father subsequently
remarried and made a new will leaving everything to the
second wife, the defendant. It seemed some of the reasons
for that were that the testator had been displeased with
the way the plaintiff had conducted business which he
had got inter vivos from his parents, the plaintiff
and his wife ignored and did not invite the testator to
their house often enough after he had been widowed and
the behavi9ur of the plaintiff's, son, the testator's
grandson, at the testator's wedding to the defendant.
The plaintiff and his wife brought proceedings against
the defendant claiming that she held the testator's estate
in trust for the benefit of the plaintiffs, to give effect
to the provisions set out in the parents' mutual wills,
and for an order under Section 2 (a) of the Inheritance
(Provision for Family and Dependant) Act, 1975, of England,
for reasonable financial provision to be made for the
first plaintiff out of the testator's estate. The Court,
Chancery Division in England, held that on the evidence
(which was extensive), the plaintiffs had not established
the existence of a specific agreement that the two wills
were mutually binding. The declaration that the wills
were mutual wills refused. The Court, however, in what
it described as the exceptional circumstances of the case,
made an order providing for the son, the first plaintiff;
under the Inheritance Provision for Family and Dependant)
Act, on the basis that, "given the son's needs at
the time of the father's death, it was not reasonable
for the father to treat himself as free to disinherit
the son;" It is difficult for one far away in Belize
to appreciate the finding of facts in Goodchild that there
was no agreement that the wills were to be mutually binding,
especially when in several similar cases the Opposite
findings of facts that firm binding agreements existed
in the wills have been made.
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The
law about mutual will, which may be a joint will or separate
wills, has been accepted in several subsequent judgments
in England, to have been propounded long ago in the judgment
of Lord Camden on 18th July, 1769 in Dufour v Pererra
1 Dick 419; Hargr. Jurid. But much development
through other landmark cases have taken place, and I dare
say, with much modification which may even be viewed as
departure from the ratio decidendi in Dufour
v Pererra. For example, it has been clarified
over and over again that for the doctrine of mutual will
trust to operate, it was not necessary that the survivor
should have proved the will of the first to die and to
have taken benefit under it. - see Re Dale (deceased)
Proctor v Dale [1993] 4 All ER 129, another case
cited by Mrs. Courtenay. In the case, husband and wife
made identical wills, leaving nothing to each other, and
everything to the son and daughter in equal shares. The
husband died first and of course, the wife did not benefit
from his will. Subsequently she changed her will by leaving
a great deal more to the son. The daughter succeeded in
the preliminary issue that assuming there were mutual
wills, it was not necessary that it be shown that the
mother had benefitted out of the mutual will of the father
in order for the mother to be bound not to revoke or alter
her own will. That seemed to have over-ruled, Stone
v Hoskins (1905) P.D. 194, another English case.
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Three
other notable cases; R. Cleaver (deceased) Cleaver
v Insley and others [1984] 2 All ER 1018; In re
Oldham, Hadwen v Myles [1924] 1 Ch. 75; and Gray
and Others v Perpetual Trustees Co. Ltd. and Another [1928]
AC 391 PC, made the point that the mere making
of simultaneous wills or wills in similar terms without
agreement that parties are bound, do not make the wills
mutual and binding wills, although that may be circumstantial
evidence of the agreement.
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In
Oldham, husband and wife made wills simultaneously.
Besides two minor gifts made by the husband, the two wills
were identical, and left everything to the survivor of
them absolutely and thereafter the residuary interest
to their children and failing such children to certain
relatives of the husband and of the wife and mutual friends.
They never had children. The husband died first. The wife,
then aged 64, re-married Mr. Oldham, a man 35 years younger,
and on the same day changed her will, left life interest
to Oldham and then almost, if not entirely, everything
to her own relatives. The Court did not find, "in
the circumstances, binding agreement and therefore did
not find mutual wills proved. But in Re Cleaver,
husband and wife left property to the survivor of them
also absolutely and thereafter to the three children of
the husband, the daughter to have only life interest in
one-third, a way not to confer benefit on her husband,
and because the testator detested the way the daughter
had obtained the estate of her aunt. After the life interest
of the daughter the two sons would take the residuary
interest in equal shares. After the death of the husband
the wife took benefit from his will. She acknowledged
in a discussion, her obligation in her identical will.
She, however, changed her will several times, first effecting
inconsequential changes, but in the last will she left
everything to the step daughter and her husband. She had
moved and lived with the step daughter until her death.
The Court held that the testatrix's will and that of her
husband were mutual wills, there had been clear evidence
to prove, on balance of probabilities, that there had
been agreement between the testator and the testatrix
that they would execute mutual wills to dispose of their
property in identical terms in pursuance of the agreement.
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Most
of the landmark cases concern spouses having made mutual
wills and after the death of one of them, the other revoked
or varied his or her will. The rules about mutual wills,
however, are not limited to spouses.
- Determination
(Declarations Granted)
I have
already accepted that there has been proof that the will of
Eric William King and that of Isabella Tolmie King were wills
made on a firm contract to devise and bequeath property in
the terms agreed and included in the wills and on a firm agreement
not to revoke the will. Applying the rules of mutual wills
to the facts of this case, it is clear that the declarations
sought at paragraphs (1) to (4) of the application merely
asked for declarations that are no more than the result of
the application of the rules of mutual will to the facts.
The points made by Blanca are not material to the determination
as to whether or not to grant the declarations. The points
are relevant to identifying assets that may or may not be
included in the estate of Mr. King and to proof of claims
against the estate. I grant all the declarations (1), (2),
(3) and (4) in the originating summons dated the 3rd day of
September, 2001, filed at Court on 4.9.2001.
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Costs
In the
circumstances of this case, and given the fact that Blanca
Lidia Vega did not seek to contest the declarations sought,
and limited her case to urging that her own efforts that contributed
to some of the assets that may be gathered when the estate
is assembled be taken into account, and that a loan to Eric
was taken in her name, I do not order any costs against her.
The order for costs is that parties bear own costs.
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General Observation
I would
like to observe, and it should be noted that when the stage
is reached when the deceased estate of Eric William King is
being gathered and claims against it are to be proved and
liquidation and distribution accounts are to be drawn, care
should be taken not to include in the estate of King, portions
of matrimonial property that are the entitlement of Blanca,
which she earned as the result of her cohabitation as partner
and subsequently as wife, of Mr. King, and as the result of
her own industry. Blanca is entitled to an opportunity to
prove her claims in the usual way.
- Pronounced
this Wednesday the 8th day of May, 2002.
At the
Supreme Court,
Belize City.
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