Will of elderly dying person contested on grounds of testator being of unsound mind
A recent decision of the High Court considered an appeal from the Circuit Court where the will of a dying bachelor farmer had been challenged on the grounds that the farmer was not of sound mind when he made his will. The siblings of the farmer had claimed in the Circuit Court that their brother was not of sound disposition when making the will and the Circuit Court judge found this to be the case. A nephew of the deceased farmer, whom had been left the farm in the will, appealed the decision to the High Court.
The deceased farmer’s sister attended to the affairs of her dying brother when he was hospitalised suffering from cancer. She had asked a solicitor to visit her brother for the purposes of taking his will. The solicitor drew the conclusion that the farmer was too ill to make the will so he left. Another solicitor visited the farmer three days later at the request of the sister’s husband and this solicitor decided the farmer was of sound mind to make his will and did so.
There were suggestions that the nephew, who inherited the farm, had a physical row with the deceased previously and it was submitted this could have influenced the farmer in leaving the farm to him. The High Court judge dismissed this as being an influencing factor. The High Court judge over-ruled the Circuit Court judge and found that the farmer was of sound mind when making his will.
The judge in this case accepted the opinion of the solicitor in deciding the farmer was of sound mind when making the will but in the opinion of this writer, where the testator is in hospital that judgment should be made by the doctor, not a solicitor. However, if a solicitor calls to a sick persons’ home then the opinion of the solicitor would be correct.
Contesting wills can be expensive and the costs comes out of the estate thus reducing its value, and it is best to be careful in these circumstances and if the sick person is under medical care, seek medical advice in determining the mental state of the person making the will.