Home spotlight Private client attorneys might consider filming testators to help resolve will disputes

Private client attorneys might consider filming testators to help resolve will disputes

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“Someone dies and an unholy war erupts over who gets how much of the estate. It might be adult children contesting their late parent’s wishes, doing battle with a step-parent or challenging each other to claim a bigger piece of the financial pie,” writes Talin Vartanian for CBC News.

“Problems are most likely to crop up when people die without leaving behind a valid will that is up to date,” she adds.

However, following the bad blood, ruined relationships and even deaths occasioned by will contests, solicitors have been urged to consider filming clients making their will as an aid to resolving disputes that may arise later.

This was a suggestion made by a Kings Counsel (KC) at the Law Society’s annual private client conference.

Chairing an opening plenary session on dealing with disputes, Serle Court Chambers’ Constance McDonnell KC, who specialises in trust and probate disputes, told last week’s packed conference that wills are sometimes made for very low fees – but the duty of care remains the same. ‘Videoing the event is a very cheap way of recording what happened,’ McDonnell said.

Asked about it during questions, according to a report written by Monidipa Fouzder for Law Gazette UK, McDonnell said she failed to understand why videoing does not happen more often. ‘It’s cheap, easy. From the point of view of someone in court for probate trials, the judge wants to know what happened. Video is something they would watch immediately and an ideal way of showing them what happened.’

On concerns the client might get ‘stage fright’, McDonnell suggested solicitors could draft an attendance note along the lines of ‘Switched on camera, client was a bit nervous’.

She acknowledged it can go wrong, recalling a case where a lay person filmed the testator and ‘you could see the lady’s eyeballs moving because she was reading something’.

However, she added: ‘We’re in an age now where many of your clients do not use paper or pens, they’re used to being on camera, used to having a camera pointed at them…. Letters of wishes – imagine how powerful [it would be] if a matriarch or patriarch filmed why they wanted all their money to go to charity. It’s a resource that’s so underused.’

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