Keeping
Your Will Out of Court
- INTRODUCTION
- THE NATURE OF A WILL
- ELEMENTS OF A WILL
- FORMALITIES FOR MAKING A VALID
WILL
- SOLICITOR/NOTARY NEGLIGENCE
- SUGGESTIONS TO AVOID POTENTIAL
LIABILITY
- AMBIGUOUS DESCRIPTIONS: SOME
RULES FOR RESOLVING THEM
- PRINCIPLES OF CONSTRUCTION AND
INTERPRETATION OF WILLS
- THE POWER OF THE COURTS TO RECTIFY
A WILL
- REPUGNANT CONDITIONS
- IMPOSSIBLE CONDITIONS
- CONDITIONS AGAINST PUBLIC POLICY
- CONCLUSION
1. INTRODUCTION
Probably the best way that a lawyer or Notary can keep his or
her Will out of court is to always bear in mind the end use of the
Aproduct.@ The primary goal of a client in executing a Will is to
ensure that his or her lifetime accumulated wealth will pass to
the estate in accordance with the testator=s directions. For the
Aproduct@ to achieve that result requires it to be successfully
admitted into probate by an appropriate court.
The professional draftsperson must have a solid grasp of not only
the requirements of the Wills Act, but also, an understanding of
the myriad of legal issues that can interrupt, or derail, the achievement
of a successful Aproduct@ being admitted to probate. In order to
be successful in this regard, the draftsperson must be acutely aware
of the nature of potential litigation facing the Will and fully
appreciate the legal issues that relate to such litigation. It is
a huge responsibility, and a vast topic of law. This paper is certainly
not an exhaustive examination of everything that can Abite you@
when preparing Wills, but I believe that most of the significant
topics have been addressed.
Accordingly, the following topics related to the proper preparation
of a Will are discussed in this paper.
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2. THE NATURE OF A WILL
The law recognizes two basic ways in which persons may make gratuitous
gifts of property:
1. by inter vivos gift and;
2. by testamentary disposition.
A donor makes an inter vivos gift when he or she intends the transfer
of interest to be immediate and irrevocable. The gift is perfected
during the lifetime of the donor. For a valid inter vivos gift,
there must be evidence of a donative intent of the donor to be unconditionally
bound by the transfer, coupled with the delivery of either the subject
matter of the gift or by some appropriate indicator of title.
A testamentary gift on the other hand occurs when the donor intends
to make a gift that is effective only upon the donor's death, and
is revocable until then. The gift is said to be "dependent
on death for its vigour and effect." Any instrument that is
entirely dependent for its vigour and effect upon a death will be
held to be testamentary.
A true testamentary gift, when properly executed, is a Will. It
confers no interest on its beneficiaries, other than hope, until
the unrevoked Will takes effect by the testator's death.
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3. ELEMENTS OF A WILL
There are basically four requirements.
A) Intended to Have Disposing Effect
A Will must express the testator's real donative intention. It
will not be a valid Will if the testator merely writes a statement
importing information about his or her future intentions regarding
his or her Will. Another example is where undue influence has been
exerted upon the testator. As the testator is not expressing his
or her true intention, the Will should be invalid.
B) Intended Not to Take Effect until After Death and to Be Entirely
Dependent on Death for its Operation
If at the time of the execution of the document, the document is
legally effective to pass some immediate interest in the property,
no matter how slight, the transaction will not be classified as
testamentary. If the transaction is not testamentary, the property
will not be included as part of the estate and will not be available
for creditors. If a document is not executed as a Will, and appears
to pass property to other persons on the death of the person who
owned the property, the validity of the instrument is likely to
be called into question as an attempt to make a Will and evade the
consequences of a testamentary act. The fact that a document describes
itself as a Will and is executed as a Will does not necessarily
make it testamentary. The entire document will be rejected from
probate if all of its dispositions are operative before death. However,
a part of the document that is testamentary, because it has no operation
at all until death, may be severed and admitted to probate.
C) Intended to Be Irrevocable
A Will is revocable even when it is expressed to be irrevocable
and even if the testator covenants not to revoke it. Even a statute
such as the Wills Variation Act, which allows a court to vary a
Will, does not alter the revocable essence of a Will. When a Will
is revoked in breach of a contract not to revoke it, the testator
or the estate may be liable in damages or subject to some equitable
remedy. Where the Will is a mutual Will, the promise not to revoke
may give rise to a constructive trust that is irrevocable, in favour
of the Will's beneficiaries. The term "mutual Wills" refers
to Wills that dispose of property belonging to two persons, usually
a husband and wife, who have agreed to pool their property and to
provide, by their Wills, for its disposition according to an agreed
scheme. Persons who make mutual Wills usually agree not to alter
or revoke them without the other's consent, and it is out of this
agreement not to revoke that a constructive trust may arise. The
agreement not to revoke may be incorporated in the Will by recital
or otherwise, or it may be established outside of the Will.
D) Executed in Accordance with the Wills Legislation of the Appropriate
Jurisdiction. (See Part Two in this article.)
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4. FORMALITIES FOR MAKING A VALID WILL
Section 3 of the Wills Act states that a Will must be in writing,
but there are no restrictions as to the materials on which, or by
which, it may be written, or as to what language may be used. It
may be handwritten or typed, but if both a pencil and an ink pen
are both used, there is a presumption that the pencil writing was
only deliberative and it will be excluded from probate unless the
court decides that the testator intended to include it.
Signature by Testator
The signature of the testator must be intended as an act of execution
of the Will. The mark of the testator is a sufficient signature
whether he can write or not. Another person, in the testator's presence
and by his direction, may sign a testator's name on behalf of the
testator. Section 4 of the Wills Act (excluding military forces
while on active service and mariners in the course of a voyage)
requires that a Will be signed at its end by the testator or signed
in the testator's name by some other person in the testator's presence,
and by the testator's direction. The testator must make or acknowledge
the signature in the presence of two or more attesting witnesses,
all present at the same time, and then the two or more of the attesting
witnesses must subscribe the Will in the presence of the testator.
Place of Signature
Section 6 of the Wills Act states that a Will is deemed to be signed
at its end if the signature of the testator, made either by the
testator or the person signing for the testator, is placed at or
after or following or under or beside or opposite to the end of
the Will so that it is apparent on the face of the Will that the
testator intended to give effect by the signature to the writing
signed as his or her Will.
The same section states that a Will is not rendered invalid in
any of the following circumstances:
a) the signature does not follow immediately the end of the Will;
b) a blank space intervenes between the concluding words of the
Will and the signature;
c) the signature is placed among the words of a testimonium clause
or of an attestation clause or follows or is after or under an attestation
clause, either with or without a blank space intervening, or follows
or is after or under or beside the name of a subscribing witness;
d) the signature is on a side or page or other portion of the paper
or papers containing the Will on which no disposing part of the
Will is written above the signature; and
e) there appears to be sufficient space to contain the signature
on or at the bottom of the side or page or other portion of the
same paper on which the Will is written and preceding that on which
the signature appears.
Who Can Be a Witness?
The requirement that a witness be present refers to the witness's
mental as well as his or her physical presence. A blind person is
not capable of being a witness to a Will. A blind testator may sign
with a signature, however, by a mark, or by directing a third person
to sign on his or her behalf. In each case, the attestation clause
should reflect what has occurred and also confirmation that the
Will was read over to the testator prior to execution.
Section 10 of the Wills Act states: "If a person who attested
a Will was at the time of its execution or afterward has become
incompetent as a witness to prove its execution, the Will is not
on that account invalid.
This section does not give effect to a disposition or direction
that is underneath the signature or that follows the signature or
to a disposition or direction inserted after the signature was made.
Any disposition under or following the signature is invalid. See
Re Brown Estate (1953) 10 W.W.W. (N.S.) 163.
Section 11 of the Wills Act provides that if a Will is attested
by a person to whom or to whose then wife or husband a beneficial
devise, bequest or other disposition or appointment, or affecting
property, except charges and directions for payment of debt, is
thereby given or made, the devise, the bequest or other disposition
or appointment is void so far only as it concerns the person so
attesting, or the wife or the husband or a person claiming under
any of them but the person so attesting is a competent witness to
prove the execution of the Will or its validity or invalidity.
Section 12 of the Wills Act provides that a creditor of the testator
is a competent witness to prove the execution of the Will or its
validity or invalidity.
Section 13 of the Wills Act provides that an executor may be a
valid witness to the execution of the Will.
The witnesses need not know that the document is a Will. It is
sufficient for the witnesses to see the testator in the act of writing
his signature, although they do not see the signature and do not
know what he is writing. It does not suffice if a witness, though
present in the same room, is not aware that the testator is writing.
Similarly if a witness departs before the testator completes his
intended signature, this does not suffice. The testator must acknowledge
the signature by his words or conduct. An express acknowledgment
by the testator is desirable but not essential and no particular
form of words is required. It is sufficient that the testator, or
someone in his presence and on his behalf, simply request the witnesses
to sign the document before them, without telling him that it is
his Will.
The attesting witnesses must subscribe with the intention that
the subscription made should be an attestation of the Will, and
evidence is admissible to show whether such was the intention or
not. A signature made without any intention of attesting is excluded
from probate, but there is a presumption that a person signing at
the end of the Will does so as a witness.
Witnesses need not sign by name; initials or description, or a
mark, are sufficient if intended as the signature of the witness.
Tracing over a previous signature with a dry pen is not a signature,
as the witness must subscribe and not merely acknowledge previous
signature. One witness cannot sign for another. Nor can the third
persons sign for witness. A witness cannot sign in the name of another
person if the witness intends to make it appear that the Will was
attested by that other person. However a witness or a third person
may guide the hand of a witness while he makes his signature. The
mark of the testator will be valid even if the testator requires
assistance in making it. See Re White (1948) 1 D.L.R. 572
Attestation Clause
While no form of attestation clause is required, nevertheless an
attestation clause is highly desirable because it facilitates the
grant of probate. In the absence of the sufficient attestation clause,
the court would then require that due execution of the Will be established
by affidavit evidence before granting probate in common form. An
attestation clause raises a presumption that the Will was duly executed.
The Date
A Will should be dated, but if it is not, or is dated imperfectly,
a grant may still be obtained. The court would then require at least
one of the witnesses to swear an affidavit stating the date of execution.
Age
The testator must be 19 years or older, unless at the time of making
the Will the person is or has been married or is a person as set
out in section 5 of the Act, i.e., a member of the armed forces
while placed in active service or a mariner at sea or in the course
of a voyage. Section 7 of the Wills Act also prevents a person under
19 from making a Will in contemplation of marriage.
Alterations
Any alteration to the Will must be signed by the testator and the
witnesses in the margin or near the alteration in the Will or at
the end of or opposite to a memorandum referring to the alteration
which is contained in the Will. (Section 17)
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5. SOLICITOR/NOTARY NEGLIGENCE
The leading causes of claims and complaints against lawyers and
Notaries with respect to Wills preparation are as follows.
_ Misuse of precedents
_ Failure to take adequate instructions
_ Insufficient knowledge of the law
_ Insufficient revision and review
_ Failure to apply the "what if" test
_ Too much haste in drafting the Will
I am listing for your review many of the frequent errors made by
solicitors in Will drafting cases, that show up in the case law.
A. Failure to take detailed notes
B. Failure to declare that the Will was made in contemplation of
marriage
C. Failure to advise marriage revokes a Will
D. Failure to include a residue clause
E. Failure to dispose of the entire residue of the estate
F. Incorrectly drawing a codicil that improperly reflects on the
Will
G. Failure to include a specific bequest, such as a residence,
contrary to the testator's instructions, resulting in the gift following
into the residue of the estate
H. Failure to properly conduct Land Title searches
I. Failure to sever joint ventures contrary to instructions and
provisions of the Will
J. Incorrectly naming charities
K. Failure to promptly carry out testator's instructions
L. Using words such as "issue"
M. Having a spouse of a beneficiary witness the Will
N. Missing limitation dates, such as the six month date from Letters
Probate in the Wills Variation Act
O. Failing to probe the testator's mind to determine sufficient
mental capacity
P. Failure to interview the client in sufficient depth
Q. Failure to ascertain the existence of suspicious circumstances
R. Failure to react properly to the existence of suspicious circumstances
S. Interviewing the testator in the presence of interested party
or parties
T. Failing to obtain a mental status examination
U. Using a term in a Will that is ambiguous requiring an interpretation
V. Taking instructions from a person other than the testator and
failing to confirm instructions with the testator
W. Failure to provide a discretionary trust for mentally disabled
children, or others who receive a form of state welfare
CASE LAW DISCUSSION RE: STANDARD OF CARE FOR SOLICITOR NEGLIGENCE
In the Jacobsen Ford - Mercury Sales Ltd. v. Sivertz 1980 1 W.W.R.
141, it was stated:
"A lawyer is obliged to act as a 'prudent solicitor' and must
'bring to the exercise of his profession a reasonable amount of
knowledge, skill and care in connection with the business of his
client.' There is no liability for mere errors in judgment because
a solicitor does not undertake not to make mistakes but only not
to make negligent mistakes. The determination is said to be a question
of degree, and there is a borderline between negligence and no negligence:
see Linden Canadian Tort Law 1977 pp. 108 - 109."
In Marbel Developments Ltd. v. Pirani (January 24, 1994) Vancouver
Registry No. C925970, it was held that:
"A solicitor's duty is determined by the work undertaken rather
than by his or her circumstances ... the standard is only one of
reasonable competence: it is not a standard of perfection Y or of
strict liability."
The court will first look at the nature and extent of the solicitor's
retainer.
The Supreme Court of Canada stated in Central and Eastern Trust
Company v. Rafuse (1986) 31 D.L.R. (4th) 481 at 523:
AA solicitor is required to bring reasonable care, skill and knowledge
to his performance of the professional service which he has undertaken:
see Hett v. Pun Pong 1890, 18 S.C.R. 290 at p. 292.@
The requisite standard of care has been variously referred to as
that the reasonably competent solicitor, the ordinary competent
solicitor and the ordinary prudent solicitor.
LIABILITY TO DISAPPOINTED BENEFICIARIES
In 1978, Justice Atkins, in Wittingham v. Crease and Company 3
E.T.R. 97, found the lawyer negligent in having a spouse of a beneficiary
witness the Will. This in turn caused that bequest to fail, and
the solicitor was liable in damages for negligence to the "disappointed
beneficiary," in an amount being the difference between what
the beneficiary received on an intestacy and what the beneficiary
would have received after a successful application under the Wills
Variation Act.
The following year, our Court of Appeal followed Wittingham (supra),
and in Tracy v. Atkins 16 B.C.L.R. 223, found that despite the fact
that the defendant's solicitors did not represent the Plaintiff,
a lawyer could be liable to an opposing party if he or she placed
him or herself in a "sufficient relationship of proximity,"
that he or she incurred a duty of care toward the plaintiffs.
Thus, the BC Courts in the late '70s began to allow recovery on
the basis of the Hedley Byrne principle. The principle of that case
is that if a person seeks information from a person possessing a
special skill and trust, that person to exercise due care, and if
that person knew or ought to have known that reliance was being
placed on his or her skill and judgment, he or she owes a duty of
care to the first person. Further, absent express disclaimer of
responsibility, the first person can recover damages for financial
loss caused by the negligent misrepresentation, where spoken or
written, of the second person.
Again in 1979, the British Court of Appeal in Ross v. Caunters,
followed Wittingham and found liability against a lawyer to disappointed
beneficiaries, where the lawyers had drafted a Will, forwarded the
Will to the testator for execution, but failed to properly ensure
that a beneficiary did not witness the Will. A beneficiary in fact
did witness the Will and was successful in a claim against the lawyer
for damages for the loss of the benefits under the Will.
Probably the current high watermark of solicitor's liability to
disappointed beneficiaries is the House of Lords decision of White
v. Jones (1995)1 All E.R. 691.
In that case a testator had a law firm prepare a Will where he
disinherited two daughters. He subsequently reconciled with his
daughters and wrote a letter on July 17 to his lawyers requesting
that they prepare a new Will with a specific gift to each of the
two daughters. The law firm never did prepare the Will prior to
the testator's death on September 14. The two daughters brought
an action for negligence and recovered their loss from the lawyers.
The majority of the House of Lords held that Hedley Byrne cannot
properly give rise to a tortious liability. There is no duty of
care other than to the client, and Hedley Byrne ought not to apply
in cases of pure economic loss, and there is no "loss in not
receiving a gift." In the result, the House of Lords fashioned
a new basis for a remedy based on a concept of "transferred
loss," that is since the deceased cannot take action against
the solicitor for breach of the retainer, the right to do so was
treated as transferred to the beneficiary.
It would appear that this White v. Jones approach gives rise to
the argument that liability to the beneficiary is necessarily limited
by the terms of the contract of retainer of the solicitor.
The following excerpt from the decision pretty well sums up this
area of law:
"The very purpose of the employment of the solicitor is to
carry out the client's wish to confer a particular testamentary
benefit on the intended beneficiary. There is no other purpose.
If the solicitor negligently fails to achieve that purpose, justice
requires that there should be some remedy available."
There are now over 20 years of jurisprudence that clearly establish
that a solicitor can be liable in negligence to a disappointed beneficiary,
who loses his or her inheritance as a result of a lack of due diligence
on the lawyer's part that causes the disappointed beneficiary to
not inherit as was contemplated by the testator.
Given the number of Wills that have been prepared over the years,
and the ever increasing degree of the duty of care owed by a solicitor
to his or her clients and beneficiaries, gives reason to believe
that claims by disappointed beneficiaries against solicitors will
only increase in the future.
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6. SUGGESTIONS TO AVOID POTENTIAL LIABILITY
Take your time. Be cautious. Seriously consider charging your
actual time on a Wills file. If your client objects, then educate
the client about the amount of time needed to prepare a Will so
as to ensure that the client's lifetime accumulated wealth will
pass to his or her chosen heirs.
2. When the Will is ready for execution, read it through a number
of different times, each time assuming a different scenario involving
contingencies relevant to the Will.
3. Do not be a dabbler. If you do not routinely draw Wills, then
consider not doing them at all.
4. Use a checklist when taking instructions. The three Law Society
Practice Checklist Manuals are an excellent start, and can be modified
to suit you . I always use it when I cross-examine a lawyer or Notary.
It usually makes them look incompetent if they have not followed
a checklist.
5. Get all the necessary information about your client's personal
circumstances , including special situations such as a disabled
child. It is essential to obtain complete information about the
client's estate, including details about the nature in value of
each asset, its location, and how it is registered.
6. Review copies of earlier Wills, insurance policies, separation
agreements, marriage contracts, or any other documents that may
affect the client's estate.
7. Take the necessary time to satisfy your responsibility to ensure
that the client understands what the Will says, what it means, and
that the client approves its contents. It is essential to go through
the Will clause by clause with the client. The lawyer should attend
upon the client to make sure that the Will is properly executed.
If this is not possible, the lawyer has a duty to make sure that
when the original of the Will is sent out for signature, it is accompanied
with a very clear letter of instructions on how to execute the Will.
You have a further obligation to subsequently ensure that the Will
is in fact executed and is put in safekeeping.
8. It is essential to keep very careful notes of Will's instructions
and all communications with Will's clients. If there is a mistake
or an ambiguity and the drafting, it may be these notes that will
determine the construction that the court will put on the Will.
Notes are especially crucial if there are any unusual circumstances
surrounding the Will. A few examples of this might include elderly
or infirm testators, blindness or deafness, poor language skills,
deathbed Wills, or testators whose Wills might be subject to challenge
all the basis of undue influence or lack of capacity.
9. Utilize good legal assistants, but do not place too much reliance
on them. Ultimately you cannot delegate your own responsibility
to ensure that the Wills are prepared correctly.
10. Always file a Wills Notice with the Division of Vital Statistics.
Although it is not mandatory, you should do so, particularly in
light of the development of liability in favour of disappointed
beneficiaries.
11. Maintain a Wills index with the name and address of the testator,
the filing number of the Will file, the name of the executor, the
date of execution of the Will, and the Will's location.
12. Deliver a final letter to the client confirming the location
of the Will, the date that it was signed, and reminding the client
to review the Will from time to time. It is also essential to make
the client aware that marriage revokes the Will and that divorce
may affect the validity of some of the provisions of the Will.
13. Probe the testator's mind to ensure that there is sufficient
mental capacity to prepare a Will. If there is any doubt, a medical
opinion should be obtained.
14. Always take instructions in the absence of potential beneficiaries
or executors.
15. Record detailed reasons why any person who would be an appropriate
object of the testator's bounty is being omitted from the Will,
and then consider the preparation of a detailed memorandum to the
Will in conjunction with your notes.
16. Try not do codicils. It is too easy to make a mistake.
17. Do not use the words issue, per stirpes, per capita.
18. If a charity is a beneficiary in a Will, then it is imperative
to do two things:
(i) understand the structure of the charity, and obtain the testator's
instructions on which part of the charity her or she wishes to benefit;
and
(ii) ensure that the name of the charity is correct. The easiest
way of understanding the structure of the charity and finding out
its proper name is to telephone the charitable organization and
explain your inquiry relates to a gift made by Will, and to speak
with a person authorized to give you the information. See also each
year's Canadian Donor=s Guide for assistance.
19. Only sign one original, and make it clear that a copy is, in
fact, a copy.
20. Use memorandums to explain why certain beneficiaries are not
being provided for, such as in a Wills Variation situation. Set
out the reasons in detail, and try to ensure that the reasons set
out are factually accurate, and not merely vindictive and mean spirited.
21. Do not under any circumstances attempt to prepare a Will that
is Aover your head@ or that you should not be preparing due to restrictions
on your practice, i.e., Notaries doing Wills with discretionary
trust provisions. AIf in doubt, refer it out@ should be your motto.
22. Try to use percentages, rather than specific amounts.
23. Ensure that the executors have sufficient powers to carry out
their job. For example, if the testator has a business, then include
powers to operate the business, such as the power to order inventory.
Otherwise the trustee may only be able to operate the business much
like a receiver, unless appointed special powers by the court, on
application.
24. Do not include an RRSP designation clause, or revocation of
an RRSP clause in a Will.
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7. AMBIGUOUS DESCRIPTIONS: SOME RULES FOR
RESOLVING THEM
Wrong Description
The principle of falsa demonstratio non nocet means that if, on
considering the language of the Will with the aid of any admissible
extrinsic evidence, the court comes to the conclusion that the testator
intended to pass something and can determine what that something
is, then the fact that the testator gave it a wrong description
in his Will, does not prevent the Will taking effect in regard to
the subject matter intended by the testator. This principle also
applies to a wrong description of a person in a Will. For example
in Re Gifford (1944) Ch.186, the testator by her Will made a gift
of her war bonds. At the date of her Will, she held no war bonds,
as 10 years previously they had been converted into consolidated
inscribed stock. The court held that the latter stock passed under
the gift.
But this principle has been held inapplicable to property which
at the date of the Will the testator did not possess and did not
contemplate possessing. Thus in Re Gifford, the court held that
savings certificates purchased by the testator after the date of
her Will did not pass under the gift of her war bonds.
2. Property Disposed of Before the Date of the Will
If this occurs the courts have three alternatives.
a) The court may decide that some other property possessed by the
testator at the date of his Will was meant, and if so, then the
latter property passes under the testator as a specific gift pursuant
to the falsa demonstratio principle as occurred in Re Gifford.
b) The court may construe the legacy as general or demonstrative,
and not specific. In that event, the legacy is provided for the
beneficiary out of the testator's general estate.
c) The court may construe the gift as specific, and decide that
the testator possessed no property that fell within the description
in the Will, and thus the gift fails.
3. The Testator Thought He Had Property, but Did Not
If the testator makes a specific gift of a thing he thinks he has
but never had, or other thing that he intends to purchase, but does
not, the gift is void. Where there is nothing answering to any part
of the description, a specific gift fails.
4. Inconsistent Clauses
Where inconsistent clauses appear in the same Will, as a last resort,
a Arule of thumb@ has been created, and may be applied so as to
avoid having both clauses being held void for uncertainty. The rule
is that the latter of the two inconsistent provisions prevails.
It is a rule of last resort and will be applied only if the Will
and the surrounding circumstances provide no means of reconciling
the two clauses.
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8. PRINCIPLES OF CONSTRUCTION AND INTERPRETATION
OF WILLS
In construing a Will, the object of the court is to ascertain
to the intention of the testator as expressed in his Will when it
is read as a whole in the light of the surrounding circumstances
in which it was made. Several of the main principles are discussed
below, and while they do not really restrict the court in ascertaining
the testator's meaning, they give the court flexibility in its interpretation.
In many instances, they attribute a presumed intention to the testator
if the words of the Will have left the intention doubtful and uncertain.
The leading case is perhaps Perrin v. Morgan (1943) A.C.399 where
Lord Simon stated:
"The fundamental rule in construing the language of a Will
is to put on the words used the meaning which, having regard to
the terms of the Will, the testator intended. The question is not,
of course, what the testator meant to do when he made his Will,
but what the written words he uses mean in the particular case-what
are the expressed intentions of the testator.@
a) The Court Cannot Rewrite a Will
The function of a court of construction is to construe the testator's
Will, not to make a new Will for him.
b) The Court Does Not Guess
The court will not speculate upon what the testator may be supposed
to have intended to do, and instead will only try to determine what
that which the testator has written means. See Abbot v. Middleton
(1858) 7 H.L. C. 68.
c) Identical Words Are Presumed to Have the Same Meaning
It is presumed that if a word or phrase is used with a clear meaning
in one part of the Will, it is intended to bear the same meaning
elsewhere if it is repeated and its meaning there is uncertain.
d) Effect to Be Given to All Words
As a general principle, when interpreting an ambiguous or uncertain
clause, the court will strive to give effect to all the words used
by the testator, unless to do so would be contrary to the testator's
plainly expressed intentions in some other parts of the Will.
An example of this principle may be found in the Ontario Court
of Appeal decision in Re Stark (1969) 2 O.R. 881. In that case,
the testator had made a gift to his "nephews" and the
court interpreted that word to include nephews of the half-blood.
When he made his Will, the testator had only one nephew of the whole-
blood and the circumstances were such that it was unlikely that
he would have any further nephews of whole-blood. The court concluded
that the use of the plural in mentioning the nephews can only have
been for the purpose of including nephews of both the full-and half-blood.
e) Presumption that Words to be Given their Ordinary Meaning
Prima facie the words and phrases used in a Will are to be given
their ordinary meaning. But often a word used in a Will needs to
be considered in its context as part of a phrase or sentence in
order to ascertain its ordinary meaning. If the meaning of a word
or phrase has changed with the passage of time, it is the ordinary
meaning current when the Will was made that is relevant. If a word
or phrase has more than one ordinary meaning, i.e., the word "money,"
then no presumption will arise that if there is one particular meaning
rather than the other, and the court determines the meaning intended
by the testator by considering all the provisions of the Will in
the light of the surrounding circumstances. In fact, in the decision
of Perrin v. Morgan (supra), the House of Lords decided that the
word money has several ordinary meetings, and did not have a single
strict and primary meaning and in fact, had one or more popular
or secondary meetings.
If a word or phrase has only one ordinary meaning and no special
meaning, the ordinary meaning rule raises a presumption that the
word or phrase bears that ordinary meaning. This presumption may
be rebutted in two ways.
(i) The Dictionary Principle
This is another application of the principle that a Will is to
be read as a whole. It is called such because the testator applied
his own Adictionary.@ If it can be shown that in light of the surrounding
circumstances that the testator used that word or phrase in a different
sense from its ordinary meaning, then the word or phrase is to be
construed in that different sense. The testator is free to use words
to meet whatever he wishes, if he makes the sense in which he is
using them clear in his Will.
(ii) Secondary Meaning Makes Sense
If the ordinary meaning does not makes sense when a Will is read
in the light of the surrounding circumstances in which it was made,
and a word or phrase has a secondary meaning that does makes sense,
the word or phrase is to be given that secondary meaning. Under
this rule the word or phrase must be capable of bearing the secondary
meaning to be put on it; the surrounding circumstances cannot make
"black" mean "white.
f) Presumption that Technical Words Are to Be Given their Technical
Meaning
This rule often applies to any word or expression that has a recognized
meaning as a "term of art" used by lawyers and Notaries
in drafting. The court then decides whether a word or expression
has a technical legal meaning and, if so, what that meaning is.
This presumption can also be rebutted by the application of the
aforesaid dictionary principle and secondary meaning "makes
sense" rules.
g) The Entire Will Is to Be Read In Context
The intention of the testator is to be collected from the Will
as a whole, read in its context. Particular words and phrases are
not to be read in isolation from the entire context.
h) Presumption Against Intestacy
If a Will is fairly capable of two interpretations, one resulting
in some or all of the property being incompletely disposed of and
the other completely disposing of all of the testator's property,
it is presumed that the testator intended to dispose of his or her
entire estate, and did not intend to die intestate in respect of
the whole or any part of the estate. The presumption is especially
strong if the testator has purported to dispose of all of his or
her property.
The presumption against intestacy is often invoked in the "money"
cases where the testator leaves "all the rest of my money"
to a named person. Unless the word money is construed to mean "estate"
the testator would usually die partially intestate. The courts will
often so construe a word to prevent an intestacy.
i) Presumption of Rationality
A testator is entitled to be capricious in the disposition of his
or her property and effect will be given to his or her intention
so far as the law allows, if it is clearly expressed. It is presumed
that the testator did not intend capricious, arbitrary, unjust or
irrational consequences to flow from his or her dispositions. This
presumption is frequently relied on in finding an error or omission
that the court is willing to correct.
j) Presumption of Legality
If a Will is ambiguous and one possible interpretation of the Will
appears to offend against the rule of law, while another possible
construction that the Will reasonably bears does not, the testator's
intentions will be presumed to accord with the law.
k) Presumption Against Disinheritance
As a general rule, if the words of the Will are ambiguous, the
court will prefer a construction that will benefit the testator's
heirs or immediate next of kin over one that favours more distant
relatives or nonrelatives.
l) General Versus Particular Intention
If a testator expresses both a general and a particular intention
with respect to a certain gift,, and the two are inconsistent, or
the particular intention cannot be given effect to because of a
rule of law, the court will give effect to the paramount general
intention by disregarding, modifying, or restricting the particular
intention. A frequent application of this principle that the particular
intention yields to the general if the two are inconsistent, arises
when the testator first disposes of an apparently absolute gift,
followed by a gift over of what remains. If the two provisions cannot
be reconciled, the court has then to give such effect to the wishes
of the testator as is legally possible, by ascertaining which part
of the testamentary intention predominates and by giving effect
to it, rejecting the subordinate intention as being repugnant to
the dominant intention.
m) Restriction of An Absolute Gift
In plain English, the testator cannot give absolutely, then in
the next breath, take away from the absolute gift.
The Supreme Court of Canada in Blackburn v. McCallum (1903) 33
S.C.R. 65 stated at p. 92:
"when property is given absolutely a condition cannot be annexed
to the gift inconsistent with its absolute character Y ."
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9. THE POWER OF THE COURTS TO RECTIFY A
WILL
Mr. Justice Burnyeat, in Brand vs. Adams 1998 CanRepBC 186, reviewed
the jurisdiction of the Court to rectify an improperly drawn Will.
He concluded that the Court DOES have the jurisdiction to strikeout
words inserted by mistake, but that the Court=s jurisdiction DOES
NOT extend to the power to add or substitute words in any circumstances.
The following passage is cited from that decision.
A The Supreme Court may sit as either a Court of Probate or a Court
of Construction. When it sits as a Court of Probate, it has jurisdiction
to grant probate. Once probate of a Will has been granted, the Court
sits as a Court of Construction and has jurisdiction to interpret
the Will.
"In the exercise of the Probate jurisdiction, the Court certifies
that the Will is valid and that the personal representative named
in the Grant is entitled to administer the Estate. The Court also
has a limited power, confined to deleting words, to rectify the
wording of a Will to accord with what it determines to have in fact
been the testator's will.
"In the exercise of the construction jurisdiction [as opposed
to the Supreme Court sitting as a Court of Probate], the Court interprets
or construes the contents of the testamentary documents that have
been approved by the Court in the exercise of its probate jurisdiction.
The Court of Construction can only interpret the words that validly
constitute the Will, as determined by the Court of Probate. If the
Will was admitted to probate without any application for rectification,
then the words that validly constitute the Will are those contained
in the original document. If a rectification application was brought,
the words that validly constitute the Will are those that resulted
from the court's rectification prior to the grant of probate. The
Court [of Probate] cannot insert missing words and must be satisfied
that the Testator did not "know and approve" the use of
the words struck out. The equitable doctrine of rectification of
written documents does not generally apply to Wills. The courts
have construed the Wills Act so that there is no jurisdiction to
add words to a Will, and only limited jurisdiction to delete or
ignore words. If words have been omitted in error from the Will,
and, because the court has no jurisdiction to add words, the Will
is admitted into probate without rectification, a construction application
can subsequently be brought to determine the meaning of the Will
in the form in which probate was granted.
Feeney, The Canadian Law of Wills (2nd Edition), 1982, Vol. I:
"The jurisdiction of the Court of Probate to correct mistakes
in a Will is very limited; it is confined "to striking out
words inserted by mistake without the approval of the Testator.
It does not extend to adding or substituting words in any circumstances.
There is simply no jurisdiction to rectify a Will. (At pp.39-40)@
PART EIGHT
CLASS GIFTS
Problems can arise in the interpretation of Wills as to whether
or not the testator intended to benefit a class of beneficiaries
as opposed to certain named individuals. If a gift to an individual
fails, then as a general rule the gift lapses and devolves on an
intestacy. If a gift to a member of a group of persons or a class
fails, then that gift does not lapse but is shared by the remaining
members of the class who survive the testator.
In April 2000, I was counsel on a Will's interpretation application
called Milthorp v. Milthorp. The testator left the residue of the
estate to her two natural children and named them, as well as her
husband's four children, and named them. One of the husband's children
predeceased his father, and the question arose as to whether that
child's interest lapsed and went by way of an intestacy, or was
it a class gift, and thus went to the surviving children equally.
Madam Justice Smith reviewed the law and concluded that it was not
a class gift.
The following are some excerpts from that decision that define
a class gift.
In Kingsbury v. Walters (1901), A.C. 187, 70 LT Ch 546, Lord MacNaughten
set out the test for class gifts:
"When there is a gift to a number of persons who are united
or connected by some common tie, and you can see that the testator
was looking to the body as a whole rather than to the members constituting
the body as individuals, and also you can see that he intended that
if one or more of that body died in his lifetime the survivors should
take the gift between them, there is nothing to prevent your giving
effect to the wishes of the testator."
The definition of a class gift in Halsbury, 2nd edition, was cited
with approval by the Ontario Supreme Court in Re Brush, [1943] 1
D.L.R. 74 at paragraph 25:
"Prima facie a class gift is a gift to a class of persons
included or comprehended under some general description and bearing
a certain relation to the testator or another person. Thus, where
a testator divides his residue into as many equal shares as he shall
have children surviving him, or predeceasing him leaving issue,
and gives a share to or in trust for each such child, the gift is
to a class."
At page 365 of Re Brush, the court referred to the decision of
Bolton v. Bailey (1879), 26 Gr. 361, in which Proudfoot V.C. quoted
with approval Jarman's definition of a class gift:
"... a gift to a class as a gift of an aggregate sum to a
body of persons, uncertain in number at the time of the gift, to
be ascertained at a future time, and who are all to take equally,
the share of each being dependent for its amount upon the ultimate
number of persons."
Halsbury goes on to say, at pp. 144-5:
"Gifts to persons described only by relationship are sometimes
construed as class gifts, and sometimes as gifts to individuals.
A gift may be nonetheless a gift to a class because some of the
members are referred to by name, or because a person ... is excluded
by name ... . On the other hand, a gift to an individual and the
children of another individual is not regarded as a class gift,
unless there is something in the context to show that the testator
intended to form a class."
At p. 145 the author of Halsbury states:
"... gifts to several persons designated by name or number
or by reference are not class gifts, and are liable to lapse."
A somewhat similar statement is made in Theobald on Wills, 9th
edition., p. 670:
"A gift 'to the five daughters of A' or to 'my nine children,'
or to 'my said three sisters,' is not a gift to a class.@
When Does the Class Close?
In Bullock v. Downes (1860) 9 H.L.C.1, it was held that prima facie
the next of kin are to be ascertained at the death of the testator,
but, that if there is a sufficient indication to that effect in
the words of the Will, the time for ascertaining the class may be
the time fixed by the Will as the period of distribution.
PART NINE
CONDITIONAL GIFTS
If words are included in a Will that show that a testator intended
a gift to be ineffective unless some specific event occurs or some
state of affairs continues, then the gift is subject to a condition
of which there are two kinds: condition precedent and condition
subsequent.
Where the condition must occur for the gift to take effect, then
the gift is subject to a condition precedent. If the language shows
that the gift is to take effect but terminate on the happening of
the condition, then it is a condition subsequent.
It is a question of construction in every case whether a reference
to an event indicates a condition upon which the gift depends, or
is merely a statement of the testator=s reason for making the gift.
In McKeen Estate v. McKeen Estate (1993) N.B.J. 69, it was held
that the crucial distinction is whether the happening of the condition
is an event that caused the gift to spring into being, and thus
vest, or whether the happening signifies that an existing (already
vested) interest is to come to an end.
If a condition precedent is considered to be too vague or too uncertain
to be enforceable, then the gift will fail entirely. On the other
hand, a vague or uncertain gift will be perfected if the condition
subsequent is void.
A condition precedent must be expressed with sufficient clarity
for a court to determine that any failure to comply with it should
disentitle the beneficiary completely. A distinction should be drawn
that it is still possible to postpone an interest to a future time,
and that does not constitute a condition precedent. For example,
ATo Mr. A, two years after my death@ is not a contingent gift.
An example of a condition precedent can be found in the decision
Melnik v. Sawycky (1978) 1 W.W.R. 107, where the testator left all
his estate to his niece who was living in the U.S.S.R., AProvided
that the said niece come to Canada and make her permanent home in
Canada.@
The Saskatchewan Court of Appeal held that the gift was a condition
precedent, and that she must come to Canada to live as that was
a condition of the acquisition of the gift and not merely a condition
(subsequent) of its retention.
Similarly, in Robertson v. Thomas and Roberts (unreported B.C.C.A
Victoria Registry VO1078, November 29,1990), the Court determined
that a bequest of a house to a beneficiary Aif she wishes to live
in it@ was a condition precedent to the beneficiary receiving the
gift, and that she must elect to do so before the gift vested to
her.
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10. REPUGNANT CONDITIONS
Testators sometimes attempt to effect a restraint on enjoyment
of a gift by attaching a condition to the gift in an attempt to
control the conduct of the donee with regard to it. The law will
usually give effect to this, so long as the condition precedent
is not impossible to fulfill, is expressed with sufficient clarity,
and does not violate a rule of public policy.
Thus it has been upheld that if a testator gives a gift on the
condition that the donee ensure that the testator is not put into
an old person=s home, and it is proved that the donee allowed the
testator to be put into such a home, then the gift failed. Re Archibald
(1933) N.L.47.
As previously discussed, a restraint on alienation of a gift absolute
will not be allowed. Thus a condition on a gift of real property
that it not be sold Aas long as grass grows and water runs@ was
found to be void. McEachern v. New Brunswick Housing Corp. (1990)
117 N.B.R. (2d) 14
CONDITION POSTPONING ENJOYMENT BEYOND THE AGE OF MAJORITY (RULE
IN SAUNDERS v. VAUTIER)
Feeney, The Canadian Law of Wills (4th edition), states at 16.7
as follows:
A The most usual type of condition that is void as being repugnant
to the nature of an absolute gift is a gift of the capital of a
fund to a person subject to a condition that the fund is not to
be paid to the person until that person attains some age greater
that the age of majority. Usually a condition of this kind can only
be valid if the income from the fund is given to another person
until such time as the beneficiary attains a specified age. Unless
there is a gift over of the intermediate income, or the Will so
clearly takes the income from the donee that a court will hold that
there is an intestacy as to the income until the specified age is
reached, the donees are entitled to call for the whole fund, provided
only that they are sui juris [they are not under a legal disability
to act for themselves].@
In Re Squire, (1962) O.R.863, the Ontario court found as follows.
Facts: A testator left certain real estate to two of his grandsons
to be held in trust until they reached the age of 30 years. The
trustee was to invest the income for their benefit, and it had a
discretion to advance sums for their education.
Held: The properties became vested in the two grandsons and they
were entitled to receive them at the age of 21. (The age of majority
in Ontario at that time.) A devise had to be interpreted as vesting
unless some condition precedent expressed in the bequest prevented
the vesting. Testator's intention in respect of vesting could be
inferred from the fact that the two grandsons were entitled to the
interim income and there was no gift over if they failed to reach
the age of 30 years, the property was separated from the rest of
the estate, and they were excluded from sharing in the residue.
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11. IMPOSSIBLE CONDITIONS
An impossible condition precedent to fulfill with respect to land,
will render the gift void. However, where the gift is one of personalty
[moveable property or chattels], even though the condition is clearly
a condition precedent, yet impossible to fulfill, then the gift
may be allowed to stand.
12. CONDITIONS AGAINST PUBLIC
POLICY
There are many conditions that in the interest of the public, or
the Crown, that may be said to be against public policy. The conditions
may vary over time, but generally speaking, conditions that offend
the law, or are an unreasonable restraints on marriage, or a condition
that attempts to avoid the Wills Variation Act, or is racially offensive,
may be void. Some conditions that were formerly held to be void,
may now be allowed, and vice versa. This is simply because of changes
of public opinion over time, which the Courts attempt to reflect.
13. CONCLUSION
AA gift is not a kiss in the dark. Unlike the memory of a kiss
which fades in time, the giving of a gift has lasting consequences.@
(Per Justice Greer in Schilthuis v. Arnold, (1941) O.J. 2212 at
page 2 of 25.)
Much can be done to protect the document, the executor, the beneficiaries,
and YOURSELF from litigation. The more knowledge and understanding
the draftsperson has, then the more likely it will be that Apreventative@
measures can be taken to increase the probability that a successful
estate administration will be achieved without the involvement of
litigation. The draftsperson must not only prepare the Will in a
manner that properly sets out the intentions of the testator, but
also, the preparation must also serve to provide maximum protection
to the integrity of the Will should it be attacked, as well as to
avoid liability for negligence on the part of the draftsperson.
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