You are here:
AustLII >>
Databases >>
Supreme Court of New South Wales >>
2017 >>
[2017] NSWSC 590
Database Search
| Name Search
| Recent Decisions
| Noteup
| LawCite
| Download
| Context | No Context | Help
Carusi-Lees v Carusi [2017] NSWSC 590 (18 May 2017)
Last Updated: 18 May 2017
|
Supreme Court
New South Wales
|
Case Name:
|
Carusi-Lees v Carusi
|
Medium Neutral Citation:
|
|
Hearing Date(s):
|
10 and 11 April 2017
|
Date of Orders:
|
18 May 2017
|
Decision Date:
|
18 May 2017
|
Jurisdiction:
|
Equity
|
Before:
|
Hallen J
|
Decision:
|
The parties, within 14 days, are to consider whether any amendments to the
proposed orders are required. The matter is stood over
to a convenient date for
any argument as to the nature and form of the orders proposed. Otherwise, any
agreed amendments to the proposed
orders may be forwarded to the Court, for
consideration, in Chambers, or if no amendments are sought, the orders proposed
will be
entered and the adjourned date vacated.
|
Catchwords:
|
SUCCESSION – FAMILY PROVISION – The Plaintiff, an adult child
of the deceased, makes a claim for a family provision order
– No dispute
as to the Plaintiff’s eligibility as a child of the deceased – The
Defendant the widow of the deceased
and the sole executrix and beneficiary named
in the Will - No application by Defendant for administration made at date of
hearing
– Whether grant of administration is necessary in order to deal
with the Plaintiff’s application –– Virtually
no actual estate
– Whether the deceased’s interest in the proceeds of sale of jointly
held property, or other jointly
held property that passed by survivorship to the
Defendant should be designated as notional estate – Property that may be
designated
as notional estate of large value – Significant provision made
for the Plaintiff during the lifetime of the deceased - Competing
financial
claim advanced by the Defendant Whether family provision order should be made in
favour of the Plaintiff, and if so, the
nature and quantum of the provision to
be made
|
Legislation Cited:
|
|
Cases Cited:
|
Alexander v Jansson [2010] NSWCA 176Andrew v Andrew [2012] NSWCA 308;
(2012) 81 NSWLR 656Andrew v Andrew [2011] NSWSC 115Bates v Cooke [2015]
NSWCA 278Boettcher v Driscoll [2014] SASC 86; (2014) 119 SASR
523Bondelmonte v Blanckensee [1989] WAR 305Borebor v Keane [2013] VSC
35Bosch v Perpetual Trustee Co Ltd [1938] AC 463Bowditch v NSW Trustee
and Guardian [2012] NSWSC 275Bowyer v Wood [2007] SASC 327; (2007) 99 SASR
190Brimelow v Alampi [2016] VSC 135 Butcher v Craig [2009] WASC
164Burke v Burke [2015] NSWCA 195Chan v Chan [2016] NSWCA 222Chapple
v Wilcox [2014] NSWCA 392; 87 NSWLR 646Christie v Manera [2006] WASC
287Collicoat v McMillan [1999] 3 VR 803Crossman v Riedel [2004] ACTSC
127Diver v Neal [2009] NSWCA 54de Angelis v de Angelis [2003] VSC
432Flathaug v Weaver [2003] NZFLR 730Foley v Ellis [2008] NSWCA
288Goodman v Windeyer [1980] HCA 31; 144 CLR 490Goodsell v Wellington
[2011] NSWSC 1232Grey v Harrison [1997] 2 VR 359Hawkins v Prestage
(1989) 1 WAR 37Henry v Hancock [2016] NSWSC 71Heyward v Fisher (Court of
Appeal (NSW), 26 April 1985, unrep) Hinderry v Hinderry [2016] NSWSC
780Hughes v National Trustees Executors & Agency Co of Australasia Ltd
(1979) 143 CLR 134; [1979] HCA 2Hunter v Hunter (1987) 8 NSWLR 573Hyland
v Burbidge [2000] NSWSC 12Ilott v The Blue Cross & Ors [2017] UKSC
17In re Green, deceased; Zuckerman v Public Trustee [1950] NZGazLawRp 121; [1951] NZLR 135John
v John; John v John [2010] NSWSC 937Kavalee v Burbidge; Hyland v Burbidge
[1998] NSWSC 111; (1998) 43 NSWLR 422Kleinig v Neal (No 2) [1981] 2 NSWLR 532Kohari v Snow
[2013] NSWSC 452MacGregor v MacGregor [2003] WASC 169Marks v Marks
[2003] WASCA 297Mayfield v Lloyd-Williams [2004] NSWSC 419McCosker v
McCosker [1957] HCA 82, (1957) 97 CLR 566McGrath v Eves [2005] NSWSC
1006McKenzie v Topp [2004] VSC 90Morier v Liem [2016] NSWSC
582Pincius v Wood [1998] TASSC 46Pontifical Society for the Propagation
of the Faith v Scales [1962] HCA 19; (1962) 107 CLR 9R (on the application
of M) v Slough Borough Council [2008] UKHL 52; [2008] 1 WLR 1808Re Buckland,
Deceased [1966] VicRp 58; [1966] VR 404Salmon v Osmond [2015] NSWCA 42Singer v Berghouse
[1994] HCA 40; (1994) 181 CLR 201Slack v Rogan; Palffy v Rogan [2013] NSWSC
522; (2013) 85 NSWLR 253Smith v Johnson [2015] NSWCA 297Smith v Woodward
(Supreme Court (NSW), 9 September 1994, unrep) Stern v Sekers; Sekers v
Sekers [2010] NSWSC 59Stott v Cook (1960) 33 ALJR 447Taylor v Farrugia
[2009] NSWSC 801Underwood v Gaudron (2015) 324 ALR 641; [2015] NSWCA
269Verzar v Verzar [2012] NSWSC 1380Vigolo v Bostin (2005) 221 CLR 191;
[2005] HCA 11Walker v Walker (Supreme Court (NSW), Young J, 17 May 1996,
unrep) Wheat v Wisbey [2013] NSWSC 537White v Barron (1980) 144 CLR 431;
[1980] HCA 14Wilcox v Wilcox [2012] NSWSC 1138Worsley v Solomon [2008]
NSWSC 444
|
Category:
|
Principal judgment
|
Parties:
|
Ms Zenuccia Mary Carusi-Lees (Plaintiff) Mrs Shirley Margaret Carusi
(Defendant)
|
Representation:
|
Counsel: Mr D Liebhold (Plaintiff) Mr L Ellison SC
(Defendant) Solicitors: Macpherson Kelly (Plaintiff) Glass
Goodwin Solicitors (Defendant)
|
File Number(s):
|
2015/353137
|
JUDGMENT
The Claim
- HIS
HONOUR: Agostino Phillip Carusi (“the deceased”) was born in
March 1932 and died on 4 December 2014, aged 82 years. He was survived
by his
second wife, Shirley Margaret Carusi, who is the Defendant in these proceedings,
and by his children, Zenuccia Mary Carusi-Lees
(called “Zena” in the
affidavits), who is the Plaintiff, and a child of the deceased from his first
marriage, and Monique
Mihaljevic and Tino Carusi, who are the only two children
from his marriage to the Defendant. He was also survived by Peter John
Carusi,
the son of the Defendant.
- Without
any undue familiarity, or disrespect intended, and for convenience, I shall
refer to the parties either by the role each plays
in the proceedings or by the
name used during the hearing. I shall refer to other family members, after
introduction, by her, or
his, first name.
- The
Plaintiff seeks provision out of the deceased's estate and notional estate
pursuant to the Succession Act 2006 (NSW) ("the Act"). The Act applies in
respect of the estate of a person who died on, or after, 1 March 2009. The Act
replaces the
Family Provision Act 1982 (NSW) ("the former Act"), which
was repealed, effective from 1 March 2009. A family provision order is an order
made by the Court
in relation to the estate, or notional estate, of a deceased
person, to provide from that estate, for the maintenance, education,
or
advancement in life, of an eligible person. The Plaintiff also seeks an order
that her costs of the proceedings be paid.
- The
deceased left a Will dated 3 July 2013. By that Will, he left the whole of his
estate to the Defendant. The Defendant has not
sought Probate of the
deceased’s Will.
- Since
there was no real estate, and virtually no personal estate, which the deceased
died seised, or possessed of, or entitled to,
in New South Wales, at the date of
death (because virtually all of his property was jointly held and passed to the
Defendant by survivorship),
a grant of administration of the deceased's Will was
not necessary in order to have property of the deceased vest in the executor:
s
44 of the Probate and Administration Act 1898 (NSW).
- Accordingly,
a question raised was whether the deceased’s interest in jointly held
property, which had passed by survivorship
to the Defendant, should be
designated as notional estate.
- The
parties agreed that the named Defendant is the appropriate party and the proper
contradictor of the Plaintiff’s claim. She
is now the sole registered
proprietor of all of the property that the Plaintiff has asked the Court to
designate as notional estate.
In any event, without opposition, she has
represented the estate of the deceased, since the commencement of the
proceedings. I shall
make the appropriate order in due course.
- The
Plaintiff commenced these proceedings by Summons filed on 1 December 2015. It is
not in dispute that the proceedings were commenced
within the time prescribed by
the Act (not later than 12 months after the date of the death of the deceased).
It is also not in dispute
that as a child of the deceased, the Plaintiff is an
eligible person within s 57(1)(c) of the Act. The language of the relevant
sub-section
is expressive of the person’s status, as well as her, or his,
relationship to the deceased. There is no age limit placed on
an eligible person
making an application.
Preliminary Issue
- The
Plaintiff sought an order under s 91 of the Act.
- The
section applies, since this is a case in which an application has been made by a
person for a family provision order, in respect
of the estate or notional estate
of a deceased person, or deceased transferee, respectively, in relation to which
administration
has not been granted. The Court may, if it is satisfied that it
is proper to do so, grant administration in respect of the estate
of the
deceased person, or deceased transferee, to the applicant, for the purposes only
of permitting the application concerned to
be dealt with, whether or not the
deceased person or deceased transferee left property in New South Wales.
- I
dealt with the issues that arise in a case where there has been no grant of
administration in Wheat v Wisbey [2013] NSWSC 537 at [29] – [60]. I
shall not repeat what I wrote in that case. However, in summary, I concluded
that there would be circumstances in
which it was “proper” to make
an order under s 91, and circumstances in which it was not. In any event, the
making of
a family provision order is independent of whether to grant probate or
administration under s 91.
- Senior
counsel for the Defendant proposed “...if the case gets that far, the
defendant would take advantage of an opportunity
to ... raise the funds in her
own way, to discharge any obligation”: T6.27 – T6.33.
- Even
though the making of an order under s 91 was not opposed, it seems to me, as it
did, in Wheat v Wisbey, since the Defendant (who is the executrix of the
deceased’s Will) is a party to the proceedings and has agreed to satisfy
any family provision order and costs order that may be made in favour of the
Plaintiff, that it is unnecessary, and, therefore, it
is not proper, to grant
administration under s 91 in this case.
- However,
as I did in Wheat v Wisbey, since an order under s 91 is not to be made,
but the holder of property that may be designated as notional estate is a party
to
the proceedings, I shall make an "otherwise order" under s 72 of the Act (to
which I shall refer), permitting the Plaintiff to proceed
against the Defendant,
as holder of property to be designated as notional estate, in the event that any
family provision order made
in the Plaintiff’s favour is not paid in
accordance with the terms of the order.
- (I
should mention that not very much was said in the submissions by either counsel
about the topic of designating property as notional
estate. Senior Counsel for
the Defendant did not concede that an order designating property as notional
estate should be made. In
fact, he reminded the Court of s 87 of the Act to
which reference will be made later in these reasons.)
Background
Facts
- In
a claim for a family provision order, factual context is necessary. It is next
convenient to begin with a statement of background
facts, since these provide
that context. For the most part, the facts stated are not controversial. In
relation to any matters that
were in dispute, to which I refer, the facts set
out hereunder should be regarded as the findings of the Court.
- The
deceased married Joan Mary Grace Callinan in February 1958. They were divorced
in September 1963. There was one child of the deceased’s
first marriage,
being the Plaintiff, who was born in March 1959 and who is now 58 years of
age.
- Joan
predeceased the deceased, having died in about May 2005. Following her death,
the Plaintiff inherited, pursuant to Joan’s
Will, about $700,000: T32.35
– T32.44.
- Joan
and the deceased separated in 1958 or 1959, but the Plaintiff was not aware of
his existence until she was introduced to him,
for the first time, in about
1969, when she was 10 years old. I shall return to the nature of their
relationship later in these reasons.
- The
Defendant was born in September 1938. She is nearly 79 years of age.
- The
deceased’s relationship with the Defendant commenced at the end of 1958.
At that time, she was already pregnant with her
son, Peter, who was born in
November 1958. The Defendant says that, from this time, she and the deceased
“were inseparable”.
She gave evidence that she did not know, then,
that the deceased was still married to Joan.
- Shortly
after Peter’s birth, the deceased moved into a home in which the Defendant
and Peter then lived. It was at this time
that the deceased informed the
Defendant that he was married to, but separated from, Joan.
- The
Defendant and the deceased were married in September 1975 and remained married
until his death in December 2014. Accordingly,
their relationship spanned 55
years.
- Tino
was born in February 1973 and Monique was born in March 1974.
- The
Plaintiff married her first husband, Robert, in 1980. There was one child of the
marriage, Dominica, who was born in August 1980.
The marriage ended in about
1985.
- The
Plaintiff married her second husband, Andrew Lees, from whom she is now
separated, in 1997. From this marriage, there were two
children, namely Finnian,
who was born in April 1998, and Luca, who was born in July 1999.
- As
stated, the deceased left the whole of his estate to the Defendant. The
Plaintiff was not mentioned directly, or indirectly, in
the deceased’s
Will. (Although “my children” were identified as substitute
beneficiaries, in the event that the
Defendant did not survive the deceased, the
Plaintiff did not fall within the definition of that term set out in Clause 2.2
of the
Will.) Accordingly, the Plaintiff received no provision out of the estate
of the deceased.
- The
deceased explained his reasons for omitting the Plaintiff as a beneficiary. I
shall return to this topic later in these reasons.
- As
there has been no grant of Probate, there was no Inventory of Property
identifying the deceased’s estate at the date of death.
However, the
Defendant, in an affidavit sworn in March 2016, stated that the estate then
consisted of a motor vehicle ($2,000) and
a Family Vault at Castlebrook Memorial
Park, Rouse Hill. In the affidavit, she could not attribute a value to the
Family Vault, although
she stated that the deceased had purchased it, in June
2003, for $190,000. She had attempted to sell it one year prior to the
deceased’s
death, but had not received any interest from potential
purchasers.
- In
the affidavit, the Defendant also acknowledged that there was property that
could be designated as notional estate. She identified
the deceased’s
interest as a joint tenant in real estate situated at Lancelot Street, Five
Dock, a suburb of Sydney (“the
Five Dock property”) ($1,250,000); a
one half interest in real estate situated at Old Pitt Town Road, Box Hill, NSW
(“the
Box Hill property”), which interest the deceased had
transferred to the Defendant in June 2012, pursuant to which transfer,
she and
the deceased held it as joint tenants ($1,425,000); the deceased’s
interest as a joint tenant in the Box Hill property
($1,425,000); and the
deceased’s joint interest in moneys held in two bank accounts
($86,051).
- In
a subsequent affidavit, sworn in February 2017, relied upon at the hearing, the
Defendant stated that the actual estate still consisted
of the motor vehicle and
the Family Vault. Whilst the Plaintiff, by her counsel, asserted that the Family
Vault had some value, no
evidence was given as to its current value. In any
event, there is no suggestion that it could be sold. I am satisfied that the
Family
Vault has some value, but for the purposes of these proceedings, it may
be ignored as property from which a family provision order
in favour of the
Plaintiff could be satisfied.
- In
the same affidavit, the Defendant described the nature of the property (and gave
its estimated value) that the Court may be able
to designate as notional estate.
She identified the property as
follows:
Description
|
Name
|
Value $
|
One half interest of the deceased as joint tenant with me at the date of
death in the proceeds of sale in the Five Dock NSW
|
Shirley Margaret Carusi
|
$ 746,570
|
One half interest of the deceased in the Box Hill property transferred by
the deceased to the Defendant on 17.6.12
|
Shirley Margaret Carusi
|
$1,875,000
|
One half interest of the deceased as joint tenant with the Defendant at the
date of death in the Box Hill property
|
Shirley Margaret Carusi
|
$1,875,000
|
One half interest in Westpac Joint Cheque Account due to deceased’s
failure to sever joint tenancy
|
Shirley Margaret Carusi
|
$ 111,039
|
TOTAL
|
|
$4,496,570
|
- The
Five Dock property was sold in May 2016. The mortgage secured on the Five Dock
property was discharged, and the Defendant received
$1,493,141, being the
balance of the proceeds of sale. However, Capital Gains Tax (CGT) is said to be
payable and it has been estimated
to be $168,915. At the date of the hearing,
the CGT had not been paid.
- At
the hearing, the parties agreed that the available net proceeds of sale of the
Five Dock property that could be designated as notional
estate was $662,113
(being one half of the net proceeds of sale of the Five Dock property ($746,570)
less one half of the estimated
CGT ($84,457), together with the cash in bank,
which was $111,039, making a total of $773,152.
- The
Defendant also gave evidence that Tino had paid $74,356, on account of nursing
home fees for the deceased, which amount had not,
as yet, been repaid to him. As
it would appear that the actual estate will not satisfy the payment of debts,
funeral and testamentary
expenses, the Defendant, herself, may have to meet the
repayment. It should be borne in mind that the Defendant may be required,
personally, to bear the liability when her financial circumstances and resources
are considered.
- Usually,
in calculating the value of the deceased's estate and notional estate finally
available for distribution, the costs of the
proceedings should be considered
with circumspection, since, unless the overall justice of the case requires some
different order
to be made, the plaintiff, if successful, normally would be
entitled to an order that her, or his, costs and disbursements, calculated
on
the ordinary basis, should be paid out of the estate of the deceased, while the
defendant, as the person representing the estate
of the deceased, irrespective
of the outcome of the proceedings, normally will be entitled to an order that
her, or his, costs, calculated
on the indemnity basis, should be paid out of the
estate.
- As
Basten JA put it in Chan v Chan [2016] NSWCA 222 at
[54]:
“In considering an amount by way of provision, it is appropriate also to
have regard to the diminution of the estate on account
of legal
costs.”
- However,
this statement does not mean that parties should assume, in all cases, that this
type of litigation can be pursued, safe
in the belief that costs will be paid
out of the estate: Carey v Robson (No 2) [2009] NSWSC 1199; Forsyth v
Sinclair (No 2) (2010) 28 VR 635; [2010] VSCA 195; Harkness v Harkness
(No 2) [2012] NSWSC 35.
- The
Plaintiff’s costs and disbursements, calculated on the ordinary basis, of
the proceedings, were estimated to be $123,000,
inclusive of GST, and on the
basis of a two day hearing. Of this estimated amount, she has paid $99,827. In
addition, there is the
amount of $5,000 in her solicitors’ trust account
which amount is being held on account of her costs.
- It
follows, if the Plaintiff is successful, and if an order for her costs to be
paid is made, and the estimate of costs, calculated
on the ordinary basis,
proves accurate, she will be reimbursed all, or at least some, of the costs that
she has paid.
- (I
should mention that the Plaintiff’s costs and disbursements, calculated on
the indemnity basis, were estimated to be $163,530.
One is required to suppress
the gasp for breath that such a large amount of costs provokes in what is,
essentially, a relatively
straightforward case. Why such a large amount has been
incurred in costs was not explained. That the amount is extremely high for
the
Plaintiff’s costs, calculated on the indemnity basis, is further
demonstrated when one compares the Defendant’s costs
and disbursements
which, whilst high, are significantly less, even taking into account that senior
Counsel appeared for the Defendant
at the hearing.)
- The
Defendant’s costs and disbursements, calculated on the indemnity basis, of
the proceedings, were estimated to be $113,325,
inclusive of GST and on the
basis of a two day hearing. Of this estimated amount, the Defendant has paid
$63,000, from funds that
she has, leaving $50,525 left to be paid.
- The
parties agreed that in the event that the Plaintiff is successful, the usual
costs orders should be made unless, within 14 days
of the making of orders, a
different order for costs is sought by either of them: T108.23 – T108.44.
(I have taken this agreed
position into account in framing the order proposed at
the conclusion of these reasons.)
- The
combined estimate of the parties’ costs is, therefore, $236,325. Neither
party asked me to make a specified gross sum costs
order instead of costs to be
assessed, pursuant to s 98(4)(c) of the Civil Procedure Act 2005 (NSW).
Therefore, I shall not determine the quantum of the Plaintiff’s costs that
should be paid out of the notional estate
of the deceased, in the event that an
order for her costs is made. That will be a matter for the parties after
judgment is delivered.
- The
only persons described as eligible persons, within the meaning of the Act, are
the Plaintiff, the Defendant, Tino, Monique and
Peter. Only the Plaintiff made
an application for an order under the Act, and as I understand it, none of the
Defendant’s children
wish to make an application that would reduce the
entitlement of their mother. Each, except Peter, is a witness whose affidavit
was
read in the proceedings. However, only the Plaintiff, the Defendant and Tino
were cross-examined.
- At
the hearing, counsel for the Plaintiff did not cross-examine Monique. He sought
leave to re-open the Plaintiff’s case after
he had elected not to
cross-examine her (T95.42 – T95.44), but, after some debate, counsel for
the Plaintiff did not persist
with the application.
- The
Defendant has not made an application for an order under the Act. She did raise
her financial and material circumstances in the
proceedings, upon which she was
cross-examined. The Court may not disregard the deceased’s freedom of
testamentary disposition,
and the preferable disposition to her as the sole
beneficiary, regardless of her financial position or needs. Section 61 of the
Act provides that her interests, as a beneficiary, cannot be disregarded, even
though she has not made an application.
- Similarly,
as will be referred to later, the Court, in considering property to be
designated as notional estate, must also consider
a number of matters which
relate to the Defendant’s position as the sole owner of that property: s
87 of the Act.
Deceased’s Testamentary Intentions
- The
deceased made a number of Wills during his lifetime, in each of which, other
than the last, he had made provision for the Plaintiff.
- By
his Will, made on 25 May 1996, the deceased gave 25% of his residuary estate to
the Defendant and divided 75% equally between his
three children and Peter (part
of Ex. 1). It follows that under this Will, the Plaintiff would have received
about 19% of the deceased’s
estate.
- By
his Will, made on 22 November 2004, the deceased provided a legacy of $500,000
to the Plaintiff, 25% of the balance to the Defendant
and the balance of his
residuary estate to Peter, Tino and Monique in equal shares (part of Ex. 1).
This is, on any view, a significant
lump sum by way of provision made for the
Plaintiff.
- By
his Will made on 14 September 2009, the deceased provided a legacy of $500,000
to be divided equally between the Plaintiff, Dominica,
Finnian and Luca. He left
his residuary estate, after payment of debts, funeral and testamentary expenses,
as to 40% to the Defendant
and as to the balance to be divided equally between
Peter, Tino and Monique (part of Ex. 1). This is less provision, by way of a
lump sum, but would have amounted to a legacy of $125,000.
- By
his Will made on 20 August 2010, the deceased left the Plaintiff a legacy of
$50,000, in addition to legacies of $50,000 each being
left to Dominica, Finnian
and Luca, the latter two legacies to be paid when each attained the age of 25
years (part of Ex. 1).
- I
have dealt with the deceased’s last Will earlier in which no provision was
made for the Plaintiff.
- It
can be seen that the deceased’s testamentary intentions appear to reveal
that, as time passed, the deceased reduced the provision
made for the Plaintiff.
(Of course, at the date of each of the earlier Wills, the estate of the deceased
would be likely to have
had a greater value than it currently has since the
transfer of the Box Hill property did not occur until 2012.)
- In
a Statutory Declaration made by the deceased on 4 December 2004 (Ex. 2), the
deceased wrote:
“1. In making my will I have made provision of $500,000
for my daughter Zena.
2. I have done this because of previous provision that I have
made for her during her lifetime.
3. When she purchased a house in Drummoyne I gave her the sum
of $400,000 of which she repaid $200,000. This made a net gift of
$200,000.
4. Further I gave her $50,000 to buy a car.
5. I also gave her one gift of $100,000 which she needed for
different things.
6. I also gave her another $150,000 in various parcels of
$5,000, $10,000 and $20,000.
7. All of these gifts were made after I sold Parklea.
8. Thus I believe the provision of $500,000 made in my will is
just and adequate.”
- On
the day the deceased made his last Will (3 July 2013), he wrote (Ex.
3):
"To whom it may concern –
I, Agostino Phillip Carusi have over the years extended significant financial
support to my daughter, Zena Carusi-Lees providing
her with financial assistance
estimating over $1 million dollars to purchase cars, houses & overall
wellbeing & lifestyle.
I feel I have assisted her greatly during this time more so than any of my other
children.
Subsequently it is my wish & request in my last Will & Testament that my
daughter, Zena Carusi-Lees under any circumstances,
is not the beneficiary of my
present or future assets."
- There
is no doubt that evidence of the intentions of the deceased in respect of
provision for an applicant are admissible in family
provision proceedings:
Bosch v Perpetual Trustee Co Ltd [1938] AC 463 at [481]-[482]. The Court
may also have regard to any evidence of the testamentary intentions of the
deceased, including evidence
of statements made by the deceased for the purpose
of determining, relevantly, in this case, whether to make a family provision
order
and the nature of any such order: s 60(2)(j) of the Act.
- However,
it is to be remembered, as well, that merely because a statement is made by the
deceased concerning the applicant for provision,
it does not, unquestionably,
have to be accepted as true. Such a statement may be just as inaccurate, or as
unreliable, as a statement
of a living witness, whether as the result of
mistake, or failure of memory, or deliberate untruth: Worsley v Solomon
[2008] NSWSC 444 at [35].
- I
bear in mind, also, what was said by the Court of Appeal of New Zealand in In
re Green, deceased; Zuckerman v Public Trustee [1950] NZGazLawRp 121; [1951] NZLR 135 at 141,
(which passage was approved by the majority of the High Court of Australia in
Hughes v National Trustees, Executors and Agency Company of Australasia
Ltd [1979] HCA 2; (1979) 143 CLR 134 at 152):
" ... the testator should not be allowed from the grave to condemn the child and
to impose upon that child the positive duty of disproving
the allegations as an
essential preliminary to prosecuting the claim."
- Earlier,
at 149, Gibbs J had written:
"Such a statement is admissible as original evidence to prove the knowledge,
motive or other state of mind of the testatrix should
that be
relevant."
- In
Pincius v Wood [1998] TASSC 46, Cox CJ noted, at 4:
“A reason based on a belief proved to be mistaken may well be relevant in
support of an applicant's claim. Thus, if the reason
advanced for inclusion is a
mistaken belief in the prosperity of an applicant who enjoyed a good
relationship with the testator that
could properly be taken into account and
would be a strong reason for interfering with the
will...”
- In
Diver v Neal [2009] NSWCA 54 at [61], Basten JA
wrote:
“There will be cases in which intervention in the distribution of the
estate will be justified on the basis that the testator
was not fully aware of
all the relevant circumstances when he or she made his or her will: see, eg,
In re Allen (deceased); Allen v Manchester [1921] NZGazLawRp 155; [1922] NZLR 218 at 220-221
(Salmond J). On the other hand, too much weight should not be given to the
testator’s expressed intention. The Court
is not limited to considering
the circumstances as they existed when the will was made, or when the testator
died. Rather, s 9(2) requires the adequacy of provision to be determined as at
the date of the hearing of the application. Furthermore, whatever the semantic
phraseology, the authorities are unanimous that the Court is required to apply
an objective standard in assessing the adequacy of
the provision
made.”
- More
recently, in Brimelow v Alampi [2016] VSC 135 , McMillan J wrote, at [15]
(although the terms of the relevant section are
different):
“It has always been the case that the courts have taken into account the
terms of any expressions of the deceased in admissible
form. In respect of
applications made where a deceased died after 20 July 1998, the Court may accept
any evidence of the reasons
of a deceased for making the disposition in his or
her will (if any) and for not making proper provision for an applicant, whether
or not the evidence is in writing. By mandating that the Court must take such
expressions into account it is not intended that such
evidence, by will or in
other evidence, suddenly takes on some higher status. The weight to be attached
to such statements will depend
on the circumstances. Reasons can be shown to be
incorrect or misconceived, which may enhance or boost the strength or defence of
a claim.”
- Finally,
I repeat what I wrote in Andrew v Andrew [2011] NSWSC 115 at
[25]:
"While the Court will consider any explanations given by the deceased in the
will, or elsewhere, for excluding a particular person
as a beneficiary, such
explanations do not relieve the court from engaging in the enquiry required by
the Act: Slack-Smith v Slack-Smith [2010] NSWSC 625 at [27]. What an
explanation may do is cast light on the relationship between the deceased and
that person, at least from the deceased's
perspective."
- In
this case, there was some dispute about the nature of the provision made for the
Plaintiff during the lifetime of the deceased,
which was a matter that seemed to
have permeated the reasoning of the deceased in making the provision that he
made for the Plaintiff
in a number of his Wills, and which provided a reason for
omitting her completely in the last Will.
- The
Plaintiff accepted that the deceased had been “very generous and very kind
and very loving” towards her (T67.16 –
T67.18); acknowledged that in
the period between 1985 and 1992, he had sent cheques for amounts of $1,000 or
$2,000 on several occasions
to assist with hospital expenses; had given her the
various amounts that he had itemised in the Statutory Declaration (Ex. 2), with
the exception of the amount in Paragraph 6, in respect of which she said she was
not sure if that was the amount, but that it “would
be close to that
amount” (T70.04 – T70.08); that in respect of the loan of $400,000,
it had been completely interest
free; that when the Drummoyne home had been
sold, she and her husband had made a profit of some hundreds of thousands of
dollars
(T72.24 – T72.44); and that even after 2004, he had provided her
with some money, including in 2013, when he gave her financial
assistance which
went towards, amongst other things, her wellbeing and lifestyle and her day to
day expenses. However, she did not
agree that she had received “over $1
million dollars” from the deceased.
- It
was not put to the Plaintiff that amounts that she had received from the
deceased after 2004 (as set out in Ex. 2) had amounted
to more than an
additional $500,000 (making it over $1 million as had been stated by the
deceased in Ex. 3.
- I
raised this matter with senior counsel for the Defendant (T78.35 –
T79.37):
“... If I add up all the figures in exhibit 2, which are not loans that
have been repaid and excluding any interest that would
have accrued on the
loans, on my calculations it comes to $500,000. Do you agree?
ELLISON: 350 plus 150 is 500.
HIS HONOUR: Yes. Now, then if I go to exhibit 3, despite what was said in 2004
in the statutory declaration, in this document it
suggests financial assistance
estimating over $1 million. Is there to be any evidence from your side to
demonstrate any additional
amounts that have been paid or advanced to the
plaintiff--
ELLISON: Not by way of--
HIS HONOUR: --after 2004 that would--
ELLISON: Raise it from 500.
HIS HONOUR: --raise it from 500,000 to a million dollars?
ELLISON: No, not by way of documentation, your Honour. I am reminded that in
Monique's evidence she refers to the fact that she would
write cheques for the -
in para 15(c), for instance, of Monique's affidavit she says, in relation to
2003 - I can't be precise but
she may have given additional money but I can't
point to anything that takes it from 500 - directly takes it from 500 to a
million.
All I can do is say the deceased might have thought that his largesse
benefitted her, for instance and I'm just making this half
by way of submission,
enabled her to make a profit on real estate, things like that.
HIS HONOUR: But that isn't what he says. He says that he has extended financial
support, providing her with financial assistance
estimating over $1 million and
all I'm really trying to enquire is whether there is any evidence that extends
the $500,000 that he
has been very, very specific about in exhibit 2--
ELLISON: Not directly, no.
HIS HONOUR: --to get it to the million dollars in exhibit 3.
ELLISON: No, your Honour.
HIS HONOUR: No, thank you. So at the moment, if the evidence remained as it is
and bearing in mind the admission of the plaintiff,
he appears to have made
financial provision for her during his lifetime of about $500,000, subject to
anything else you can establish,
is that right?
ELLISON: 500 - I mean, I'm--
HIS HONOUR: Plus the interest--
ELLISON: Interest foregone.
HIS HONOUR: Yes.
ELLISON: Yes.”
- The
Defendant acknowledged that what had been stated by the deceased in Ex. 2 was an
accurate list of the amounts that he had provided
to the Plaintiff, at least
until 2004. She also accepted that, as far as she knew, the deceased had made no
further gifts to the
Plaintiff after the date of the Statutory Declaration:
T72.13 - T73.40.
- There
was some cross-examination of the Defendant about whether the the reference to
“cars [and] houses” in Ex. 3 was
accurate. She did not seem to know
(T88.46 – T89.32). I do not think anything turns on the use of the plural
rather than the
singular. More important appears to be the inability to
establish to the Court’s satisfaction that the deceased had provided
the
Plaintiff with “financial assistance of over $1 million”.
- (There
was also some evidence by Tino, who was cross-examined, but not about this
topic, that in 2010, the Plaintiff’s husband,
Andrew, had asked the
deceased to lend him and the Plaintiff $250,000 to cover expenses for “the
house, school fees and general
expenses”, but that the deceased had
refused the request.)
- Taking
all of the evidence into account, I am satisfied that the Defendant was not able
to demonstrate that the statement made by
the deceased in Ex. 3, was accurate,
so far as it related to the total of the amounts said to have been advanced to
the Plaintiff.
Nor can I be satisfied that the Plaintiff’s evidence that
she had not received as much as the amount asserted by the deceased
was
wrong.
- Yet,
on any view, as acknowledged by the Plaintiff, the deceased had been extremely
generous, financially, towards her during his
lifetime and had assisted her,
financially, over a long period of time.
The Statutory
Scheme
- Next,
I shall discuss the statutory scheme that is relevant to the facts of the
present case. As the Plaintiff’s eligibility
and the commencement of the
proceedings within time is not in issue, the only questions for the Court to
determine are whether the
Plaintiff has been left with inadequate provision for
her proper maintenance, education and advancement in life and, if so, what,
if
any, further provision ought to be made out of the estate of the deceased for
those purposes.
- It
is this mandatory legislative imperative that drives the ultimate result, and it
is only if the Court is satisfied of the inadequacy
of provision that
consideration is given to whether to make a family provision order (s 59(2)).
Only then may “the Court... make such order for provision out of the
estate of the deceased person as the Court thinks ought
to be made for the
maintenance, education or advancement in life of the eligible person, having
regard to the facts known to the
Court at the time the order is made”. The
Act stipulates no automatic entitlement to provision and the deceased’s
Will
applies unless a specific application is made to, and acceded to, by the
Court.
- The
parties were largely agreed as to the principles to be applied on this topic so
it is not necessary to re-state them in detail.
I have dealt with them in many
cases, one of which is Hinderry v Hinderry [2016] NSWSC 780.
- Whether
the disposition of the deceased’s estate was not such as to make adequate
provision for the proper maintenance, education
or advancement in life of the
Plaintiff will always, as a practical matter, involve an evaluation of the
provision, if any, made
for the claimant on the one hand, and the
claimant’s “needs” that cannot be met from his, or her, own
resources
on the other: Hunter v Hunter (1987) 8 NSWLR 573 at 575.
- "Provision"
is not defined by the Act, but it was noted in Diver v Neal at [34], that
the term "covers the many forms of support and assistance which one individual
can give to another. That support and
assistance will vary over the course of
the person's lifetime".
- Neither
is the word "maintenance", nor the phrase "advancement in life", defined in the
Act. However, in Vigolo v Bostin [2005] HCA 11; (2005) 221 CLR 191,
Callinan and Heydon JJ, at 228-229, said, of the words "maintenance", "support"
and "advancement":
“'Maintenance' may imply a continuity of a pre-existing state of affairs,
or provision over and above a mere sufficiency of
means upon which to live.
'Support' similarly may imply provision beyond bare need. The use of the two
terms serves to amplify the
powers conferred upon the court. And, furthermore,
provision to secure or promote 'advancement' would ordinarily be provision
beyond
the necessities of life. It is not difficult to conceive of a case in
which it appears that sufficient provision for support and
maintenance has been
made, but that in the circumstances, say, of a promise or an expectation
reasonably held, further provision
would be proper to enable a potential
beneficiary to improve his or her prospects in life, or to undertake further
education."
- In
Alexander v Jansson [2010] NSWCA 176, Brereton J (with whom Basten JA and
Handley AJA agreed), said at [18]:
“‘Proper maintenance’ is not limited to the bare sustenance of
a claimant...but requires consideration of the totality
of the claimant’s
position in life including age, status, relationship with the deceased,
financial circumstances, the environs
to which he or she is accustomed, and
mobility.”
- Although
discussed in the context of legislation in the United Kingdom that has a few
similarities, (and omitting parts of the reasons
that, clearly, would not apply
to the Act) in Ilott v The Blue Cross & Ors [2017] UKSC 17 at [14]
– [15], the following passage in the judgment of Lord Hughes (with whom
Lord Neuberger, Lady Hale, Lord Kerr, Lord Clarke,
Lord Wilson and Lord Sumption
agreed) appears:
“The concept of maintenance is no doubt broad... It must import provision
to meet the everyday expenses of living...
The level at which maintenance may be provided for is clearly flexible and falls
to be assessed on the facts of each case. It is
not limited to subsistence
level. Nor, although maintenance is by definition the provision of income rather
than capital, need it
necessarily be provided for by way of periodical payments,
for example under a trust. It will very often be more appropriate, as
well as
cheaper and more convenient for other beneficiaries and for executors, if income
is provided by way of a lump sum from which
both income and capital can be drawn
over the years... Lump sum orders are expressly provided for... There may be
other cases appropriate
for lump sums; the provision of a vehicle to enable the
claimant to get to work might be one example and, as will be seen, the present
case affords another. As Browne-Wilkinson J envisaged (obiter) in In re
Dennis ... there is no reason why the provision of housing should not be
maintenance in some cases...”
- Although
the existence, or absence, of “needs” which the applicant cannot
meet from her, or his, own resources will always
be highly relevant and often
decisive, the statutory formulation, and, therefore, the issue in every case, is
whether the disposition
of the deceased’s estate was not such as to make
adequate provision for her or his proper maintenance, education and advancement
in life: Singer v Berghouse [1994] HCA 40; (1994) 181 CLR 201 at
227.
- “Need”,
of course, is also a relative concept: de Angelis v de Angelis [2003] VSC
432 at [45]. It is different from “want” and does not simply mean
“demand” or “desire”. The latent difference
between the
words was stated by Lord Neuberger of Abbotsbury (now President of the Supreme
Court of the United Kingdom), in the House
of Lords decision, R (on the
application of M) v Slough Borough Council [2008] UKHL 52; [2008] 1 WLR 1808
at [54]:
“‘Need’ is a more flexible word than it might first appear.
‘In need of’ plainly means more than merely
‘want’, but
it falls far short of ‘cannot survive
without’.”
- In
Boettcher v Driscoll (2014) 119 SASR 523; [2014] SASC 86 at [41], David J
added:
“‘Need’ is not so synonymous with ‘want’ such that
the two are interchangeable.”
- As
Callinan and Heydon JJ emphasised in Vigolo v Bostin at [122], the
question of the adequacy of the provision made by the deceased “is not to
be decided in a vacuum, or by looking
simply to the question whether the
applicant has enough upon which to survive or live comfortably”. The
inquiry is not confined
only to the material circumstances of the applicant. It
is a broader concept, which requires consideration of matters necessary to
guard
against unforeseen contingencies. The whole of the context must be
examined.
- If
the Court is satisfied that, at the time when the Court is considering the
application, adequate provision for the proper maintenance,
education or
advancement in life of the applicant has not been made by the Will of the
deceased, it determines whether to make an
order for provision and what
provision ought to be made.
- The
questions posed arise under s 59(2) and s 60(1)(b) of the Act. Mason CJ, Deane
and McHugh JJ, in Singer v Berghouse, at 211, affirmed that the decision
made involves an exercise of discretion in the accepted sense. The fact that the
Court has a
discretion means that it may refuse to make an order even though the
jurisdictional question has been answered in the applicant’s
favour.
- Section
60 of the Act provides:
“(1)The Court may have regard to the matters set out in subsection (2) for
the purpose of determining:
(a) whether the person in whose favour the order is sought to be made (the
applicant) is an eligible person, and
(b) whether to make a family provision order and the nature of any such
order.
(2) The following matters may be considered by the court:
(a) any family or other relationship between the applicant and the deceased
person, including the nature and duration of the relationship,
(b) the nature and extent of any obligations or responsibilities owed by the
deceased person to the applicant, to any other person
in respect of whom an
application has been made for a family provision order or to any beneficiary of
the deceased person’s
estate,
(c) the nature and extent of the deceased person’s estate (including any
property that is, or could be, designated as notional
estate of the deceased
person) and of any liabilities or charges to which the estate is subject, as in
existence when the application
is being considered,
(d) the financial resources (including earning capacity) and financial needs,
both present and future, of the applicant, of any other
person in respect of
whom an application has been made for a family provision order or of any
beneficiary of the deceased person’s
estate,
(e) if the applicant is cohabiting with another person - the financial
circumstances of the other person,
(f) any physical, intellectual or mental disability of the applicant, any other
person in respect of whom an application has been
made for a family provision
order or any beneficiary of the deceased person’s estate that is in
existence when the application
is being considered or that may reasonably be
anticipated,
(g) the age of the applicant when the application is being considered,
(h) any contribution (whether financial or otherwise) by the applicant to the
acquisition, conservation and improvement of the estate
of the deceased person
or to the welfare of the deceased person or the deceased person’s family,
whether made before or after
the deceased person’s death, for which
adequate consideration (not including any pension or other benefit) was not
received,
by the applicant,
(i) any provision made for the applicant by the deceased person, either during
the deceased person’s lifetime or made from
the deceased person’s
estate,
(j) any evidence of the testamentary intentions of the deceased person,
including evidence of statements made by the deceased person,
(k) whether the applicant was being maintained, either wholly or partly, by the
deceased person before the deceased person’s
death and, if the Court
considers it relevant, the extent to which and the basis on which the deceased
person did so,
(l) whether any other person is liable to support the applicant,
(m) the character and conduct of the applicant before and after the date of the
death of the deceased person,
(n) the conduct of any other person before and after the date of the death of
the deceased person,
(o) any relevant Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander customary law,
(p) any other matter the Court considers relevant, including matters in
existence at the time of the deceased person’s death
or at the time the
application is being considered.”
- It
can be seen that s 60(2) enumerates 15 specific matters, described by Basten JA
in Andrew v Andrew (2012) 81 NSWLR 656; [2012] NSWCA 308 at [37], as
“a multifactorial list”, and by Lindsay J in Verzar v Verzar
[2012] NSWSC 1380 at [123], as “a valuable prompt” to which the
Court may have regard, together with “any other matter the court considers
relevant”, for the purposes of determining eligibility, whether to make a
family provision order and the nature of any such
order.
- In
Chapple v Wilcox [2014] NSWCA 392; 87 NSWLR 646 at [7], Basten JA
wrote:
“Section 60 of the Succession Act spells out the matters which the
Court may have regard to in determining whether the claimant ‘is an
eligible person’
and whether to make a family provision order: s 60(1).
Most of the factors listed in s 60(2) will be irrelevant in relation to whether
the applicant is an eligible person, a matter largely dependent upon the
language of s 57. The matters set out must be available considerations in
relation to both limbs of s 59(1) dealing with a family provision order, namely
par (b) and par (c). Section 60 provides no assistance in relation to the
different considerations which may arise in respect of each paragraph of s
59(1). The factors are also relevant to the determination of the ‘nature
of any such order’, which presumably includes the discretionary
element to
be found in s 59(2): s 60(1)(b).”
- The
section does not prioritise the catalogue of matters that may be taken into
account. No matter is more, or less, important than
any other. The weight of
each of the matters specified in the section, which may be taken into account,
will depend upon the facts
of the particular case. There is no mandatory command
to take into account any of the matters enumerated. None of the matters listed
is, necessarily, of decisive significance and none differentiate, in their
application, between classes of eligible person. Similarly,
there is no
distinction based on gender.
- The
section also does not say how the matters listed are to be used to determine the
matters identified in s 60(1). Considering each of the relevant matters does not
prescribe a particular result, and whilst there is likely to be a substantial
overlap
in the matters that the Court may take into account when determining the
answers to what is posed in s 60(1), those matters are not identical.
- A
reference to some of the matters in s 60(2) not only permits, but requires, a
comparison to be made between the respective positions of the applicant and any
other eligible
person, as well as of any beneficiary, whilst others do not.
Importantly, also, many of the matters in sub-section (2), of themselves,
are
incapable of providing an answer to the questions posed in s 60(1).
- Leaving
aside the question of eligibility, the matters referred to in s 60(2) may be
considered on “the discretionary question”, namely whether to make
an order and the nature of that order. Importantly,
under s 60(2), attention is
drawn to matters that may have existed at the deceased’s death, or
subsequently.
- Section
65(1) of the Act requires the family provision order to specify:
- (a) the person
or persons for whom provision is to be made, and
- (b) the amount
and nature of the provision, and
- (c) the manner
in which the provision is to be provided and the part or parts of the estate out
of which it is to be provided, and
- (d) any
conditions, restrictions or limitations imposed by the Court.
- The
order may require the provision to be made in a variety of ways, including a
lump sum, periodic sum, or “in any other manner
the Court thinks
fit” (s 65(2) of the Act). If the provision is made by payment of an
amount of money, the order may specify whether interest is payable on the
whole,
or any part, of the amount payable for the period, and, if so, the period during
which interest is payable and the rate of
interest (s 65(3) of the Act).
- Section
66 of the Act sets out the consequential and ancillary orders that may be
made.
- Unless
the Court orders otherwise, any family provision order under the Act takes
effect as if it were a codicil to the will (s 72(1)(a) of the Act). I shall make
an order that the order in favour of the Plaintiff should not have that
effect.
- Section
78(1)(a) has the effect that the court may only make an order designating
property as notional estate for the purposes of a family provision
order to be
made under Part 3.2 of the Act. Thus, it is necessary to determine whether a
family provision order should be made in the Plaintiff’s favour.
- Section
99(1) of the Act provides that the Court may order the costs of proceedings in
relation to the estate, or notional estate, of the deceased
(including costs in
connection with mediation) to be paid out of the estate in such manner as the
Court thinks fit.
- There
are some other general principles that should be identified for the benefit of
the parties, although I have repeated them in
many cases.
- The
Court’s discretion in making an order is not untrammelled, or to be
exercised according to idiosyncratic notions of what
is thought to be fair, or
in such a way as to transgress, unnecessarily, upon the deceased’s freedom
of testation: Pontifical Society for the Propagation of the Faith v Scales
[1962] HCA 19; (1962) 107 CLR 9 at 19; McKenzie v Topp [2004] VSC 90
at [63].
- In
Stott v Cook (1960) 33 ALJR 447 at 453-4, Taylor J, although dissenting
in his determination of the case, observed that the Court did not have a mandate
to rework
a will according to its own notions of fairness. His Honour
added:
“There is, in my opinion, no reason for thinking that justice is better
served by the application of abstract principles of
fairness than by acceptance
of the judgment of a competent testator whose knowledge of the virtues and
failings of the members of
his family equips him for the responsibility of
disposing of his estate in far better measure than can be afforded to a Court by
a few pages of affidavits sworn after his death and which only too frequently
provide but an incomplete and shallow reflection of
family relations and
characteristics. All this is, of course, subject to the proviso that an order
may be made if it appears that
the testator has failed to discharge a
duty to make provision for the maintenance, education or advancement of
his widow or children. But it must appear, firstly, that such
a duty existed
and, secondly, that it has not been discharged.”
- Of
the freedom of testamentary disposition, in Grey v Harrison [1997] 2 VR
359, Callaway JA said, at 366:
“... [I]t is one of the freedoms that shape our society, and an important
human right, that a person should be free to dispose
of his or her property as
he or she thinks fit. Rights and freedoms must of course be exercised and
enjoyed conformably with the
rights and freedoms of others, but there is no
equity, as it were, to interfere with a testator’s dispositions unless he
or
she has abused that right. To do so is to assume a power to take property
from the intended object of the testator’s bounty
and give it to someone
else. In conferring a discretion in the wide terms found in s 91, the
legislature intended it to be exercised in a principled way. A breach of moral
duty is the justification for curial intervention
and simultaneously limits its
legitimate extent.”
- In
Vigolo v Bostin, at [10], Gleeson CJ pointed out that the relevant
legislation did not confer new rights of succession and did not create legal
rights
of inheritance. Rather, his Honour explained:
“It preserved freedom of testamentary disposition, but subjected that
freedom to a new qualification”.
- In
Goodsell v Wellington [2011] NSWSC 1232 at [108], I also noted
that:
“Freedom of testamentary disposition remains a prominent feature of the
Australian legal system. Its significance is both practical
and symbolic and
should not be underestimated.”
- As
Pembroke J said, in Wilcox v Wilcox [2012] NSWSC 1138 at
[23]:
“The court does not simply ride roughshod over the testator’s
intentions... The court’s power to make an award
is limited. The purpose
of the discretionary power under Section 59(1) is to redress circumstances where
‘adequate provision’ has not been made for the
‘proper maintenance, education or advancement in life’ of the
claimant. The adjectives ‘adequate’ and ‘proper’
are
words of circumspection.”
- White
J referred to these principles in Slack v Rogan; Palffy v Rogan [2013]
NSWSC 522; (2013) 85 NSWLR 253 at [127]:
“In my view, respect should be given to a capable testator’s
judgment as to who should benefit from the estate if it
can be seen that the
testator has duly considered the claims on the estate. That is not to deny that
s 59 of the Succession Act interferes with the freedom of testamentary
disposition. Plainly it does, and courts have a duty to interfere with the will
if the
provision made for an eligible applicant is less than adequate for his or
her proper maintenance and advancement in life. But it
must be acknowledged that
the evidence that can be presented after the testator’s death is
necessarily inadequate. Typically,
as in this case, there can be no or only
limited contradiction of the applicant’s evidence as to his or her
relationship and
dealings with the deceased. The deceased will have been in a
better position to determine what provision for a claimant’s maintenance
and advancement in life is proper than will be a court called on to determine
that question months or years after the deceased’s
death when the person
best able to give evidence on that question is no longer alive. Accordingly, if
the deceased was capable of
giving due consideration to that question and did
so, considerable weight should be given to the testator’s testamentary
wishes
in recognition of the better position in which the deceased was placed
(Stott v Cook (1960) 33 ALJR 447 per Taylor J at 453-454 cited in
Nowak v Beska [2013] NSWSC 166 at [136]). This is subject to the
qualification that the court’s determination under s 59(1)(c) and (2) is
to be made having regard to the circumstances at the time the court is
considering the application, rather than at the
time of the deceased’s
death or will.”
- In
relation to a statement made by the deceased, in Hughes v National Trustees
Executors & Agency Co of Australasia Ltd at [7], Barwick CJ
wrote:
“...When attempting to decide what a particular testator or testatrix
ought as a just and wise father or mother to have done,
those reasons which that
testator or testatrix actually entertained for his or her decision cannot, it
seems to me, justly be ignored.
Of course, if the evidence in the matter does
not support such reasons, they cannot be acted upon simply because the deceased
asserted
or entertained them.”
- Yet,
in considering the question, the nature and content of what is adequate
provision for the proper maintenance, education and advancement
in life of an
applicant, is not fixed or static. Rather, it is a flexible concept, the measure
of which should be adapted to conform
with what is considered to be right and
proper according to contemporary accepted community standards: Pontifical
Society for the Propagation of the Faith v Scales at 19; Walker v
Walker (Supreme Court (NSW), Young J, 17 May 1996, unrep); Stern v
Sekers; Sekers v Sekers [2010] NSWSC 59.
- In
Henry v Hancock [2016] NSWSC 71 at [69], Brereton J
wrote:
“Formerly, the yardstick which was applied was that of the wise and just
testator. Nowadays, it is fashionable to couch it
in terms of “community
standards”, although I am not at all sure that this is any different from
the moral obligation
of a wise and just testator and, as has not infrequently
been pointed out, there is no ascertainable external community standard
to guide
the decision, which involves a broad evaluative judgment unconstrained by
preconceptions and predispositions, and affording
due respect to the judgment of
a capable testator who appears to have duly considered the claims on his or her
testamentary bounty
— subject to the qualification that the court’s
determination is made having regard to the circumstances at the time
of the
hearing, rather than at the time of the testator’s will or
death.”
- In
all cases under the Act, what is adequate and proper provision is necessarily
fact specific.
- All
of the financial needs of an applicant have to be taken into account and
considered by reference to the other factors referred
to in the Act and in
Singer v Berghouse. What is proper provision is not arrived at by adding
up all of the identified financial needs: Hyland v Burbidge [2000] NSWSC
12 at [56]. Nor does it follow that, if the Court decides it is inappropriate to
make a specific provision in respect of one identified head
of claim, that any
identified financial need, even a contingent need, in relation to that claim
becomes irrelevant to the final assessment:
Mayfield v Lloyd-Williams
[2004] NSWSC 419 at [89].
- The
size of the estate or notional estate is a significant consideration in
determining an application for provision. However, its
size does not justify the
Court in rewriting the will in accordance with its own ideas of justice and
fairness: Bowyer v Wood [2007] SASC 327; (2007) 99 SASR 190 at [41];
Borebor v Keane [2013] VSC 35 at [67].
- In
relation to the Plaintiff’s claim, being a claim for provision by an adult
child, I have set out the following principles
in many other cases, which are
also useful to remember:
- (a) The
relationship between parent and child changes when the child attains adulthood.
However, a child does not cease to be a natural
recipient of parental ties,
affection or support, as the bonds of childhood are relaxed.
- (b) It is
impossible to describe, in terms of universal application, the moral obligation,
or community expectation, of a parent in
respect of an adult child. It can be
said that, “ordinarily, the community expects parents to raise and educate
their children
to the very best of their ability while they remain children;
probably to assist them with a tertiary education, where that is feasible;
where
funds allow, to provide them with a start in life, such as a deposit on a home,
although it might well take a different form.
The community does not expect a
parent, in ordinary circumstances, to provide an unencumbered house, or to set
his, or her, child
up in a position where she or he can acquire a house
unencumbered, although in a particular case, where assets permit and the
relationship
between the parties is such as to justify it, there might be such
an obligation”: Taylor v Farrugia [2009] NSWSC 801 at [57];
McGrath v Eves [2005] NSWSC 1006; Kohari v Snow [2013] NSWSC 452
at [121]; Salmon v Osmond [2015] NSWCA 42 at [109].
- (c) Generally,
also, “the community does not expect a parent to look after his or her
children for the rest of [the child’s
life] and into retirement,
especially when there is someone else, such as a spouse, who has a prime
obligation to do so. Plainly, if an adult child remains a dependent of a
parent, the community usually expects the parent to make
provision to fulfil
that ongoing dependency after death. But where a child, even an adult child,
falls on hard times and where there
are assets available, then the community may
expect parents to provide a buffer against contingencies; and where a
child has been unable to accumulate superannuation or make other provision
for
their retirement, something to assist in retirement where otherwise they would
be left destitute”: Taylor v Farrugia at [58].
- (d) If the
applicant has an obligation to support others, such as a parent’s
obligation to support a dependent child, that will
be a relevant factor in
determining what is an appropriate provision for the maintenance of the
applicant: Re Buckland, Deceased [1966] VicRp 58; [1966] VR 404 at 411; Hughes v
National Trustees Executors and Agency Co of Australasia Ltd at 148;
Goodman v Windeyer [1980] HCA 31; 144 CLR 490 at 498, 505. But the Act
does not permit orders to be made to provide for the support of third persons
that the applicant, however
reasonably, wishes to support, where there is no
obligation of the deceased to support such persons: Re Buckland, Deceased
at 411; Kleinig v Neal (No 2) [1981] 2 NSWLR 532 at 537; Mayfield
v Lloyd-Williams at [86].
- (e) There is no
need for an applicant adult child to show some special need or some special
claim: McCosker v McCosker [1957] HCA 82, (1957) 97 CLR 566; Kleinig v
Neal (No 2) at 545; Bondelmonte v Blanckensee [1989] WAR 305;
Hawkins v Prestage (1989) 1 WAR 37 at 45; Taylor v Farrugia, at
[58].
- (f) The adult
child’s lack of reserves to meet demands, particularly of ill health,
which become more likely with advancing
years, is a relevant consideration:
MacGregor v MacGregor [2003] WASC 169 at [179]- [182]; Crossman
v Riedel [2004] ACTSC 127 at [49]. Likewise, the need for financial security
and a fund to protect against the ordinary vicissitudes of life are relevant:
Marks v Marks [2003] WASCA 297 at [43]. In addition, if the applicant is
unable to earn, or has a limited means of earning, an income, this could give
rise to an increased
call on the estate of the deceased: Christie v Manera
[2006] WASC 287; Butcher v Craig [2009] WASC 164 at [17].
- (g) The
applicant has the onus of satisfying the Court, on the balance of probabilities,
of the justification for the claim: Hughes v National Trustees, Executors and
Agency Co of Australasia Ltd at 149.
- A
very similar statement of these principles, which I set out in Bowditch v NSW
Trustee and Guardian [2012] NSWSC 275 at [111], was cited with approval in
Chapple v Wilcox at [21]; and at [65]-[67]; and was referred to, with no
apparent disapproval (although in that appeal there was no challenge the
correctness of those principles), in Smith v Johnson [2015] NSWCA 297 at
[62].
- The
role of the Court is not “to address wounded feelings or salve the pain of
disappointed expectations” that the Plaintiff
might feel: Heyward v
Fisher (Court of Appeal (NSW), Kirby J, 26 April 1985, unrep).
- In
Foley v Ellis [2008] NSWCA 288 at [88], Sackville AJA noted that
Singer v Berghouse “strongly suggests that the court cannot
consider the propriety and adequacy (or inadequacy) of any testamentary
provision
for an applicant in isolation from the resources and needs of other
claimants on the deceased’s bounty”. The only other
claimant on the
bounty of the deceased in the present case is the Defendant.
- The
Defendant, of course, is not an applicant for provision. She does not have to
prove an entitlement to the provision made for her
in the deceased’s Will,
or otherwise justify such provision. However, she is the widow of the deceased.
Their marriage was
of almost 40 years duration, and their relationship, as
stated, spanned 55 years. But there is nothing in the Act itself which confers
a
privileged position upon a spouse of the deceased. It is as the beneficiary
named in the Will of the deceased, and the joint holder
of property, that the
Court is not entitled to disregard her interest.
Qualifications
on “Principles”
- As
long ago as 1980, in White v Barron (1980) 144 CLR 431; [1980] HCA 14, at
440, Stephen J wrote:
“[T]his jurisdiction is pre-eminently one in which the trial judge's
exercise of discretion should not be unduly confined by
judge-made rules of
purportedly general application.”
- As
I have stated in a number of cases (see, for example, Bowditch v NSW Trustee
and Guardian), I do not intend what I have described as
“principles” or “general principles” to be elevated into
rules
of law, propositions of universal application, or rigid formulae. Nor do I
wish to suggest that the jurisdiction should be unduly
confined, or the
discretion should be constrained, by statements of principle found in dicta in
other decisions, or by preconceptions
and predispositions. Decisions of the past
do not, and cannot, put any fetters on the discretionary power, which is left
largely
unfettered. I do not intend a guide to be turned into a tyrant.
- It
is necessary for the Court, in each case, after having had regard to the matters
that the Act requires it to consider, to determine
what is adequate and proper
in all the circumstances of the particular case. In addition, in each case, a
close consideration of
the facts is necessary in order to determine whether the
basis for a family provision order has been established. Every case is different
and must be decided on its own facts. As Lindsay J said in Verzar v Verzar
at [131]:
“Whatever guidance one might draw from analogous cases all analogies, and
any guidelines drawn from a pattern of similar cases,
must yield to the text of
the legislation, the duty of the Court to apply that text to the particular
circumstances, and the totality
of material circumstances, of each case.
Preconceptions and predispositions, comforting though they may be, can be the
source of
inadequate consideration of the jurisdiction to be exercised:
Bladwell v Davis [2004] NSWCA 170 at [12] and
[18]-[19].”
- The
importance of the qualifications to which I have referred in the last two
paragraphs have been stressed in Chapple v Wilcox by Basten JA, at
[18]-[20], and by Barrett JA, at [66]-[67]; Burke v Burke [2015] NSWCA
195 at [84] – [85]. They must be remembered.
Notional
Estate
- It
is not necessary to spend too much time on this aspect of the case.
- The
notional estate provisions of the Act are dealt with in Part 3.3 of the Act.
However, in s 3 of the Act, "notional estate" of a deceased person is defined as
meaning “property designated by a notional estate order as
notional estate
of the deceased person”. "Notional estate order" means “an order
made by the Court under Chapter 3 designating
property specified in the order as
notional estate of a deceased person”.
- It
has been said, in respect of the notional estate provisions in the former Act,
that an applicant for provision “may now apply
in the same proceedings for
orders for relief and designating property as "notional estate" thereby
compelling the "disponee" of
a "prescribed transaction" to provide money or
property for the purpose of making financial provision for the applicant”:
Kavalee v Burbidge; Hyland v Burbidge [1998] NSWSC 111; (1998) 43 NSWLR 422 at 441. The
same principle applies in respect of a person to whom property has been
distributed.
- Section
63(3) of the Act provides that a family provision order may not be made in
relation to property of the estate that has been distributed
by the legal
representative of the estate in compliance with the requirements of s 93, except
as provided by subsection (5).
- Section
63(5) provides that a family provision order may be made in relation to property
that is not part of the estate of a deceased person, or
that has been
distributed, if it is designated as notional estate of the deceased person by an
order under Part 3.3 of the Act.
- Importantly,
the power to make a notional estate order does not arise unless the Court is
satisfied that (a) the deceased person left
no estate, or (b) the deceased
person’s estate is insufficient for the making of the family provision
order, or any order as
to costs, that the Court is of the opinion should be
made, or (c) provision should not be made wholly out of the deceased
person’s
estate because there are other persons entitled to apply for
family provision orders or because there are special circumstances (s 88).
- Furthermore,
the Court must not designate as notional estate, property that exceeds what is
necessary, in the Court’s opinion,
to allow the provision that should be
made, or, if the Court makes an order that costs be paid from the notional
estate under s 99, to allow costs to be paid as ordered, or both (s 89(2)).
- Section
78 (1)(b) of the Act provides:
“(1) The Court may make an order designating property as notional estate
only:
(b) for the purposes of an order that the whole or part of the costs of
proceedings in relation to the estate or notional estate
of a deceased person be
paid from the notional estate of the deceased person.
- Section
79 of the Act, relevantly, deals with the designation of property where the
estate of the deceased has been distributed. The section
provides:
“The Court may, on application by an applicant for a family provision
order or on its own motion, make a notional estate order
designating property
specified in the order as notional estate of a deceased person if the Court is
satisfied that on, or as a result
of, a distribution of the deceased
person’s estate, property (whether or not the subject of the distribution)
became held by
a person (whether or not as trustee) or subject to a
trust.”
- The
effect of a notional estate order is that a person’s rights are
extinguished to the extent that they are affected by a notional
estate order (s
84).
- Section
85 provides:
“The Court may make one or more notional estate orders in connection with
the same proceedings for a family provision order,
or any subsequent proceedings
relating to the estate of the same deceased person.”
- The
Court’s power to make a notional estate order is circumscribed by other
sections. Section 87 provides:
“The Court must not make a notional estate order unless it has considered
the following:
(a) the importance of not interfering with reasonable expectations in relation
to property,
(b) the substantial justice and merits involved in making or refusing to make
the order,
(c) any other matter it considers relevant in the
circumstances.”
- In
John v John; John v John [2010] NSWSC 937 at [118] - [120], Ward J (as
her Honour then was) said:
“What amounts to “reasonable expectations in relation to
property” was considered in Petschelt v Petschelt [2002] NSWSC 706,
at [68], by McLaughlin M (as the Associate Justice then was), who
said:
That phrase does not, however, indicate the person by
whom those reasonable expectations are held. Clearly the Court must consider
the
reasonable expectations of the First Defendant in relation to property. By the
same token, however, the Court should also consider
the reasonable expectations
of the Deceased herself in relation to property, and also, possibly, the
reasonable expectations of the
Plaintiff.
In D’Albora v D’Albora [1999] NSWSC 468, at [53], Macready M
(as the Associate Justice then was) gave examples of the circumstances which
might give rise to reasonable expectations
for the purposes of this
section:
Under s 27(1)(a) the Court has to consider the
importance of not interfering with the reasonable expectations in relation to
the property. Such reasonable
expectations may well occur in a number of
circumstances. For example, a beneficiary who receives a property may have spent
money
on the property or worked on the property ... Another common area where
one often sees in this matter is where there is a promise
in relation to the
property and the acting by an intended beneficiary on the fact of that
promise.
Similarly, in Wentworth v Wentworth [1992] NSWCA 268, Priestley JA, with
whom Samuels AP and Handley JA agreed, referring to the “more general
precautionary provisions” in
ss 26 and 27 of the Family Provision
Act, said:
“s 27(1) for example, says the Court shall not
make an order designating property as notional estate unless it has considered,
amongst other
things, the importance of not interfering with reasonable
expectations in relation to property. If someone is in possession of property,
otherwise than by gift, after having given up something of equivalent value in
order to obtain that property, it would be entirely
reasonable for that person
to expect to remain in possession of it.”
- I
have little doubt that the Defendant is a person whose “reasonable
expectations” should be considered since she is the
widow of the deceased,
and in the events that happened, the person who came to hold all of the jointly
held property by survivorship.
- The
“substantial justice and merits” referred to in s 87(b) are linked
to the making, or refusing to make, an order designating
property as notional
estate: Smith v Woodward (Supreme Court (NSW), 9 September 1994,
unrep).
- The
position of all parties should be considered in respect of s 87(b) and (c).
- In
determining what property should be designated as notional estate of a deceased
person, the Court must have regard to the value
and nature of any property the
subject of a distribution from the estate of the deceased, any changes in the
value of property of
the same nature as the property referred to, in the time
since the distribution was made, and any other matter it considers relevant
in
the circumstances: s 89.
- I
am satisfied that there is property that could be the subject of a notional
estate order. Although senior counsel for the Defendant
did not specifically
concede that a notional estate order should be made, it seems to me that he did
not really dispute that such
an order could be made, in respect of property
consisting of cash held by the Defendant, arising from the payment to her of the
balance
of the proceeds of sale of the Five Dock property, and the jointly held
cash in bank (in total $773,152).
- The
Defendant was content to proceed upon the basis that any order made in favour of
the Plaintiff would be met by her. In all the
circumstances of this case, that
is a sensible approach to have been adopted and I shall allow her that
opportunity.
Additional Facts
- I
set out additional facts I am satisfied are either not in dispute, or that, in
my view, have been established by the evidence. I
do so by reference to s 60(2)
of the Act. Where necessary, I shall express the conclusions to which I have
come. I have taken this
course, not “to dwell on particular matters as if
they were, in themselves, determinant of the broad judgments required to
be made
under s 59” (Verzar v Verzar at [124]), but in order to complete
the recitation of facts that will assist me to determine the questions that must
be answered.
(a) any family, or other,
relationship between the applicant and the deceased person, including the nature
and duration of the
relationship
- As
stated, the relationship between the deceased and the Plaintiff is that of child
and father. That relationship existed throughout
the Plaintiff’s life,
although they did not have much to do with each other until the Plaintiff was
about 10 years old. The
Plaintiff’s mother and the deceased separated in
the year of the Plaintiff’s birth. (Clearly, the Plaintiff did not cause
this lack of contact and nothing turns on it.) The deceased spoiled her
“with gifts, fancy restaurant meals and holidays”.
- For
most of the time prior to 1980, the Plaintiff lived in Queensland.
- From
the time that she met the deceased until 1985, they kept in regular contact.
Between 1985 and 1992, however, there was little
contact between them. It may be
that this was caused by a misunderstanding between them, but the reasons are
unimportant since there
is no suggestion that there was a complete breakdown in
their relationship, or that they were completely estranged during this
period.
- In
any event, in 1985, the Plaintiff moved back to Brisbane. She remained living
there until about 2002. She says that during this
period, “it became
harder for me to continue my relationship with Dad but I flew to see him as
often as I was able to afford
and time at work allowed”.
- However,
after 1992, the relationship between them was a reasonably close one and it
endured until the death of the deceased. When
the Plaintiff married Andrew in
1997, the deceased attended the wedding and walked the Plaintiff down the
aisle.
- They
remained in contact thereafter throughout the Plaintiff’s life, with the
Plaintiff visiting the deceased on occasion and
otherwise keeping in contact
with him.
- I
accept Monique’s evidence that the Plaintiff did not visit the deceased as
often as the Plaintiff had alleged, after he moved
into the nursing home. This
is hardly surprising bearing in mind the circumstances of the Plaintiff’s
marital relationship,
to which I shall refer to later in these reasons.
- I
also accept Monique’s denial that the Plaintiff provided the deceased with
emotional support and guidance. This was a somewhat
vague suggestion made by the
Plaintiff, and I consider, that it is virtually unsupported by the
Plaintiff’s evidence.
- Importantly,
in Ex. 3, the deceased does not attribute, as a cause for omitting the Plaintiff
as a beneficiary in his last Will, a
strained relationship as parent and
child.
- However,
it is clear, from all of the evidence, that as the years passed, the deceased
grew weary of the Plaintiff’s requests
for money. This is demonstrated by,
amongst other things, the deceased’s question to Monique “How much
money is enough?”
It is also supported by the evidence of Tino.
- As
stated previously, the deceased had made significant provision for the
Plaintiff, at least until 2004.
(b) the nature
and extent of any obligations or responsibilities owed by the deceased person to
the applicant, to any other person
in respect of whom an application has been
made for a family provision order or to any beneficiary of the deceased
person’s
estate
- There
is no definition of the words “obligations” or
“responsibilities” to which the sub-section refers in
the Act. Each
word is to be understood in its ordinary, grammatical meaning as the condition
of being morally or legally bound.
- The
responsibility of the deceased was expressed by Lord Romer in Bosch v
Perpetual Trustee Co Ltd, at 478-479:
“Their Lordships agree that in every case the Court must place itself in
the position of the testator and consider what he
ought to have done in all the
circumstances of the case, treating the testator for that purpose as a wise and
just, rather than a
fond and foolish, husband or father. This no doubt is what
the learned judge meant by a just, but not a loving, husband or
father.”
- Leaving
aside any obligation, or responsibility, arising as a result of their
relationship as parent and child, the deceased did not
have any legal obligation
to the Plaintiff as a child, once she became an adult, imposed upon him by
statute or common law. Yet,
an obligation or responsibility to make adequate
provision for the proper maintenance, education or advancement in life,
continues
to be recognised.
- In
Flathaug v Weaver [2003] NZFLR 730 at [32], the origin of the obligation
which underpins the Act’s recognition of the duty owed by a parent to a
child was put
in this way:
“The relationship of parent and child has primacy in our society. The
moral obligation which attaches to it is embedded in
our value system and
underpinned by the law. The Family Protection Act recognises that a
parent’s obligation to provide for
both the emotional and material needs
of his or her children is an ongoing one. Though founded on natural or assumed
parenthood,
it is, however, an obligation which is largely defined by the
relationship which exists between parent and child during their joint
lives.”
- As
counsel for the Plaintiff submitted, “the deceased expressed an awareness
of that obligation on many occasions over the course
of the Plaintiff’s
life, including by making some provision for the Plaintiff in his will dated 20
August 2010”.
- Yet,
as earlier stated, there is no “presumptive testamentary entitlement of an
[adult] offspring”: Underwood v Gaudron [2015] NSWCA 269 at
[73].
- This
matter, if relevant, requires a balancing of potentially competing obligations
as between the applicant and the beneficiary.
- I
have earlier referred to the deceased’s obligation to the Defendant, his
widow of an extremely long marriage. It cannot be
forgotten that the Defendant
and the deceased had a relationship that spanned over half a century.
- The
Plaintiff accepted that the deceased had an obligation to make
“generous” provision for the Defendant, but submitted
that, in light
of the nature and value of the estate and potential notional estate, as well as
the financially-secure circumstances
of the Defendant, “substantial”
provision, nevertheless could be made for the Plaintiff.
(c)
the nature and extent of the deceased person’s estate
(including any property that is, or could be, designated as notional
estate of
the deceased person) and of any liabilities or charges to which the estate is
subject, as in existence when the application
is being considered
- I
have earlier dealt with these matters. The value of the property that may be
designated as notional estate is quite large.
(d)
the financial resources (including earning capacity) and
financial needs, both present and future, of the applicant, of any
other person
in respect of whom an application has been made for a family provision order or
of any beneficiary of the deceased person’s
estate
- The
Plaintiff, currently, is employed as a Master Teacher at a State High School in
Queensland. Her tenure in that position will come
to an end in the current
calendar year. She believes that she will be unlikely to find another position
as a Master Teacher. She
believes that her annual salary will be reduced by
approximately $10,000 from the beginning of 2018. I am satisfied that the
Plaintiff
retains an earning capacity, albeit if her status as a Master Teacher
changes, her income will be reduced. In any event, it is improbable
that she
will be able to make savings from her income that improves her present
position.
- The
Plaintiff’s net income, currently, is $5,845 per month, whilst her monthly
expenditure is said to be $14,687 (of which $5,750
represents her mortgage
repayments). It is clear that the Plaintiff is living well beyond her means. How
she meets the expenditure
is not fully explained, although some of her
liabilities suggest that she has needed to borrow funds to do so.
- The
evidence of the Plaintiff as to how she has come to find herself in the current
financial position demonstrates that she (and
Andrew), for some years, have
lived well beyond her means. As senior counsel for the Defendant
submitted:
“The Plaintiff and her husband spent $430,000.00 on development costs,
legal costs and renovations in respect of the Drummoyne
property (paragraph 95).
She had inherited a net $700,000.00 from her mother which also went on a car,
credit cards and towards the
Drummoyne mortgage. $30,000.00 was spent on the
wedding of daughter, Dominica. $200,000.00 was borrowed for a short time from
daughter,
Monique in 2006.
Drummoyne was sold in June 2011 for $1.7 million with a mortgage of $1.045
million being paid out. After other costs, $250,000.00
was set aside to buy a
property in Brisbane. $280,000.00 "plus our savings" were applied towards
personal debts, school fees, rent
and tax totalling $302,000.00. The detail set
out in the Plaintiff's affidavit, paragraph 99, demonstrates a lifestyle clearly
where
the Plaintiff and her husband had been living beyond their means on
borrowed money and borrowed time.
The Plaintiff says (paragraph 100) in May 2013 she and her husband paid $1.22
million for a Brisbane house which as at November 2015
had a mortgage
indebtedness of $1,091,000.00.”
- The
Plaintiff attributed much of the blame regarding the financial predicament in
which she now finds herself, to Andrew. In particular,
she attributes credit
card debts of $250,000 to personal expenditure by him.
- The
Plaintiff currently has the following financial resources:
- (a) Home in
East Brisbane
$1,375,000
- (b) Motor
vehicle
$
9,000
- (c) Shares in
publicly listed companies $ 8,000
- (d) Home
contents
$ 40,000
- (e) Superannuation
$
575,631
TOTAL
$
2,007,631
- I
have ignored the Plaintiff’s money in bank because it is said to be
“nominal”. However, I have earlier referred
to the fact that if an
order for her costs is made, the Plaintiff will be reimbursed for some of the
costs that she has already paid.
(I say some of the costs because the quantum of
the Plaintiff’s costs may be disputed and, in any event, she may have to
pay
an amount towards those costs and disbursements calculated on the indemnity
basis.)
- The
Plaintiff has the following liabilities:
- (a) Home
mortgages
$1,091,000
- (b) Personal
loan from daughter Dominica $ 30,000
- (c) Credit card
debt
$ 4,000
- (d) Legal fees
$ 60,000
- (e) Legal fees
AFSA proceedings
$ 1,493
- (f) Outstanding
and future school fees for Luca $ 80,000
- (g) Estimated
income tax and capital gains tax $
10,000
TOTAL
$ 1,276,493
- The
evidence reveals that the Plaintiff’s marriage has irretrievably broken
down, and that she and her estranged husband have
entered into a property
settlement, the effect of which is that she is to receive the whole of the
property in which she, and their
children presently live, subject to the
mortgages which secure the debts of almost $1.1 million. Her husband is
currently bankrupt.
(The former matrimonial home will remain in the names of the
Plaintiff and Andrew until such time as it is sold or the Plaintiff
is able to
refinance the loan secured on that property.)
- The
Plaintiff was cross-examined, extensively, by senior counsel for the Defendant
about the home in which she and her two children
live. It is described in Ex. 4
(being a real estate advertisement) as “ a stylish home situated on a 534
sq. metre block in
one of the most desirable inner city suburbs of
Brisbane” and as an “awe inspiring home [that] combines quality
fixtures
and finishes with a clever design”. It is said to have “an
impressive steam room, gym (denied by the Plaintiff) and large
kitchen... a
spacious walk in butler’s pantry, extensive bench tops, ample storage
space, quality cabinetry, breakfast bar
and a full range of quality stainless
steel European appliances”. It has an in-ground pool. It has five bedrooms
and what appears
to be a two car garage.
- The
Plaintiff denied that the home was too big for her and her two children. She
said that she requires the additional space because
when her daughter and
husband visit with their two children it means that they have somewhere to stay:
T41.45 – T41.49. The
Plaintiff says that they visit a few times each year
for several days. She would like to remain living there because it has been
the
only home that she and her children have had since they arrived in Brisbane. She
says that she is established there, has good
neighbours, it is very close to the
school at which she teaches and the parish.
- Despite
her evidence, the Plaintiff did give evidence of the cost of alternative
accommodation. It was only in answer to a question
from the Bench that she gave
evidence that if she were able to pay off her son's school fees, if she was just
living off her wage
essentially, with no school fees or legal fees to repay, she
“would probably be able to manage a mortgage of about $300,000”:
T43.37 – T43.44.
- In
addition, the Plaintiff has provided evidence that in September 2016, she had
received correspondence from the Australian Financial
and Security Authority
(“AFSA”) “advising that Andrew had filed for bankruptcy and
asserting a claim, on behalf
of Andrew’s creditors, to Andrew’s
interest” in their former matrimonial home.
- In
early February 2017, she had received further correspondence advising that its
investigations would probably be completed by the
end of February 2017. She also
stated that “[U]ntil AFSA’s investigation is concluded, I have no
way of knowing whether
I will retain possession of” the former matrimonial
home.
- Even
without the claim by AFSA, it seems highly unlikely that the Plaintiff will be
able to continue to afford the repayments that
she currently is required to make
on her current mortgage in order to retain the home in which she and her
children live.
- Counsel
for the Plaintiff submitted that “[T]he plaintiff is in need of secure
accommodation and a fund against contingencies”.
In oral submissions, the
amount of the provision sought was said to be $500,000: T100.21 –
T100.24.
- The
Defendant’s net income, earned from interest on cash at bank, is
approximately $4,400 per month (although this may be an
underestimate, as the
Defendant also stated that she expects to earn income from the funds that she
has invested with Tino), whilst
her monthly expenditure is $7,234. (These
expenses include $960 per month for home and pool maintenance.)
- The
Defendant was cross-examined about details appearing in a number of copy tax
returns, lodged between 2012 and 2014, which disclosed
that in those years, each
of the deceased and the Defendant received income totalling approximately
$160,000 each year from a trust.
The Defendant responded that she was not aware
of that as the deceased had dealt with those matters: T91.35 –
T91.43.
- In
addition, the Plaintiff tendered (Ex. D) a copy letter dated 15 July 2016, that
referred to the Defendant’s response to a
Notice to Produce dated 8 April
2016 and that “no individual tax return or Notice of Assessment was
produced in respect of
Shirley for 2015. Please provide those documents.”
In addition, a request was made in the letter, for the Defendant to produce
“a copy of the individual tax return prepared for Shirley and any Notice
of Assessment for the 2016 year (if available now,
or when available)”.
Other documents were also sought in the letter, including a copy of the
superannuation fund trust deed
(and any variations thereto) relating to the
Shirley Carusi Super Fund.
- There
was no evidence that documents in answer to these requests, in particular, had
been produced by, or on behalf of, the Defendant.
- The
Defendant gave evidence of the following financial resources:
- (a) Home in Box
Hill
$ 3,750,000
- (b) Two cars
$ 40,000
- (c) Savings in
bank accounts $
1,558,321
- (d) Funds
invested with
Tino $
600,000
TOTAL
$5,948,321
- (Of
the amount currently in the bank, about $746,570 forms part of the proceeds of
sale of the Box Hill property.)
- The
Defendant has the following liabilities:
- (a) Nursing
home fees (owed to Tino) $ 74,354
- (b) Capital
gains tax on Five Dock
$168,981
TOTAL
$243,335
- In
an affidavit sworn 10 February 2017, the Defendant acknowledged that as a result
of the sale of the Five Dock property, there has
been a reduction of her monthly
expenses. She also wrote that she intended to pay the CGT at the conclusion of
the proceedings.
- She
also stated that her living expenses “are greater than my income”
and that she intended “to invest the net proceeds
of sale of the Five Dock
property to provide me with an income to fund my current and future living
expenses and also to provide
me with funds for any contingencies that may
arise”.
- Finally,
she stated that there were expenses which were likely to be incurred in
repairing, or maintaining, the Box Hill property,
including repairs to the
swimming pool, to the roof, to ceilings in three of the bedrooms, to the
bathrooms, and the complete renovation
of the kitchen.
- I
am a little troubled by the Defendant’s apparent failure to disclose
documents that reveal her income for the financial year
ending 30 June 2016. Her
reliance upon her children, who assisted her, in this regard, does not alleviate
my concern.
(e) If the applicant is cohabiting
with another person - the financial circumstances of the other person
- The
Plaintiff is the sole provider for her sons, Finnian and Luca. Finnian resides
with the Plaintiff, whilst Luca resides at boarding
school during the school
term. Since the beginning of 2017, Andrew no longer resides with the Plaintiff
and the children.
- Finnian
suffers from a range of mental health issues (said to be Attention Deficit
Disorder, Autism Spectrum Disorder, and generalised
anxiety). The Plaintiff
deposes that he suffers from significant learning difficulties and behavioural
issues.
- He
is unemployed and, currently, on Centrelink benefits ($433 per fortnight of
which $155 (or perhaps, more recently, $95), is garnisheed
to pay court fines
and fees, which total several thousand dollars). On occasion, Finnian
contributes to the household expenses, but
his contribution is intermittent. He
is currently serving a two year Probation Order, as a result of his conviction
for various drug-related
offences.
- Even
though Finnian is an adult, he remains, at least partially, dependent on the
Plaintiff. It seems like this partial dependency
may continue for some
time.
- Luca
has no financial resources of any significance and does not contribute to the
household expenses. He, too, is likely to be dependent
upon the Plaintiff for
some time.
(f) any physical, intellectual or
mental disability of the applicant, any other person in respect of whom an
application has been
made for a family provision order or any beneficiary of the
deceased person’s estate that is in existence when the application
is
being considered or that may reasonably be anticipated
- The
Plaintiff has had a history of anxiety and depression. She was hospitalised for
depression in about 1999. Her evidence is that
her present circumstances,
including her acute financial insecurity in the wake of the bankruptcy of her
estranged husband and the
claim by AFSA, are causing her extreme emotional, and
mental, anxiety. Her treating doctor has referred her to a psychologist, but,
currently, she is unable to pay for treatment, so has been unable to receive
therapy. She is taking an increased dosage of anti-depressant
medication on the
prescription of her treating general practitioner.
- Despite
these difficulties however, the Plaintiff acknowledged that she has still been
able to continue in her employment (T63.8 –
T63.14).
(g) the age of the applicant when the
application is being considered
- The
Plaintiff is aged 58 years.
(h) any
contribution (whether financial or otherwise) by the applicant to the
acquisition, conservation and improvement of the
estate of the deceased person
or to the welfare of the deceased person or the deceased person’s family,
whether made before
or after the deceased person’s death, for which
adequate consideration (not including any pension or other benefit) was not
received, by the applicant
- As
a child of the deceased, I think it likely that the Plaintiff made some
contribution to the welfare of the deceased. However, any
such contribution
appears to have been, for the most part, some years before the deceased’s
death. Although she says that she
provided emotional support, companionship and
guidance to the deceased, I do not accept that she did so, to any significant
extent,
in the last years of the deceased’s life. To the contrary, it
appears that for a number of years before his death, her requests
for financial
assistance, caused the deceased significant stress. In addition, Andrew’s
request in 2010, for financial assistance,
naturally, caused the deceased such
concern that he left it to Tino to deal with.
- There
is no evidence that the Plaintiff contributed to the acquisition, conservation,
and improvement, of the property that may be
designated as notional estate of
the deceased person. Rather, the Defendant gave evidence of her significant
financial, and other,
contributions, which she made to the acquisition,
conservation, and improvement, of the property. There was no challenge to the
Defendant’s
evidence.
(i) any provision
made for the applicant by the deceased person, either during the deceased
person’s lifetime or made from
the deceased person’s estate
- I
have dealt with the financial assistance provided to the Plaintiff by the
deceased earlier in these reasons. As stated, it was significant
financial
assistance. No provision, however, is made by the deceased’s Will for
her.
- (There
was other financial assistance provided by the deceased to the Plaintiff about
which she gives evidence in her first affidavit
at Paragraph 88(a), (b), (d) and
(f), which is unnecessary to detail.)
(j) any
evidence of the testamentary intentions of the deceased person, including
evidence of statements made by the deceased person
- I
have dealt with the testamentary intentions of the deceased. It is clear that in
all but the deceased’s last Will, he made
financial provision for
her.
(k) whether the applicant was being
maintained, either wholly or partly, by the deceased person before the deceased
person’s
death and, if the court considers it relevant, the extent to
which and the basis on which the deceased person did so
- The
Plaintiff was not being maintained, wholly or partly, by the deceased
immediately before his death. I have referred to the provision
made for the
Plaintiff during the deceased’s lifetime.
(l)
whether any other person is liable to support the
applicant
- Whilst
the Plaintiff’s estranged husband has an obligation, in law, to support
the Plaintiff “to the extent that [he]
is reasonably able to do so if
[she] is unable to support herself adequately” (see, s 72(1) of the
Family Law Act 1975 (Cth)), it is unlikely, as a bankrupt, that he will
be able to do so.
(m) the character and conduct
of the applicant before and after the date of the death of the deceased
person
- An
evaluation of “character and conduct” may be necessary, not for the
sake of criticism, but to enable consideration
of what is “adequate and
proper” in all the circumstances. Importantly, the Act does not limit the
consideration of “conduct”
to conduct towards the deceased.
- In
Collicoat v McMillan [1999] 3 VR 803, at [40], Ormiston J wrote, in
relation to the manner in which an applicant’s behaviour towards the
deceased is to be considered:
“Ordinarily each of the persons who have a statutory right to make [an]
application are entitled to have their position considered
by a testator but
their behaviour (right or wrong) towards the testator may only provide a basis
for measuring appropriately the
testator’s obligation to make provision
for each of those applicants. Their sins are irrelevant except in so far as a
testator
might properly take exception to their
behaviour.”
- The
troublesome aspect of the Plaintiff’s conduct during the lifetime of the
deceased relates to her requests for financial
assistance, which for a number of
years prior to his death, the deceased found burdensome and stressful.
Otherwise, there does not
appear to be any relevant conduct of the
Plaintiff.
- It
is clear that, at least in part, the Plaintiff and her husband were living far
beyond their means. In cross-examination, the Plaintiff
accepted that, during
the period prior to the breakdown of her marriage, she and her husband had spent
significant sums on several
holidays, and also other non-essential goods and
services, in circumstances where (on the Plaintiff's own evidence) the family
was
having difficulty meeting its debt-repayment obligations on the family home.
In part, at least, her current financial circumstances
have been caused by the
lifestyle that they lived.
- However,
as was written in Bates v Cooke [2015] NSWCA 278 at [66] –
[67]:
“The appellant’s financial circumstances, whatever their causes,
were factual matters that the Court might be expected
to take into account in
making the determination required by s 59(1) of the Succession
Act....
...the Court should not be deflected from considering the circumstances of the
case and the words of the statute by applying a constraint
that does not find
its source in the Succession Act.”
- In
Bates v Cooke, the Court was concerned with “well-intentioned, but
improvident, investment decisions”. I am satisfied, considering
all of the
facts of the present case, that the lifestyle choices made by the Plaintiff and
her husband (to the extent that they were
expenditure on the family rather than
on her husband alone), do not disentitle the Plaintiff to some provision out of
the notional
estate of the deceased.
- I
should mention that I do not accept the Plaintiff’s submission that there
were promises of significant provision made by the
deceased to the Plaintiff.
Even if she was aware of the terms of any of the deceased’s Wills in which
provision was made for
her, it must have been clear, by 2010, that the deceased
had become weary of having to deal with her requests for
money.
(n) the conduct of any other person
before and after the date of the death of the deceased person
- I
have no doubt that the Defendant, was a loving and dutiful wife of the deceased.
Indeed, no contrary submission was put by counsel
for the
Plaintiff.
(o) any relevant Aboriginal or
Torres Strait Islander customary law
- This
is not relevant.
(p) any other matter the Court considers
relevant, including matters in existence at the time of the deceased
person’s death
or at the time the application is being considered.
- Andrew’s
bankruptcy in September 2016, it would seem, was a consequence of him having
amassed a large amount of credit card
debts (said to be approximately
$250,000).
- The
Plaintiff gave evidence that Andrew had exclusive access to his credit cards,
and that, as a result, she did not as a result receive
the statements. She
asserted that she was not fully aware of the extent of his credit card debts
until about 2013. The Plaintiff
also said that she had been of the belief that
the credit card debt was paid off when the Drummoyne property was sold, and that
the
debt had only been in the order of $40,000 - $50,000.
- At
the hearing, counsel for the Defendant pressed the Plaintiff on her claim that
she was unaware of the extent of her husband’s
debts prior to 2013 (T47.48
– T48.23, T68.50 - T69.28, T76.1 – T76.26). I must say, I found some
of the Plaintiff’s
answers to questions about her investigations of the
level of indebtedness somewhat disingenuous.
- Counsel
for the Plaintiff contended that, however foolish it may appear (especially at
the present time), the trust placed by the
Plaintiff in Andrew, who was her
husband of many years, ought to be accepted by the Court as the main reason for
the Plaintiff’s
part in her family’s financial demise.
- As
stated, the Plaintiff and Andrew have entered into final orders as to their
matrimonial assets, which provide the Plaintiff retains
possession of the
matrimonial home at East Brisbane, on the basis that she is to refinance the
property and is solely responsible
for the mortgage payments. Given the small
amount of equity that is currently available in the property, it may be that the
claim
by AFSA will not proceed.
DETERMINATION
- As
I have recently written in Morier v Liem [2016] NSWSC 582, the fact that
the Plaintiff does not receive any provision under the Will of the deceased, of
itself, does not bespeak inadequacy.
That fact is not all that the Court is
required to consider. The totality of the relationship of the Plaintiff and the
deceased,
the age and capacity of the Defendant, as the deceased’s widow
of a very long marriage, the claim of each on the bounty of
the deceased, and
the size of the estate and notional estate, are very relevant factors in
determining the answer to the question
whether the Court is satisfied, for the
purposes of s 59(1)(c) of the Act, that the deceased did not make adequate
provision for the proper maintenance, education or advancement of the
Plaintiff.
- Basten
JA wrote in Chan v Chan [22], that the Court must
remember:
“A significant set of factors in many cases is that identified as
“the financial resources (including earning capacity)
and financial needs,
both present and future, of the applicant...”. However, it is important
not to elide the distinction between
needs and adequate provision; the former is
but one indicator of the latter. The adequacy of provision is not to be
determined by
a calculation of financial needs. The background to any
consideration of the appellant’s needs required determination of the
size
of the estate and the claims of others on the beneficence of the
testator.”
- Thus,
in determining what is adequate for the proper maintenance, education or
advancement in life of an applicant, the Court also
considers the nature, extent
and character of the estate and the other demands upon it, and also what the
deceased regarded as superior
claims or preferable dispositions.
- It
is beyond argument that the deceased made generous provision for the Plaintiff
during his lifetime. It is undisputed that he provided
her, over the years, with
amounts which together totalled $500,000. He did not make any provision for her
after about 2004, or if
he did, it was not substantial.
- However,
the level of provision made during the lifetime of the deceased for the
Plaintiff, alone, cannot determine what is “proper”
on the
deceased’s death. Of course, the fact that generous provision has already
been made is one of the matters to be taken
into account in determining what is
“proper”. The situation must be looked at when the Court is
determining the Plaintiff’s
application.
- The
Defendant is the only other person who has any relevant claim on the
deceased’s bounty. She has alleged a financial claim
on that bounty but,
in reality, it is not a very significant competing financial claim. The Court
must not ignore her claim as a
beneficiary, being the principal chosen object of
the deceased’s testamentary bounty, and also as his wife of a very long
marriage.
Furthermore, her competing claim founded upon her significant
contributions to the deceased, both financially, and in other ways,
during the
marriage must not be ignored. These matters are very relevant on the issue
whether the provision made for the Plaintiff
is inadequate. They are also
relevant on the issue of the designation of property as notional estate.
- Bearing
in mind her current financial and material circumstances, one cannot but reach
the conclusion that the provision made for
the Plaintiff in the Will of the
deceased is inadequate for her proper maintenance and advancement in life. The
Plaintiff is self-reliant.
Whilst she has a home of reasonable value, it is
almost fully encumbered. She has the significant responsibility of raising two
children.
Whilst she is not impecunious, her means are now modest.
- Accordingly,
the Court’s jurisdiction to make an order is established.
- Then,
one turns to the provision, if any, that ought to be made. In my view, some
provision ought to be made for the Plaintiff. She
is not in need of additional
education, but her claim for provision comes within the concepts of maintenance
and advancement in life
(as referred to above).
- In
Grey v Harrison at 366–367, Callaway JA
observed:
“There is no single provision of which it may be said that that is the
provision that a wise and just testator would have made.
There is instead a
range of appropriate provisions, in much the same way as there is a range of
awards for pain and suffering or
a range of available sentences. Minds may
legitimately differ as to the provision that should be made. Furthermore, it is
not at
all clear that reasons for an appropriate provision need be fully
articulated. To borrow again from the analogy of sentencing, what
is required is
an instinctive synthesis that takes into account all the relevant factors and
gives them due weight.”
- The
Plaintiff accepts that it is unlikely she will be able to continue to service
the mortgage over the East Brisbane property on
her current income, and that in
such an event she will be forced to sell the property. The Plaintiff has deposed
that she would like
to remain within the East Brisbane/Kangaroo Point areas, as
this is where she has resided for the last 6 years. She gives evidence
that the
median purchase price for a house in this area is “around the $900,000
mark”.
- The
Plaintiff has also looked at properties that are some 5 to 20 kilometres from
her current residence, where the median property
price is reported to be
“around” $800,000, which she acknowledges is also beyond her current
means. The Plaintiff estimates
that the costs and expenses of sale of the East
Brisbane property, and including stamp duty on the purchase of alternative
accommodation,
would be about $75,000.
- The
equity in the Plaintiff’s property is currently about $284,000. (I have
assumed, in this regard, that no claim will be persisted
with by AFSA.)
- I
am of the view that the Plaintiff should receive a lump sum of $400,000. This
will enable her to pay off some of her liabilities
in full ($110,000, being the
loan from her daughter and the outstanding school fees). The balance ($290,000)
will provide her with
a sum to put towards the purchase of another home, in
which she and her children can live, or can be used as a capital sum for
exigencies
of life, or, if she considers it appropriate to reduce, but not
completely eradicate, her current mortgage debt.
- It
seems to me that purchasing alternative accommodation might be the most
realistic alternative. Assuming that her current home is
sold and the debt
secured by the mortgages paid off, there is a net equity of about $284,000 in
her current home. With the balance
of the provision made for her, she will have,
in total, $574,000. If she is then able to borrow about $300,000, she will have,
in
total, $874,000 to purchase alternative accommodation and pay for the
associated costs and expenses of the purchase. (I have earlier
stated that the
community, ordinarily, does not expect a parent to provide an unencumbered house
for an adult child.)
- The
sum that I have considered to be adequate and proper, in all the circumstances,
will reduce the Defendant’s cash by $400,000,
the costs of the Plaintiff
calculated on the ordinary basis and the balance of the costs payable to the
Defendants solicitors. The
balance of the proceeds of the Five Dock property and
the cash to which I have referred will be sufficient to meet the order for
provision and the costs of the parties.
- In
reaching my conclusion, I have not forgotten that the Plaintiff has a
significant amount of superannuation ($575,631) which will,
in due time, come to
be available to her.
- I
shall give the parties 14 days to consider the following form of orders that I
propose:
- (a) Having
found the Plaintiff to be an eligible person; that the proceedings were
commenced within time; and that the provision made
for her in the Will of the
deceased is inadequate for her proper maintenance or advancement in life, she is
to receive a lump sum
of $400,000 out of the notional estate of the
deceased.
- (b) Pursuant to
s 72 of the Succession Act 2006 that the family provision order made in
favour of the Plaintiff not take effect as if the provision was made in a
codicil to the
Will of the deceased.
- (c) The
Plaintiff’s costs calculated on the ordinary basis of the proceedings, and
the balance of the Defendant’s costs,
calculated on the indemnity basis,
of the proceedings, are to be paid out of the estate, or notional estate, of the
deceased.
- (d) Provided
that the amount to which the Plaintiff is entitled is paid within 28 days of the
making of orders by the Court, or such
other time as the parties agree in
writing, no interest is to be paid on the lump sum to be paid to the Plaintiff;
otherwise, interest
at the rate prescribed under s 84A(3) of the Probate and
Administration Act 1898 (NSW) is to be paid from that date.
- (e) Being
satisfied that the deceased's actual estate is insufficient for the making of
the family provision order, and the costs
orders, that should be made, orders
that the burden of the provision made for Plaintiff, any interest thereon, and
the costs, should
be borne out of property to be designated as notional estate
of the deceased unless otherwise paid by the Defendant.
- (f) That
liberty is granted to any party to apply, in these proceedings, for
consequential and ancillary orders for the purpose of,
or with respect to,
giving effect to, and implementing, the family provision order made in favour of
the Plaintiff including the
designation of an amount of cash held by the
Defendant in bank as the notional estate of the deceased.
- (g) The
Exhibits should be dealt with in accordance with the Uniform Civil Procedure
Rules 2005 (NSW) (rule 31.16A and rule 33.10) and Practice Note No SC
Gen 18 (Para 22).
- The
parties, within 14 days are to consider whether any amendments to the proposed
orders are required. The matter is stood over to
a convenient date for any
argument as to the nature and form of the orders proposed. Otherwise, any agreed
amendments to the proposed
orders may be forwarded to the Court, for
consideration, in Chambers, or if no amendments are required, the orders
proposed will
be entered and the adjourned date
vacated.
**********
AustLII:
Copyright Policy
|
Disclaimers
|
Privacy Policy
|
Feedback
URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/nsw/NSWSC/2017/590.html