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Tyson v Beaver [2024] NZHC 278 (22 February 2024)

Last Updated: 7 March 2024

IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND WELLINGTON REGISTRY
I TE KŌTI MATUA O AOTEAROA TE WHANGANUI-A-TARA ROHE
CIV-2023-485-638
[2024] NZHC 278
UNDER
the Trusts Act 2019
IN THE MATTER OF
the Estate of Mary Emerson Beaver
AND
IN THE MATTER OF

an application under s 136 of the Act
BETWEEN
RICHARD LIONEL TYSON
Applicant
AND
MERVYN WILLIAM BEAVER
First Respondent
AND
OTHER RESPONDENTS
listed in Schedule One

Hearing:
8 February 2024
Appearances:
R Georgiou for Applicant
No Appearance for Respondents
Judgment:
22 February 2024

JUDGMENT OF CULL J

TYSON v BEAVER [2024] NZHC 278 [22 February 2024]

Background

(a) Mr Tyson contacted various members of Mervyn’s extended family to see if they had leads he could explore.

(b) Mr Tyson instructed Wellington Investigations Limited (WIL) to carry out a trace on Mervyn and his wife, Sophie, in June 2015. WIL contacted the Consulate-General of the People’s Republic of China in Sydney (where Sophie was known to work). WIL also conducted a number of searches across New Zealand and Australia (Mervyn’s last known address was in Sydney), including searches of social media, obituaries, missing persons websites, ancestry tracing websites, credit check websites and insolvency websites. WIL additionally canvassed a number of Mervyn’s family members and friends. WIL facilitated further inquiries in Australia through an agent.

(c) Mr Tyson instructed Secure Collections & Investigations Limited to carry out a trace on Mervyn in mid-2021. Their investigation included contacting financial reporting institutions, contacting persons known to Mervyn (including those contacted during WIL’s investigation), making Official Information Act requests to the New Zealand Police and Department of Internal Affairs, checking for death certificates in New Zealand and Australia and conducting extensive online searches.

$35,437.03 (as at 17 October 2023).

(a) Mervyn adored the deceased and would usually call her on her birthday, but did not do so in 2010;

(b) when it was contemplated that the deceased might be put into a retirement home, Mervyn called and said he would go to his lawyer and doctor to “sort it out”, but nothing further occurred; and

(c) no one in the extended family has heard from Mervyn since before the deceased’s death.

Legal principles

  1. Trustee may apply to court to allow distribution of missing beneficiaries’ shares

(1) The court may, on application by a trustee, make an order authorising the trustee to distribute trust property—

(a) as if a potential beneficiary or a class of potential beneficiaries does not exist or never existed or has died before a date or an event specified; and

(b) if, because of the order, it is not possible or practicable to determine whether any condition or requirement affecting a beneficial interest in the property or any part of it has been complied with or fulfilled, as if that condition or requirement had been or had not been complied with or fulfilled.

(2) The court may make an order only if it is satisfied that—

(a) reasonable measures have been taken to bring to the notice of the potential beneficiary or beneficiaries their potential beneficial interest or interests; and

(b) at least 60 days have passed since the last of those measures was taken; and

(c) no potential beneficiary with respect to whom an order is sought has come to the attention of the trustee as a result of those measures, or the claim of any such beneficiary may be disregarded in the circumstances.

What constitutes “reasonable measures”?

1 Hodgson v Hodgson [2021] NZHC 906 at [16].

2 Hodgson v Hodgson, above n 1, at [13].

3 Hodgson v Hodgson, above n 1, at [15].

4 Re Holland [2019] NZHC 1146.

5 At [12].

newspaper advertisement would not be required in addition as it would be an inefficient use of trust assets.6

Applying s 136

6 At [12].

7 At [13].

8 Re Doak [2022] NZHC 3111 at [10].

9 Young v Young [2013] NZHC 1396.

10 Hodgson v Hodgson, above n 1.

11 Hodgson v Hodgson [2023] NZHC 2025 at [18].

Cull J

Solicitors:

Gibson Sheat, Wellington, for Applicant


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