Contested Wills & Probate: Three Dangers! (Promissory Estoppel claim) UK law

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  • Опубликовано: 14 янв 2025

Комментарии • 43

  • @chrisbrown7127
    @chrisbrown7127 3 года назад +3

    I like your honesty & the fact you didn't blitz us with technical terms!

  • @theblackswanmoon5459
    @theblackswanmoon5459 5 лет назад +3

    🙏 thank you. I hope you can assist further

  • @theblackswanmoon5459
    @theblackswanmoon5459 5 лет назад +3

    Thank you so very much! 🌹🎩

  • @janner2121
    @janner2121 3 года назад +2

    Good God . This case is just like my case I am embarking on now !

    • @RedwoodLegal
      @RedwoodLegal  3 года назад

      Good luck!

    • @phoenixkali
      @phoenixkali 8 месяцев назад

      My case took just over 3 and a half years. Since I gave my bro (previous administrator) a years grace before activating a case, I’d say 2 an1/2 years. It was a simple division of house and assets(savings) if that helps. It was in uk and I was operating from Ireland 🇮🇪no will so we applied for probate.

  • @vikastambavekar8642
    @vikastambavekar8642 3 года назад +2

    Very nice 👍 explained sir...... Thanks

  • @Gamer-dude247
    @Gamer-dude247 18 дней назад

    We are four siblings, mum remarried , then mum died unexpectedly from cancer and our other youngest sibling lived with her as he has an incurable illness,...long story short, our younger sibling didnt get on with my mothers partner and moved in with other sibling to be looked after 24/7 care. 2 years later we recieved a solicitors letter giving us 2 weeks to reply to a contested will of my mothers and her husbands estate where he is demading the ENTIRE estate for himself under 3 grounds (fraudulant will, not contributing towards household bills and some other accusation).
    My mothers husband also stated that he is not letting a penny go (mainly because he says we are not his children) and apprently he will 'sit on the estate money' until it is all gone so nobody will get anything. Can he do this?
    (we have been in touch with his solicitor and we are willing to negotiate, have proof and evidence to the contrary to the accusations and have been communicating freely whereas the accuses is inwilling to negotiate and is hard to get hold of, both parties are willing to go to court)

  • @fifijamaicankitchen
    @fifijamaicankitchen 2 года назад +1

    Thank you so much for this very informative vlog. I understand the IHT is due 6 months after death and must be paid prior to grant of Probate. However, if someone opts to pay the IHT over a period of 10yrs would they need to wait until the total amount was paid after 10yrs to apply for grant of probate, or could they apply following payment of the first installment?

    • @RedwoodLegal
      @RedwoodLegal  2 года назад

      Hi Fiona! Please feel to free to email us at hello@courtwingman.com if you need further advice in respect of any inheritance matter. Many thanks, Courtwingman

  • @kathyfreeman9596
    @kathyfreeman9596 5 лет назад +1

    Great blog ty ! Will you be doing any blogs On mirrored wills and litigation with them seems very confusing

    • @RedwoodLegal
      @RedwoodLegal  5 лет назад

      Kathy, I suggest you email on info@redwoodlegal.co.uk with summary of your case.

    • @kathyfreeman9596
      @kathyfreeman9596 5 лет назад +1

      Redwood Legal
      Ok thank you

  • @RocketAli-hh9yj
    @RocketAli-hh9yj Год назад

    My father passed away recently,he made a will making me the executer,he got remarried overseas,but chose to to keep the will as it is , with out any knowledge that the second marriage will revoke the former will,I have already sent of original will for probate, what chance do I have to be given the grant

  • @Phoenix1664
    @Phoenix1664 3 года назад +1

    I am 25% beneficiary of my grandmothers estate, along with my mother, uncle and cousin at 25%. My cousin is my uncles daughter and he is executor of the estate. The terms of the will is that the house is to be sold and the proceeds split 4 ways along with any remaining money. My uncle has instead moved his daughter into the house, for the last 10 months, for free, and began renovations on the property. He has stated she intends to buy the house, however she has failed to do so and appears to be residing there indefinitely. The house as not been put on the market and my uncle has refused to ask his daughter to vacate, and will not put the house on the market. He has also lied about the market values in order to let my cousin buy it at a cheaper price. However we believe that my cousin will not be in a position to actually buy the house for several years because she cannot afford it. We have already had a solicitor send a letter of warning. He has refused to respond, he seems to think as executor he can do what he wants. He has also refused to provide any information or documentation of the estate accounts. We have now moved to a position of 'letter of action' which may well end in court. Should we get my uncle removed as executor?

    • @RedwoodLegal
      @RedwoodLegal  3 года назад +3

      Phoenix, thanks for this query - this is not something we can advise in a thread like this. You would need to book a legal surgery with us to go through it all. I appreciate people think that a lawyer should be able to give an answer to a thorough summary of the facts, but the truth is, it would be irresponsible to do so without having seen the relevant key documents and have talked you you properly. Imagine a doctor giving a response to just a written note on someone's medical condition. He would need to have a proper meeting with you.
      IF you do not want to pay for our services for a legal surgery (£150 for one hour) then I am now thinking we need to do a session on our bi-weekly legal surgery vlogs specifically on wills etc. You are welcome to join that and you can write in and we can use your example as a case study.

  • @kerryNhull
    @kerryNhull 2 года назад +1

    My dad got married 6 days before he died a deathbed marriage, his wife said we the children are getting nothing even though he told her what to give us which was a small amount and she would of been left with a house and about 170-200 k is their anything legally I can do

    • @RedwoodLegal
      @RedwoodLegal  2 года назад

      Hi Kerry, I am sorry to hear that, please feel free to email us on hello@courtwingman.com so we can advise of the next steps to take, thanks, Daria and Alex

  • @moonshine3657
    @moonshine3657 2 года назад +1

    Is the UK inheritance act same as canada considering canada is still under the british commonwealth? Here is my situation my mother appointed my brother as a trustee of her will but unfortunately my name is not mentioned in it. My mother pick my brother cause he was much smarter than I was and much more educated than I was & my brother and sister were making over 70,000 Per year & I was always poor & uneducated, right now im on long term disability, when I was still living with my parents I was the one who mowed the lawn, prune the trees, take out the garbage and sometimes run errands for my mothers medicine, while my siblings were working and taking care of there own family, do you think I have any chance to contest this? I would like to know your advice or do you think its a waste of time?

    • @RedwoodLegal
      @RedwoodLegal  2 года назад +1

      No, Canada has its own law and Quebec is French, of course. I do not know their laws, but I would be surprised if Canada in the english-speaking part does not have a similar law.
      You may have a case - the key point you mention is that you were helping your mum and maybe living with her too. It is not always easy for children to claim (See the case of Ilot v Mitson) but it can be done and often where they were in some way dependent on the deceased and the death has caused a sudden change or financial loss.
      There may be a promissory estoppel claim - but you will have need to have a promise, clearly evidenced, and then that you did genuinely act on reliance on that promise to your detriment.
      You really do need to have a legal surgery with us. Seriously! One hour to start with may just give you the tailored help you need as of course I am talking very generally. Send your papers and let us talk through it and give you an initial bit of advice.

  • @Omg4real
    @Omg4real 3 года назад +1

    My uncle had a will of 30 years my mom changed it when he was in and out of a coma she's now fighting With a lawyer the unsigned draft new will not witnessed will over the old will she win I'm not happy she done this and she has hired a lawyer to override old will

  • @thecatinthehat1863
    @thecatinthehat1863 4 года назад

    my case is very similar to the one you talked about, i looked after my gran for 18 months and she promised me a cottage to live in and the contents of her house, i became ill and left and another grand daughter has become the sole recipient and i was removed from the will completely, she changed the will multiple times over the las ten years depending on who she fell out with, I have been the only one who spent significant time with her living on the property and caring for her. I was not compensated for my time or work. Do you think i might have a claim?

    • @thecatinthehat1863
      @thecatinthehat1863 4 года назад

      this is in scotland

    • @RedwoodLegal
      @RedwoodLegal  4 года назад

      @@thecatinthehat1863 Hello :) I am afraid we do not assist with disputes in Scotland. We wish you the best of luck with your case, Kind regards, Redwood Legal Team

  • @johnkean6852
    @johnkean6852 3 года назад

    Is there anywhere l can read outcomes of Probate Court hearings? Are they published anywhere as Precedents (with names deleted of course.)

  • @austinfallis4174
    @austinfallis4174 5 лет назад

    Hi there
    Can promissory estoppel be claimed before death or only after death

    • @RedwoodLegal
      @RedwoodLegal  5 лет назад

      Yes, it is possible and there has been recent case law on this, I believe.

  • @acquiesce100
    @acquiesce100 5 лет назад

    Could I get some advice from you?

    • @RedwoodLegal
      @RedwoodLegal  5 лет назад

      Absolutely, if you email at info@redwoodlegal.co.uk with a summary of your case, I will take a look.

    • @savgoulis2826
      @savgoulis2826 4 года назад

      Ditto but a summary is what I need! I find myself in a grey area it seems. If I could produce a summary I would desperately seek your advise. I sit here with 3 years of unsolved probate. Having used some of your wisdom - I thank you for that.

  • @ithehappy1
    @ithehappy1 3 года назад

    Are these laws in any way applicable for India?

    • @RedwoodLegal
      @RedwoodLegal  3 года назад +1

      I do not know what the law is in India. But if someone is living in India but has UK assets it may fall under the jurisdiction of the English courts. It really rather depends on the facts of the case.

    • @ithehappy1
      @ithehappy1 3 года назад

      @@RedwoodLegal Understood. Thanks for the reply.

  • @thedarkdestroyer5063
    @thedarkdestroyer5063 5 лет назад

    Can someone contest a will even if there is no will. For example mum dies one of her kids says 'my mum sed I will give you the flat'.

    • @RedwoodLegal
      @RedwoodLegal  5 лет назад +2

      Yes, you can. Sometimes people die "intestate" to use the fancy legal word. There are then rules about who the money goes to and in what order. You can challenge these rules just as you can challenge a will, and the most popular way these days is by means of the Inheritance Act 1975 (though not the only way). There are other videos on this Act. Other ways might include promissory estoppel, which is where the deceased had promised something to someone before they died- but this way of claiming requires that you prove you suffered loss by relying on that promise. It is not really enough to say "I promise I will leave X to you" and then expecting a court to honour that promise. Obviously the big caveat here is that each case is different and I would need to know the facts of the case.

    • @padraigpiokelly6394
      @padraigpiokelly6394 5 лет назад

      Hi regarding spouse legal right share my mother is elected I have found that the dwelling house was well undervalued at probate I believe the valuer was told to by the other beneficiarys and executor can I get the revenue affidavit redone and s proper valuation done at market value the house was valued at 72.000 at probate and the house is worth 130.000 to 150.000

  • @theblackswanmoon5459
    @theblackswanmoon5459 5 лет назад +4

    Genius! Are you married...🤫

  • @iankendrick5282
    @iankendrick5282 Год назад

    Love your vlogs wish I had used you

  • @Reclaimedrooftiles
    @Reclaimedrooftiles 7 месяцев назад

    You talk to long to get to the point! To much waffle!