By Ryan Taylor, Partner and Emily Thurgood, Solicitor, in our London Private Wealth Disputes team at Hugh James.
Most families assume a spouse will be “looked after” in a will. In our experience, the shock comes when that assumption is wrong. We often see this in second marriages, blended families, or where a will was written years earlier and never revisited.
We regularly speak to surviving husbands and wives who are grieving, trying to work out practical next steps, and are suddenly facing a very uncomfortable reality: perhaps the home is in the deceased’s sole name, or the estate is passing to adult children from a previous relationship, and there is little or nothing left for them. For the executors and beneficiaries, emotions run just as high. They may feel they are simply following the will, and that any challenge is “creating conflict”.
Individuals in England and Wales have freedom of testation, meaning you can leave your estate to whomever you choose. But that freedom is not absolute. The Inheritance (Provision for Family and Dependants) Act 1975 (the ‘Inheritance Act’) allows certain people, including spouses, to apply to the court for reasonable financial provision from an estate, where they have not been adequately provided for.
This is where early specialist advice matters. Handled well, these cases often settle. If dealt with reactively, they can become complex, expensive and damaging to family relationships.