Neutral Citation Number: 2013 EWHC 2125 (Ch)
IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE CHANCERY DIVISION PROBATE In the estate of LOUISA ANN ASHKETTLE deceased Christopher Pymont QC
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Between : (1) ROBERT MICHAEL ASHKETTLE Claimants (2) DENNIS ROBERT ASHKETTLE ROSALIND PATRICIA ANN GWINNETT Defendant
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Mr Alexander Learmonth (instructed by Seddons) for the Claimants Mr Aidan Briggs (instructed by Wellers LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 29,30 April, 1,2,7 May 2013
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APPROVED JUDGMENT Christopher Pymont QC:
This is a probate action by which the Claimants ask the Court to pronounce
against the validity of a will dated 18 January 1999 and the Defendant (by a
late counterclaim) seeks a grant of probate of that will in solemn form. The
Claimants’ claim also seeks a grant in solemn form of letters of administration
with the will annexed in relation to an earlier will dated 2 October 1986.
There is no dispute about the 1986 will. The issues I have to determine are as
to the validity of the 1999 will. The Claimants say (i) that this will was not
properly executed (ii) that the testator did not have testamentary capacity to
make it (iii) that the testator did not know and approve the contents of the will
and (iv) that, if the testator did have capacity and did know and approve its
contents, then it must have been procured by the Defendant’s undue influence.
The testator was Louisa Ann Ashkettle (“Mrs Ashkettle”) who died on 27
September 2007, aged 86. The Claimants are Mrs Ashkettle’s two sons
(“Robert” and “Dennis” respectively) and the Defendant (“Rosalind”) is her
daughter. The 1986 will left Mrs Ashkettle’s estate to Rosalind, Dennis and
Robert in equal shares. The 1999 will left her estate to Rosalind alone. The
1999 will contains an explanation of the change in the following terms:
“3. I have made no provision in this Will for my Son [Dennis] because we do not have a friendly and reasonable Mother and Son relationship and I believe that he has adequate means of his own.”
“4. I have made no provision in this Will for my Son [Robert] because he has greatly upset me with his attitude towards my house and I believe that he has adequate means of his own”.
Whether these reasons have any cogency is part of the issues I have to address.
I have heard oral evidence from a large number of witnesses. On the
Claimants’ side, these include Dennis and Robert, Robert’s wife Jacqueline
and his children Richard and Victoria (“Vikki”), and Dennis’s son Colin. The
Claimants’ witnesses also include Michael Gillan (a former employee of
Robert’s company) who met Mrs Ashkettle once in 1999 and, by a hearsay
statement as she was unfit to attend the trial, Sally Melhuish, a friend of
Robert and his wife. The Claimants also called Dr Nandin Pandita-
Gunawardena, formerly consultant physician in Elderly Medicine at
University Hospital Lewisham, who examined Mrs Ashkettle on 4 September
1997. On the Defendant’s side, I have heard evidence from Rosalind herself
and her son Gregory, as well as Mrs Ashkettle’s neighbour, Anthony Gear, her
sister-in-law Rosina Christie, her GP Dr Arun Gupta and her solicitor Ralph
Stanger, who drew up both wills. I have also heard evidence from one of the
witnesses to the 1999 will, Denise Mears, the other (Lynn Ramsay) having
made a statement to the effect that she does not remember anything material.
The evidence before me includes a certain amount of documentary material,
particularly as to Mrs Ashkettle’s medical history. On the issue of her
capacity at the time of the execution of the 1999 will, I have also heard the
expert evidence of Professor Henry Hodkinson (called by the Claimants) and
Professor Robin Jacoby (called by the Defendant). By their joint statement
dated 18 August 2013, they agreed that Mrs Ashkettle suffered from dementia
due to Alzheimer’s disease and that Mrs Ashkettle probably had the capacity
to understand the nature and consequences of the act of making a will; but
they differed on two important issues, namely whether Mrs Ashkettle lacked
the capacity to appreciate, first, the extent of her estate and, secondly, the
moral claims of those who might have expected to benefit from her bounty
(these being legal criteria for capacity, derived from Banks v Goodfellow
(1870) LR 5 QB 549). On these issues, Professor Hodkinson’s view is that
Mrs Ashkettle lacked capacity while Professor Jacoby’s view is that whether
or not she lacked capacity will depend upon the Court’s determination of the
oral, factual (i.e. non-medical) evidence.
The evidence includes a number of photographs and home videos. I have
found these for the most part unhelpful on the issues I have to determine, with
the exception of the video I comment upon below, taken by Rosalind’s son
Christopher, which shows Mrs Ashkettle in the garden with Rosalind in 1998.
In the light of the experts’ differences, I therefore proceed to explain my
findings on the oral and documentary evidence I have heard and read. I am
concerned in the first instance to consider the first three issues raised by the
Claimants (whether the 1999 will was duly executed, whether Mrs Ashkettle
had testamentary capacity and whether she knew and approved of the contents
of the will) because the issue of undue influence only arises if the 1999 will
In making my findings, I have sought to allow for the fact that the principal
events took place at least fourteen years ago and that memories are bound to
have become weaker or less reliable with the passage of time. I have also tried
to allow for the strong feelings which this dispute has engendered on both
sides and which can be expected to have influenced the principal witnesses’
recollection of events. That said, I have concluded that Rosalind was an
unconvincing witness, whose evidence on crucial matters is unreliable. Her
attempts to explain away events which might be considered detrimental to her
case (such as the consultation with Dr Pandita-Gunawardena, her answers to
the questions on the Disability Living Allowance form and other aspects of the
written evidence) were not credible. Her purported recollection in cross
examination of the significance of an occasion in 1997 when Mrs Ashkettle
passed out while walking in the park was unsupported by any
contemporaneous medical evidence and lacked all conviction. She was
particularly poor on dates: she gave specific dates for certain events, though
without explaining how she remembered or identified them, but was otherwise
rather vague or equivocal on timing. The question of dates (and thus the
precise sequence of events) is of particular importance (as I explain below)
when one considers the evidence as to how the 1999 will came to be prepared.
In general, I prefer the evidence of Dennis and Robert on disputed issues,
though I accept that they (and Robert in particular) feel some bitterness
towards their sister and are wont to ascribe to her base motives which she may
not deserve. I was also impressed by what I saw of the Claimants’ supporting
witnesses and less so by Rosalind’s. These general conclusions have informed
Mrs Ashkettle met and married her husband, Jack, during the Second World
War and lived for some years in the East End, where they had been brought
up. Dennis and Robert describe the marriage as an unhappy one, largely
because of Jack’s “raging temper”, though things appear to have improved
when, in 1964 they moved away from Jack’s own family to 27 Galahad Road,
Downham. However, all her children agree that Mrs Ashkettle herself was a
bright and cheerful person and a loving and caring mother who was very
attached to all of them. Robert was particularly close to her. He explained
that he suffered a life-threatening illness in 1965, when he was 14, and was in
hospital for four months and then convalescing for another six. During that
time he and his mother drew very close. Mrs Ashkettle continued to dote on
him in later years. Robert, his wife Jacqueline and daughter Vikki all recall
the way she fussed over him, sometimes to the point of embarrassment.
Jack Ashkettle died in 1990. Jack’s family were not told of his death because
(as Dennis explained) Jack himself had had no desire to see his family and
would not have even attended his own mother’s funeral to avoid them. Dennis
recalls that as being a family decision (that is, agreed by Mrs Ashkettle and all
her children) though Rosalind says it was Dennis’s decision. Dennis must be
right on this as he could not have prevented Mrs Ashkettle or Rosalind from
passing on the news had they wanted to. Mrs Ashkettle’s physical health
began to decline thereafter, so that by 1993 she was living permanently with
Rosalind. The arrangement appears to have been that Mrs Ashkettle would
stay overnight at Rosalind’s home in Bromley but would spend the days, or
part of the days, at her own home. Mrs Ashkettle’s deteriorating eyesight was
a particular worry in that she would often fall. She was also already suffering
from loss of memory and concentration, sometimes with potentially dangerous
consequences, such as leaving the gas on unlit and putting an electric kettle on
the hob (as Dennis and Robert recall). Concerns for Mrs Ashkettle’s safety
must have played a large part in the decision that she should move in with
Rosalind. All Mrs Ashkettle’s children were initially very happy that she
could rely upon Rosalind, rather than having to move to some kind of nursing
Mrs Ashkettle’s mental health thereafter declined further. Robert, Jacqueline
and Vikki recall being told by Rosalind that Mrs Ashkettle’s trousers had
fallen down while she was at The Glades shopping centre and she was walking
around unaware of the fact. On a separate occasion, Rosalind told them that
Mrs Ashkettle had eaten a lipstick she had been given. Rosalind disputed
these events but I accept the evidence I heard from Robert, Jacqueline and
Whatever the precise circumstances of these, and other, reported incidents, it
is clear that by 1997 even Rosalind had become concerned by her mother’s
mental condition. By this time, Mrs Ashkettle had had laser treatment on both
eyes and cataract surgery on her left eye, following which her consultant
ophthalmic surgeon, Mr Hugkulstone, wrote to her GP, Dr Israel, on 4 April
“is now delighted with the improvement in her vision. Both eyes are quiet and white with normal intra-ocular pressures. I have therefore discharged her from the clinic.”
Mrs Ashkettle’s eyesight could no longer therefore, at this stage, offer a
complete explanation for any lapses on her part. Rosalind did not accept this:
her evidence was that the operations were not a success in that there was not
the improvement hoped for, so that Mrs Ashkettle’s eyesight “just got worse
with time.” I have concluded that here, as elsewhere, Rosalind has simply
been unable to accept the truth of evidence which contradicts her case.
Rosalind took Mrs Ashkettle to see Dr Israel on 18 August 1997. Dr Israel’s
“memory problem . living with daughter temporarily … Ref Dr G for
In a side note, Dr Israel wrote “? Alzheimers” so she was clearly concerned by
Mrs Ashkettle’s mental condition. The reference to “Dr G” was to Dr Pandita-
Gunawardena, the consultant physician in Elderly Medicine at the University
Hospital, Lewisham, to whom Dr Israel wrote the following day. She
“Thank you for seeing Mrs Ashkettle whose daughter is very concerned about her memory loss. She has no medical problems and is not on any medication. She has had a few falls lately.
I would be grateful for your advice and necessary treatment.
I have arranged for FBC, TFT’s and U&E and urine test.
In her oral evidence before me, Rosalind advanced the hypothesis that her
mother’s problems must have stemmed from a minor stroke she had suffered
in the spring (or possibly July - her evidence is inconsistent here) of 1997.
Rosalind’s evidence was to the effect that Mrs Ashkettle had had a black-out
whilst walking in the park with her on a hot day. However, this incident was
not so serious at the time for Rosalind to have taken Mrs Ashkettle to the
doctor or for her to have mentioned it to the doctor when she did visit with her
mother on 18 August 1997. As will be seen, she also did not think it of any
significance when she took Mrs Ashkettle to see Dr Gunawardena. Both Dr
Israel and Dr Gunawardena could be expected to be looking for signs or
symptoms of stroke given Rosalind’s expressed concerns about memory loss
but they mention nothing in this respect. I reject Rosalind’s hypothesis, which
struck me as an attempt to explain away the records of the consultations with
Dr Israel and Dr Gunawardena so as to avoid the conclusion that Alzheimer’s
disease was diagnosed as early as September 1997.
On 4 September 1997, Rosalind and Robert together took Mrs Ashkettle to see
Dr Gunawardena. That they both accompanied their mother on this visit
reflects the seriousness of their concerns. I have heard evidence from each of
the surviving participants in this consultation and I have considered Dr
Gunawardena’s notes and subsequent letter to Dr Israel, written later that day.
The notes record some of Mrs Ashkettle’s recent medical history, which
Rosalind accepts must have been given by her. This includes a fall “2 years
ago”, when Mrs Ashkettle fractured her elbow (confirmed by other medical
records in evidence) and two eye operations. Otherwise the note was in these
“Poor memory … it has been a gradual & progressive memory deterioration during that period of 2 yrs Unable to name day, date & year No p.h. [past history] of a stroke or TIA [transient ischaemic attack] No fits On no medication Denies history of falling Loses things, cannot find them Physical health v. good Colour [tick - i.e. normal] Occ[asional] visual hallucinations B/P 150/90 Pu 76/min regular
CNS [central nervous system] no localising signs [diagnosis] Probable Alzheimer’s T588 offered Daughter not convinced but will think about it & let Val know”
In his letter the same day to Dr Israel, Dr Gunawardena repeated the
information he had recorded in his notes. He told Dr Israel that he had told
Rosalind and Robert that Mrs Ashkettle had “early memory problems”: he did
not use the word “Alzheimer’s” as he had “got the feeling from the daughter
that mother would not have liked to have heard the diagnosis”. However his
clinical judgment was “probable Alzheimer’s”. Dr Gunawardena explained in
evidence that this meant that his clinical diagnosis was of Alzheimer’s disease,
the “probable” not being a qualification of that assessment so much as an
indication that it had not then been confirmed by the so-called litmus tests
(e.g. blood test or biopsy). This explanation is consistent with what he says in
his letter to Dr Israel about his discussion with Rosalind and Robert of
available treatment programmes. In summary, the only drug then available in
the UK for the treatment of Alzheimer’s was Aricept but it was not yet
available at the hospital or from many GPs. Dr Gunawardena therefore offered
to put Mrs Ashkettle on an Alzheimer’s study he was conducting (as also
recorded in his notes), using a drug similar to Aricept; but Rosalind was not
very enthusiastic about that and she and Robert would need to think about it
and let him know what they wanted (again, as also recorded in the notes). This
discussion and recommendation could not have taken place if Dr
Gunawardena had any doubts about his diagnosis because the trial offered and
the drugs referred to were specific to Alzheimer’s.
Rosalind failed to provide an explanation in her witness statement as to what
lay behind the decision to consult Dr Israel and subsequently Dr
Gunawardena. In cross examination, she said she was concerned about her
mother’s slurred speech but there is no other evidence for a symptom of this
kind and Rosalind may have been trying to fit the facts to her theory that her
mother had suffered a stroke when she had a black-out in the park; at all
events, I reject this evidence. More significantly, Rosalind accepted that she
was concerned that her mother was asking “what is wrong with me?” and was
“not herself”, which seems to point to a more general concern of a kind with
which Dr Gunawardena’s diagnosis is entirely consistent.
As to the severity of Mrs Ashkettle’s condition at this time, there is, first, the
evidence that the family thought it sufficiently serious to be seeking medical
advice, with Rosalind and Robert both attending the consultation with Dr
Gunawardena. That suggests that there had been a serious deterioration in her
condition over the 2 year period referred to in Dr Gunawardena’s notes. These
notes also record Mrs Ashkettle’s inability to answer Dr Gunawardena’s
questions at the consultation as to the day, date and year; a separate piece of
evidence in this connection is that, in a letter to her own solicitors dated 1
August 2003, Rosalind recalled that Dr Gunawardena had also asked her
mother how old she was, what her name was and what the Queen’s name was,
but that her mother “just froze”. It would therefore appear that Dr
Gunawardena had asked six simple questions without getting any response at
all. Professor Hodkinson thought that the inability to answer questions of this
kind would, of itself, put the degree of dementia on the borderline between
mild and moderate. Professor Jacoby agreed that inability to answer questions
such as these would make it likely that other aspects of the standard Mini
Mental State Examination (MMSE) would go unanswered, with the degree of
dementia being, on that basis, moderate to severe. These opinions are
suggestive rather than conclusive, as Dr Gunawardena did not carry out a full
MMSE but I find, in the context of the family’s decision to take medical
advice, that the degree of dementia was becoming significant by September
1997. The experts also agree that Alzheimer’s is a relentless and progressive
disease so that no improvement could be expected over time and no lucid
intervals would arise: on the contrary, the only expectation would be for the
Rosalind sought to explain Mrs Ashkettle’s failure to answer Dr
Gunawardena’s questions by saying that his accent was too thick for her
mother (and even Rosalind) to understand. Robert disagreed with this
explanation and, having heard Dr Gunawardena give evidence, I reject it. It is
in any case difficult to see how Dr Gunawardena’s practice could have been as
successful as it was over 30 years if he had had any difficulty in making
himself understood by elderly patients. Rosalind was here, in my judgment,
seeking to explain away, rather than to explain, evidence which damaged her
case and the attempt is another reason why I find her evidence unreliable.
Rosalind also criticised Dr Gunawardena for his failure to carry out
appropriate tests but a series of tests had been ordered by Dr Israel and the
results were referred to in Dr Gunawardena’s letter to her (“I note that her
haematology and biochemistry are all normal”). It was, in part, the absence of
any alternative explanation for Mrs Ashkettle’s condition that led Dr
Gunawardena to his diagnosis of “probable Alzheimer’s”. Rosalind also
complains that she was seeking a brain scan for her mother but Dr
Gunawardena explained that brain scans were not routine for Alzheimer’s
disease at the time and were only carried out if there were a possibility of
another diagnosis such as a brain tumour or subdural haematoma (which was
not the case with Mrs Ashkettle). In the absence of any alternative
explanation, Dr Gunawardena’s diagnosis should in my judgment be taken as
Rosalind’s son Christopher was married in October 1997. Robert accompanied
his mother during the ceremony and sat with her throughout the reception but
she did not engage with anyone and maintained what Robert describes as “a
blank, fixed expression for everyone.” I accept Robert’s evidence on this
On 19 January 1998, Rosalind signed a document entitled “Disability Living
Allowance/Attendance Allowance Medical Report”. Her signature expressly
“This statement has been read back to me and I agree it is full and correct.
I agree that this information is correct.”
The document was a standard form, completed by a Dr B.N. Gupta (not the Dr
Gupta who was later to become Mrs Ashkettle’s GP) during the course of a
home visit to assess Mrs Ashkettle’s needs, with Rosalind signing as her
daughter and carer, and as the person providing the relevant information. The
comments which Rosalind confirmed as accurate include these:
“A.1. My mother lives on her own, she can get out of the bed but I
2. She can walk indoors, she can get to the bathroom. She
manages stairs very carefully. She does not use any walking aid.
3. She falls over any time if not watched, last fall was 1 week
ago. She fell two years [ago] and broke her left elbow. She fell in the garden last time.
4. She can wash her face and hands but she needs help to
bath[e]. She can get to the toilet and can manage in the toilet. Some time she forgets where the toilet is?
6. Meat has to be cut, then she can feed herself.
9. She has to be undressed, then she can get into the bed.
B.1. She does not go out on her own as she is not safe. She
cannot remember things. Her eyesight is poor as well.
2. No fits [this being an answer to a question about “Blackouts,
C.1. She can turn over and manage to cover herself in bed.
2. She goes to the toilet to empty bladder, then wanders in the
house every night early hours of the morning.
D.2. No fits [again an answer to a question about “Blackouts,
August 95 [in answer to the question: How long have these needs existed?]”
Dr BN Gupta’s clinical findings were as follows:
“Mentally not orientated. She does not remember her birth date, month or year. Pleasant otherwise. No physical disability noted or found. Walks normally. [?] finger count at 3 metres. Her general condition is good …
She is mentally confused and needs supervision.”
Dr Gupta also recorded that the need for the present amount of care began in
August 1995 (by day and by night) before which no such care was needed.
Rosalind has disputed much of this report in her solicitors’ letter of 8 June
2009 and later (in slightly different terms) in her witness statement and cross
examination. Her principal objection seems to be that Dr Gupta was an
elderly foreign man with poor English whom Mrs Ashkettle could not
understand and who had made mistakes in writing down what she told him.
That does not explain why she signed the document as an accurate record.
Her explanation for that was that she could not read Dr Gupta’s writing but I
find this far-fetched on the copy I have seen. I accept the point made by
Rosalind’s Counsel that Dr Gupta was assessing care needs, not capacity, but
that does not seem to me to explain why, in that case, Rosalind was so
concerned to argue with what Dr Gupta had recorded both as to Mrs
Ashkettle’s needs (confirmed by Rosalind’s own signature) and as to his
clinical finding. In one respect (“my mother lives on her own”) the
information was plainly false. Rosalind has also not explained what was the
purpose or what were the consequences of this visit, though presumably it was
part of a claim for some kind of disability benefit.
For the rest of 1998, there appear to have been no further visits to the doctor.
There is, however, plenty of evidence that Mrs Ashkettle’s condition was
getting worse. Dennis, who had been a regular visitor to see his mother at
Rosalind’s house, found that from around 1997/8, his mother had increasing
difficulty in recognising him; he also recalls an occasion when he saw her
trying to eat her napkin and another occasion when he had to force the toilet
door because his mother had locked herself in. He found the deterioration in
Mrs Ashkettle’s condition very upsetting because it became impossible to
converse with her and she was unaware of what was going on around her. The
situation was made worse because Rosalind was becoming impossible to deal
with. He recalls a fierce row with Rosalind in late 1998 when he tried to raise
concerns about his mother and she took it as criticism of the care she was
providing (which was not his intention). Dennis stopped going to see his
mother because there was no point if she did not recognise him and he did not
want to risk a further row with Rosalind. Robert, though a less frequent
visitor, had a similar experience. He became aware by late 1998 that his
mother no longer recognised him and found Rosalind difficult in allowing him
It would seem that Mrs Ashkettle was unaware that in October 1998, she
became great-grandmother to twin girls born to Robert’s son, Richard: Robert,
Jacqueline, Vikki and Richard recall Mrs Ashkettle’s inability to register who
the babies were on separate occasions between late 1998 and their christening
on 9 May 1999 (when Sally Melhuish recalls Mrs Ashkettle as being “wholly
vacant”). Mr Gillan recalls being unable to get a response from Mrs Ashkettle
at a family party at Robert’s house in the summer of 1999 and his evidence is
supported by Robert’s. Mrs Ashkettle was similarly unresponsive at Gregory
Gwinnett’s wedding in September 1999. Gregory gave evidence that he
shared several good-humoured chats with his grandmother that day but, in
view of all the evidence, I cannot accept his assertion that Mrs Ashkettle was
“mentally … as sharp as ever”: by this time, Mrs Ashkettle’s mental condition
The evidence of Mr Gear (Mrs Ashkettle’s neighbour) as to short
conversations or exchanges with her over the garden fence, even in 1999, did
not support the contention that Mrs Ashkettle was at any stage capable of
independent or coherent thought; and the evidence of Mrs Christie (Mrs
Ashkettle’s sister-in-law) that she was still speaking to her on the telephone in
1998 lacked cogent particularity and appears to have been in part influenced
by Mrs Christie’s continued dislike of Dennis for failing to inform her of her
brother’s death. By contrast, Colin, Dennis’s son, gave evidence which I
accept that his grandmother was unable to have any meaningful conversation
with him on the last few occasions on which he visited her (which included his
son’s first and second birthdays in November 1998 and 1999).
A home video has been produced which was taken by Christopher Gwinnett in
1998 and shows Rosalind and her mother in Rosalind’s garden. Rosalind
disputed the date of the video, saying it was taken in September, but the
correct date appears to me to be the “seventh” (i.e. July) rather than
September, which is also more consistent with the profusion of colourful
flowers on display. Mrs Ashkettle says nothing coherent during the
admittedly brief conversation recorded. She is not silent however. In
response to Christopher’s saying “Eh?” at one point to his mother, she seems
initially to dislike the expression but then remarks “A, B”, which reminds her
of the line in a song “Abe, my boy” – which she then sings (rather charmingly)
to no-one in particular. She later comments “hopefully great-great
grandchildren” apparently in response to a remark of Rosalind’s but without
any real context or logic. Towards the end of the video she mutters or burbles
audibly but incomprehensibly. While I appreciate that this video is short and
therefore of limited value, it does tend to contradict Rosalind’s evidence that
her mother retained her mental capacity throughout 1998. I was particularly
struck, not only by Mrs Ashkettle’s failure to engage appropriately in the
conversation, but also by the way both Christopher and Rosalind talked across
her, as if, even then, they were used to her talking without making sense. I
was also struck by the apparent openness and cheerfulness of Mrs Ashkettle’s
disposition, which could easily mask her real condition from a person who did
not know her. Christopher has not given evidence to explain his view of his
grandmother in this video or more generally at this time, nor has Rosalind’s
An important incident took place around the same time (i.e. the summer of
1998). Richard’s partner was discovered to be expecting twins sometime
around June and Robert was concerned that there would not be space in their
current home for the whole family. Robert therefore suggested to Rosalind, in
a telephone call, that Richard rent Mrs Ashkettle’s house for around £700 a
month; this would provide Richard and his family with a home at the same
time as giving Mrs Ashkettle some extra income. Coincidentally, Dennis was
at Rosalind’s house when this telephone call was made and Rosalind spoke to
him about it. Dennis did not see any problem with the suggestion but
Rosalind was adamant that she would not allow it. Neither Robert nor Dennis
raised this request with Mrs Ashkettle directly because they both believed that
she was unaware of her surroundings by this time and unable to make a
decision. Having heard Rosalind’s refusal, Robert says he did not press the
matter and Richard made alternative arrangements for his new family.
Rosalind’s evidence was that Robert was aggressively insistent on obtaining a
tenancy for Richard and that this was an important part of what caused the
deep rift which now exists in the family. She describes how upset her mother
was to be told of the request, believing (Rosalind said) that her house was to
be taken from her. But I reject Rosalind’s description of these events, which I
regard as exaggerated and heavily dramatized. Robert’s suggestion was a
perfectly reasonable one in the circumstances and could not be reasonably
understood as a threat to take Mrs Ashkettle’s house from her; and there was
no need for Robert to become aggressive in advancing the request as it was not
his problem but Richard’s and there were alternatives available. I prefer
I turn to the circumstances in which the 1999 will came to be prepared. The
evidence for this consists of the statements and oral evidence of Rosalind and
Mrs Ashkettle’s solicitor, Mr Stanger, and a few papers from the solicitor’s
files. I would emphasise that the will file (if there was one) has not survived
so that it is not possible to read what instructions were given or by whom or to
track how they were implemented. The only attendance note which survives
relates to an Enduring Power of Attorney (“EPA”) which was executed at
around the same time but this attendance note does not reveal what
instructions were given for the will. In the result, both Rosalind and Mr
Stanger were giving oral evidence as to the detailed instructions, otherwise
unrecorded, but given some 14 years ago. I do not believe that I have heard a
full and satisfactory explanation of what really happened.
To begin with, there is some confusion as to the dates upon which Mrs
Ashkettle attended her solicitors’ office. The attendance note for the EPA
records a visit on 25 November 1998 and the will itself is dated 18 January
1999 which was presumably the date of a second visit. However there appears
to have been a third meeting, on 6 January 1999, which Rosalind recalled
(without fully explaining how she had managed to date it) but which Mr
Stanger omitted to mention in his written evidence. When this third meeting
was put to him in cross-examination, Mr Stanger produced copies of his diary
which indeed confirmed a meeting with Mrs Ashkettle and Rosalind at 3.30pm
that day. That did not explain, however, what that meeting was for or what
had transpired on that occasion nor why Mr Stanger had omitted to mention it.
The attendance note of 25 November 1998 records that Mrs Ashkettle had
attended (with Rosalind) to make a new will but that Mr Stanger had taken the
opportunity to explain about an EPA which, according to the note, Mrs
Ashkettle decided to proceed with there and then. The note records
“Although somewhat frail, she [Mrs Ashkettle] expressed her wishes clearly and thus seemed to me to have the appropriate capacity to proceed”.
This statement raises a number of (unanswered) questions as to the nature of
the discussion between the three participants and what precisely was said by
Mrs Ashkettle (as opposed to Rosalind) to express her wishes. Mr Stanger’s
evidence (unsurprisingly after 14 years) did not descend to this kind of detail.
In view of the other evidence I have reviewed above, I do not accept this
unsupported statement of Mr Stanger’s as to Mrs Ashkettle’s apparent
The attendance note also records that there was “a separate attendance note
about the will”. However, as I have said, the will file (if there was one) has
not survived. It is impossible therefore to see how, when and in what precise
terms Mrs Ashkettle (or anyone on her behalf) can be said to have given
appropriate instructions. Mr Stanger’s evidence did not supply any relevant
detail on these matters. He seemed to me to have little if any recollection
beyond what could be re-constructed from the surviving documents and his
usual practice. Rosalind claims to have been out of the room when the will
was discussed which, if true, means she cannot give evidence as to what was
said and, if untrue, makes her evidence even more unreliable.
What does survive is, of course, the 1999 will itself. This includes the express
explanation I have quoted above as to why Mrs Ashkettle was cutting out her
two sons. However, these provisions cannot, in my judgment, truly reflect the
actual circumstances at the time. On the evidence I have heard (and broadly
accepted) it was quite wrong for the will to suggest that Mrs Ashkettle and
Dennis “do not have a friendly and reasonable Mother and Son relationship”.
Dennis had been a frequent visitor to his mother and Rosalind until recently;
he had only stopped coming because his mother could not communicate any
more and Rosalind made it difficult to do so. The relationship between Mrs
Ashkettle and Dennis had otherwise always been a close one. The phrase
“friendly and reasonable” is to my mind a curious one to use for a mother –
son relationship anyway; one would expect to read that the relationship was
not “close” or “affectionate” or the like rather than “friendly” or “reasonable”.
Equally there was no basis for the comment, in Robert’s case, that “he has
greatly upset me with his attitude towards my house”; Robert had no “attitude”
towards his mother’s house, nor (as I have explained) could his request on
Richard’s behalf have reasonably given rise to any concerns on Mrs
Ashkettle’s part which could possibly have “upset” her, let alone “greatly”. In
the case of each of Dennis and Robert, it is equally unclear what (if any)
information Mrs Ashkettle could have had or understood (or conveyed to Mr
Stanger) as to what “adequate means” were available to them. I regard these
comments in the will as quite unwarranted and to that extent inexplicable.
I hesitate to make any findings about how these express comments about
Dennis and Robert came to be included in the will. The suspicion on the
evidence I have heard must be that they represent Rosalind’s instructions
rather than Mrs Ashkettle’s. In the absence of a will file, or any full
explanation from Rosalind or Mr Stanger as to how the instructions were
given before, during or after the meetings on 25 November 1998 and 6
January 1999, it is impossible to reach any final conclusion. I am satisfied,
however, that Mrs Ashkettle was not at that time in a position to appreciate the
extent of her estate or the moral claims of those (namely Dennis and Robert)
who might have expected to benefit from her bounty.
The will was executed on 18 January 1999. Mr Stanger signed it on Mrs
Ashkettle’s behalf, having read it to her. However, I regard Mrs Ashkettle’s
inability to sign as an indication of her lack of capacity rather than her poor
eyesight or physical frailty. Mrs Mears was one of the witnesses and claimed
in her statement to have had no doubts about Mrs Ashkettle’s capacity. But
her dealings with Mrs Ashkettle were fleeting and she did not give any details
as to how she could have reached such a conclusion. On the contrary, her
description of the will being read to her ascribes a rather passive role to Mrs
Ashkettle, whose “assent” may have amounted to little more than a smile and
a nod. I am not satisfied on this evidence that Mrs Ashkettle could genuinely
have understood what was being done in her name and on her behalf. The
next day, Mr Stanger swore a statutory declaration as to the due execution of
the will but this does not take matters any further.
Mr Stanger’s firm’s invoices for preparing the EPA and the 1999 will are in
evidence and show charges of £40 and £60 for each respectively (plus VAT).
The latter was dated 12 January 1999 and so must have been available for 18
January 1999 when, indeed, payment was made and the invoice receipted.
These charges suggest that Mr Stanger’s dealings with Mrs Ashkettle were
brief and (from his point of view) entirely unexceptional. I am not satisfied
from his evidence (in the absence of more detailed contemporaneous
information) that Mr Stanger asked Mrs Ashkettle open questions sufficient to
elicit the problem with her capacity which, from other evidence, I find to have
existed by this time. Professor Jacoby explained how people with dementia
can still maintain a “social façade” in certain situations, provided that they are
not asked open questions and can get by by repeating familiar learned
material. I am not satisfied from Mr Stanger’s evidence that, in his brief
dealings with Mrs Ashkettle, he penetrated any social façade she may then
have presented. The false or inaccurate explanations for not benefiting Dennis
or Robert cannot have been explored with her in any detail or their inaccuracy
would have become apparent. Rosalind did not tell Mr Stanger of any of her
mother’s medical history so it may be that he was simply unaware, from his
brief contact with her, that at the very least a medical opinion would be needed
On 19 January 1999, the day after the will was executed, Mrs Ashkettle visited
the doctor’s surgery. This was no longer the practice with which Dr Israel was
connected but a new practice, further away, where Rosalind had had her
mother registered on 19 November 1998. It is wholly unclear on Rosalind’s
evidence why she thought such a move would be appropriate at this time. Be
that as it may, the medical records show that, on this visit, Mrs Ashkettle saw
Dr Glendon who recorded (among other things)
“Problem with vision. Difficult to assess because of impaired mental state.
The inability of Dr Glendon to assess her new patient’s eyesight because of
her “impaired mental state” is another indication that she was, by this time,
unable to respond to her circumstances. Rosalind’s Defence in these
proceedings said of this note that it was unsigned and that “the Defendant will
invite the court to infer from this that it was not taken by a doctor” but Dr A
Gupta (Mrs Ashkettle’s new GP) was able to identify both that the
handwriting was Dr Mary Glendon’s and that she was one of the doctors at the
surgery. It remains wholly unclear to me why Rosalind would have put such
matters in issue: she must herself have seen the doctor with her mother.
Mrs Ashkettle’s later medical history supports the conclusion that her eyesight
had deteriorated again. Mrs Ashkettle also appears to have suffered confusion
in mid-2000 which was attributable to a urinary tract infection. Two letters
from Lewisham health care workers in August and September 2000 confirm
that Rosalind was Mrs Ashkettle’s carer and the extent of Mrs Ashkettle’s
dependence on her and also show Rosalind refusing or avoiding assistance.
An appointment with Mr Hugkulstone in April 2001 was also not met;
Rosalind accepted that there was no point in doing so. The next significant
medical event was in December 2002 when Mrs Ashkettle suffered difficulties
in swallowing her food. Dr Gupta visited her at Rosalind’s house several
times at this stage. He saw nothing which would have warranted a referral to
the hospital so it is unlikely that Mrs Ashkettle then exhibited any symptoms
of a stroke. Professor Hodkinson explained that problems with swallowing are
common in cases of Alzheimer’s disease and, in the absence of other
symptoms, that seems to be the likely explanation of Mrs Ashkettle’s
Towards the end of December 2002, Mrs Ashkettle was admitted to hospital,
having been aspirating food and mucus, as seen on a barium swallow. It is
agreed that, from this point on, Mrs Ashkettle was bedbound for the rest of her
life and never spoke again. Gregory Gwinnett described his grandmother as
deteriorating slowly from this point onwards but I reject that evidence, given
the sudden change in her condition. It may be that this evidence is accurate
though wrongly dated but, in the absence of any other reliable evidence from
him as to the date of what he observed, it is impossible to derive anything
There is little dispute between the parties as to the applicable law.
On the issue of execution of the 1999 will, the Claimants’ initial contention
was that Rosalind had not obtained a statement from either witness to its
execution, which would usually be required for proof of a will. That point was
dealt with at the commencement of the trial when Rosalind produced late
statements from both witnesses, one of whom (Denise Mears) then gave
evidence. The only point then left was whether there was sufficient evidence
that Mrs Ashkettle had given a positive direction or instruction for the will to
be signed on her behalf (see Barrett v Bem [2012] Ch 573 at paras 23-4, per
Lewison LJ). While I agree that the evidence is weak on this issue, I take the
view that, in the circumstances, Mrs Ashkettle did give a sufficient direction
for Mr Stanger to sign it on her behalf. Mr Stanger had had the will amended
to enable him to do so, he had read the will to her and she had (on Mrs
Mears’s evidence) done sufficient to convey to Mr Stanger that he should sign
on her behalf, which is what he then did. I conclude therefore, albeit
tentatively, that the will was properly executed by Mr Stanger.
As for the issue of testamentary capacity, I have been referred to the well-
known statement of principle in Banks v Goodfellow (1870) LR 5 QB 549 and
the more recent glosses on its application in cases such as Key v Key [2010] 1
WLR 2020 and Cowderoy v Cranfield [2011] EWHC 1616. In the latter case,
Morgan J (at paras 130-137) summarised the relevant authorities in terms
which I would gratefully adopt. As Morgan J emphasises, the question is not
as to whether or not the will is a fair one in all the circumstances of the case
because a valid will can be unfair, vindictive or perverse; but if the terms of a
will are surprising, that may be material to the court’s assessment of the
testator’s capacity (or indeed his knowledge and approval of the terms of the
will). Morgan J also adopts what was said by Briggs J in Key v Key, above,
as to the evidential burden shifting to the propounder if the objector raises a
I have also been taken to Hawes v Burgess [2013] EWCA Civ 94, where the
Court of Appeal recently expressed the view that it is “a very strong thing” for
a judge to find lack of testamentary capacity when the will has been prepared
by an experienced and independent solicitor following a meeting with the
testator, when it had been read through and explained to her and when the
solicitor had formed the view that the testator was capable of understanding
the will, the terms of which were not, on their face, inexplicable or irrational
(see per Mummery LJ at paras 57 and 60 and per Scott Baker LJ at para 69). I
accept the wisdom of these comments though I observe that they do not go so
far as to suggest that, in every case, the evidence of an experienced and
independent solicitor will, without more, be conclusive. Any view the
solicitor may have formed as to the testator’s capacity must be shown to be
based on a proper assessment and accurate information or it is worthless; and
(as Mummery LJ acknowledges) the terms of the will may themselves suggest
that the solicitor’s assessment was not soundly based.
On my findings in this judgment, the evidence as a whole shows that, by 18
January 1999, Mrs Ashkettle had lost testamentary capacity. She had been
suffering from a progressive form of dementia since at least 1997 (when it was
diagnosed by Dr Gunawardena) and (from his notes) at least two years before.
Other evidence suggests that the problem had emerged even earlier. By the
end of 1998, Mrs Ashkettle was unable to communicate in any meaningful
way, though she may have retained a sufficient “social façade” to mask her
mental deterioration from an incurious interlocutor. Mr Stanger’s evidence
does not contradict this conclusion because he does not say, and it is
impossible to recover, how and from whom he took his instructions or what he
relied upon in Mrs Ashkettle’s demeanour or behaviour to satisfy the
requirement of capacity; his contact with Mrs Ashkettle was extremely brief
and, at least to some extent, filtered through Rosalind. There is no evidence as
to what Mrs Ashkettle thought her property consisted of. Perhaps above all,
the terms of the will make no sense. There is no proper support or explanation
for the expressed reasons for excluding Dennis and Robert: these reasons are
irrational and inexplicable in the context of Mrs Ashkettle’s family life and
history. They are not even explicable as the product of caprice or
vindictiveness on the part of Mrs Ashkettle. Applying the approach of Briggs
J in Key v Key, above, to the evidential burden in this case, I would conclude,
at the least, that Dennis and Robert have raised a real doubt as to Mrs
Ashkettle’s capacity which has placed the evidential burden on Rosalind to
prove it, a burden which she has failed to satisfy. I would indeed go further
and say that the evidence shows that Mrs Ashkettle had no testamentary
As for the plea of want of knowledge and approval, I have been taken to cases
such as Fuller v Strum [2002] 1 WLR 1097, Hoff v Atherton [2004] EWCA
Civ 1554 and Gill v Woodall [2011] Ch 380. This question only arises if,
contrary to my conclusion above, Mrs Ashkettle had had testamentary
capacity: the question would be whether, in those circumstances, she actually
knew and approved the terms of the will. If I am wrong on the issue of
testamentary capacity, I would still conclude, for similar reasons, that Mrs
Ashkettle did not know and approve the terms of the will. She did not read it
for herself and, in my judgment, would have found it difficult to concentrate
when it was read to her or to absorb what was being said to her. There is no
evidence that she understood what property she had to which the will would
apply or, for that matter, that she genuinely understood what its effect was.
The evidence of Mrs Mears and Mr Stanger does not establish that Mrs
Ashkettle actually understood and approved what she was executing or that
Mr Stanger’s signature would have the effect of binding her; and Mr Stanger’s
evidence is anyway inadequate in explaining how, from whom and in what
terms he received his instructions. The terms of the will as regards Dennis and
Robert were irrational and inexplicable and indicate that Mrs Ashkettle did not
understand what she was doing. Mrs Ashkettle’s powers of understanding
were not, on the evidence I have heard, sufficient to enable her to know and
approve the terms of this will, even if she had retained capacity; that was
Professor Hodkinson’s opinion and it is also my conclusion from the evidence.
For these reasons, Rosalind has failed to satisfy me that the 1999 will should
be granted probate even if Mrs Ashkettle had testamentary capacity.
I need not, in the circumstances, deal with the further issue of undue influence
which would only arise if the 1999 will were otherwise valid.
I will therefore pronounce against the alleged will of 18 January 1999 and
grant letters of administration with the will annexed in relation to the will of 2
October 1986. I will dismiss the counterclaim. I will hear argument as to the
precise form of order, if it cannot be agreed.
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DESARROLLO DE UN MÉTODO ANALÍTICO BASADO EN LA EXTRACCIÓN CON DISOLVENTES PRESURIZADOS Y ANÁLISIS CROMATOGRÁFICO PARA LA DETERMINACIÓN DE RESÍDUOS DE ANTIBIÓTICOS FLUOROQUINOLONAS EN HUEVOS S. Herranz, M.C. Moreno-Bondi and M.D. Marazuela* Departamento de Química Analítica, Facultad de CC. Químicas. Universidad Complutense de Madrid, E-28040 Madrid, Spain. * Contacto: El empleo ru