BELIEB in Organ Donation

A simple plea from Justin Bieber resulted in a significant boost in on-line organ donation registrations in Ontario. 

After an Ottawa woman awaiting a lung transplant tweeted:

"Hey @justinbieber!  I BELIEB you should use that Canadian voice of yours and help save lives like mine # beanorgandonor beadonor.ca #giveblood"

Justin responded by encouraging fans to sign up.  The Trillium Gift of LIfe Network saw a surge in traffic to their website and a spike in on-line registrations as a result. 

In Ontario, your family can consent to organ donation on your behalf, if you are unable to do so.  However, on-line registration ensures that your wishes are communicated to the Trillium Network and shared with your family.  There are currently over 1,500 Ontarians awaiting life-saving organ transplants.  Go to beadonor.ca to find out more.

Moira Visoiu - Click here for more information on Moira Visoiu

Trust Basics - The Three Certainties

In our fast paced and busy lives, we can often overlook the basics, getting bogged down in the details and not seeing the forest for the trees. Seeing as this is the case, I thought it might be a good exercise to have a quick review of one of the basic tenants of trust law; the three certainties.
 

Most people are fairly comfortable with a basic understanding of what constitutes a trust. The loose idea that a trust is created when a person transfers property to another person under the instructions and understanding that the property is to be used for the benefit of a third party is fairly universally understood. But what may not be as universally understood are the basic criteria that must be met in order to have the transfer of property constitute a valid trust.  In order for the property transfer to constitute a valid trust, it must meet what are known as the three certainties: (i) The Certainty of Intention; (ii) The Certainty of Subject Matter; and (iii) The Certainty of Objects.
 

The Certainty of Intention refers to the intention on the part of the person transferring the property (more correctly referred to as the "Settlor") to create a trust. The expression of the intention to create a trust can be oral or written, and should be supported by some expression of the intent to create a trust. Put simply, when the Settlor transferred the property, they had to do so with the intention that the property be held in trust for a third party.
 

The Certainty of Subject Matter has two aspects to it, being: (i) the certainty of the property that is subject to the obligation that it be held in trust; and (ii) the certainty of the amount, or share, of the trust property that each beneficiary is to receive. At the time that the property is transferred, it must be certain what property is to form the subject of the trust, and you must know how much each beneficiary of the trust is entitled to receive. 
 

The Certainty of Objects refers to the fact that you must be certain who the beneficiaries of the trust are. For a trust to be valid, the trustee must know who they are to direct the benefits of the trust property towards, and who can hold the trustee to account in the event of anything going wrong. As such, a group so large or so vague that the trustee would unable to identify who the beneficiaries are would not be valid. The Objects have to be easily ascertainable and identified in order to be a valid trust.
 

If an alleged trust lacks any one of the three certainties it will fail as a trust. As such, when approaching a trust for the first time, a good practice tip is to quickly run through the three certainties to make sure that the trust is valid in its most basic form. Why waste hours on a more minute detail, only to realize that the trust was not valid from the start as a result of its objects being too vague. I hope this review of one of the basic tenants of trust law has provided you with a valuable refresher. Sometimes a review of the basics does us all a little good
 

Ian Hull - Click here for more information on Ian Hull

Wills and Separation Agreements - Revisited

On August 15, 2011, I blogged on the decision of Hennessy J. in Makarchuk v. Makarchuk, 2011 ONSC 4633 (CanLII).  There, the court found that a separation agreement did not preclude the surviving spouse from benefitting under the deceased’s will.

On Monday this week, the Ontario Court of Appeal dismissed the appeal, and upheld the decision of the lower court.  In a brief endorsement, the Court of Appeal stated “We have not been persuaded that the application judge erred in her interpretation of the Separation Agreement. Since the deceased never revoked his will, the gift in the will to the respondent stands.”

The Court of Appeal also dismissed a motion to admit fresh evidence. No particulars of this motion were given.

As I stated in my prior blog, separated spouses must consider their estate plan, including terms of their wills and beneficiary designations to ensure that their intentions are properly reflected.  In the case of Makarchuk, it is not clear whether the husband intended to benefit his separated spouse.  However, as the lower court noted, had he wished to not do so, there were a number of means available to him to effectively revoke the gift he had made to his spouse prior to their separation.

Have a great weekend.

Paul E. Trudelle - Click here for more information on Paul Trudelle

Death: Southbank Centre's Festival for the Living

A “festival” running at London’s Southbank Centre in January explores death from all angles. The festival will explore attitudes towards death, using music, workshops, literature and art installations. Festival events range from the whimsical to the serious.

Highlights include an art installation entitled “the ‘Boxed’ coffin exhibition”, which features a number of unusual coffins, including coffins in the shape of a dumpster, a lion, a Mercedes, a car, and a skateboard.

Less light-hearted events include a debate on assisted dying; a music concert featuring composers obsessed with death; an art installation that commemorates the 250,000 people that will be born or die in 12 hours around the world; a poetry workshop on writing poetry when dealing with the grief associated with the death of a loved one, and a pseudo-funeral procession borrowing from a New Orleans funeral parade.

Other events include a chalkboard where attendees can record an item from their “bucket-list” of the one thing that they want to do before they die, and a children’s play chronicling the last days of a pet guinea pig.

Together, the festival’s numerous events shed light on and led to healthy discussion of a topic many are reluctant to talk about. 

Thank you for reading.

Paul E. Trudelle - Click here for more information on Paul Trudelle

Who's Minding the Store?

A ‘controlled substance’ is any type of drug whose manufacture, possession or use is tightly regulated by a government because of the higher-than-average potential for abuse or addiction. In Canada, controlled substances fall under the parameters of the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act (S.C. 1996, c.19).  How is it, then, that hundreds of thousands of doses of OxyContin, morphine and other prescription narcotics are ‘robbed, pilfered or otherwise lost’ from the supply chain each year in this country?

On January 23, the National Post’s Tom Blackwell published some startling statistics about the not-so-slow leak of prescription narcotics from the supply chain. According to the Post’s research (based on Health Canada statistics), only 64% of the loss and theft of oxycodone (the active ingredient in OxyContin) is attributable to theft from, or robbery of pharmacies. Suppliers higher up the chain (e.g. manufacturers and importers) are also losing significant volumes of product, accounting for the other 36% of total loss. What scale of loss are we talking about here? If we just look at oxycodone, the combined black-market value of losses from pharmacies and ‘licensed dealers’ (producers, distributors, wholesalers) in 2010 was just over $18 million. That’s roughly a half million tablets.  Professor Benedikt Fischer, an addictions expert at Simon Fraser University summed it thusly: “This isn’t some trivial problem. We’re now looking at a problem that is a major source of disease and death. These drugs are killing a lot of people.”

The volume of drugs taken from wholesalers and distributors has also increased substantially in the past five years.  It is difficult to put a finger on any single cause.  Blackwell's article presented some prime suspects for consideration, including cutbacks in the number of controlled substance inspectors and the bare fact that a trend of increasing prescription rates for opioids translates into more opioids being in the proverbial pipeline.

It is critical that Health Canada gets to the root of the supply chain leaks.  Fischer's "these drugs are killing a lot of people" was no overstatement.  Indeed, as discussed in an earlier blog, accidental deaths in Ontario due to opioid use exceed deaths from HIV.  And from the Globe and Mail (January 6, 2012): the same number of people die from opioid-related deaths in Ontario each year as they do from motor vehicle accidents.  

Jennifer Hartman, guest blogger

Hull On Estates and Succession Planning - Courageous Questions

This week on Hull on Estates and Succession Planning, Ian Hull and Suzana Popovic-Montag give an overview of the book "With the Stroke of a Pen, Claim Your Life" by Jane Blaufus. This book is based on Jane's personal experience with the loss of her husband. In this episode, Ian and Suzana examine the "Courageous Questions" asked by Jane, questions they feel are associated with the day to day issues of estate planning.
If you have any questions or comments, please send us an email at hull.lawyers at gmail.com

Etta James Dies at 73

Renowned blues singer Etta James died last week at the age of 73. She succumbed to chronic leukemia, complicated by dementia and kidney problems.

Etta James had a particular significance to me. After buying my first CD player, Etta James’ CD was the first CD that I purchased. That CD got a lot of play.

Etta James lived a turbulent life. She was born to a mother whom Etta described as a scam artist, a substance abuser and a fleeting presence during her younger years. She did not know her father. During her lifetime, she would battle addictions.

However, as a musician, she soared. She was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and won numerous Grammys, including a special lifetime achievement Grammy in 2003.

Near the end of her life, her health declined, and here family was involved in a dispute over her care. Her two sons had challenged decisions being made by Etta’s husband, who was the conservator of Etta’s $1m estate.  The dispute was reported as settled, with the husband staying on as conservator, and the amount available for her expenses and care being fixed at $350,000. The sons were also to receive a full financial accounting of Etta’s music catalogue.

Thank you for reading.

Paul Trudelle - Click here for more information on Paul Trudelle

Mandatory Mediation of Estate Matters - Rule 75.1

Rule 75.1 of the Rules of Civil Procedure provides for the mandatory mediation of estates, trusts, and substitute decisions matters which are commenced in Toronto, Ottawa, or the County of Essex.
Rule 75.1 provides that, except in a contested Passing of Accounts, the Applicant shall make a motion, in the same way as under R. 75.06 (Application or Motion for Directions), seeking directions for the conduct of the mediation. Rule 75.1.05(2) provides that the Notice of Motion for mediation directions is to be served within 30 days after the last day for serving a Notice of Appearance.
 

In terms of who actually conducts the mandatory mediation session, R. 75.1.06 provides that the mediator can be a person chosen from the list for the county by agreement of the designated parties, a person assigned from the list by the mediation co-ordinator for the county (at the request of a designated party), or a person who is not named on the list, if the designated parties consent.
 

Most clients are vaguely familiar with the court process and think they know what to expect - they know it involves a judge, their lawyer, a trial, and a courtroom. Not many clients however know what to expect at mediation. As a result, it is important for counsel to take time to describe the process, answer any questions, and prepare their client for what they can expect to happen at mediation. By doing so, counsel can help reduce their client's anxiety about the attendance.
 

Estate mediations can be a very emotionally draining experience. Apart from any legal foundation to the dispute, many intangible factors tend to also be present in estate matters. Jealously, anger, and greed are difficult emotions to overcome and can be sever stumbling blocks in settlement. Sometimes, steering clients away from the emotional aspects and towards the financial implications of continued litigation assists them in moving past those types of difficulties.
 

Clients need to be assured that the mediation process is completely confidential and that anything that is said or admitted cannot be used against them at a later date. The fact that there will be no public record of the proceeding may provide some clients with the comfort to say things that might otherwise not be said. In addition, clients can be advised that any information they provide to the mediator to try to help him or her understand their position better can remain confidential, and that the mediator will not disclose any information unless expressly authorized by the client. Having the opportunity to participate in open and frank discussions may be the key to resolving outstanding issues, issues which might not otherwise be addressed in the litigation process.
 

In jurisdictions not governed by mandatory estate mediation, r. 75.06(2)(f.1) allows a judge hearing an Application or Motion for directions to direct that a mediation session be conducted nonetheless. Counsel may want to keep this provision in mind when otherwise seeking directions in respect of a matter which may, in whole or in part, benefit from a mediation session.
 

Ian Hull - Click here for more information on Ian Hull

Breakfast Series Recap

 

Thank you to all who attended our Breakfast Series yesterday, and congratulations on getting a head start on your CPD! 

For those of you who didn’t attend, you missed three wonderful presentations which covered a wide array of issues faced estate practitioners, both litigants and solicitors alike. Paul Trudelle provided a reminder to all of us that the Rules of Professional Conduct deserve a routine review, and drew our attention to specific examples of how estate practitioners are impacted by Rule 2, and how we should turn our minds to this rule during the course of every retainer. Natalia Angelini provided a detailed review of the Pecore decision and the issues of joint ownership in estate planning. While Ian Hull wrapped up the morning with discussion about the pitfalls and traps of disinheritance, and what planners and litigators should look to when strategizing.  

Please check out our website and see our previous presentations and papers, the papers presented at yesterday’s seminar will be posted shortly.  Also stay tuned to our website for information regarding our next breakfast series, I hope to see you there.

Have a great weekend,

Nadia M. Harasymowycz - Click here for more information on Nadia Harasymowycz

 

If I Die...

A friend recently drew my attention to a new Facebook app (ifidie) that allows you to leave a message that will only be published after you die. A video about the app can be viewed here, and the press kit on their website identifies that this could “even [be] a will”.    In brief, the app allows you to upload videos and messages, and authorize trustees (it looks like they must be Facebook friends of yours) which can notify Facebook upon your death. Once Facebook has been notified of your death, the messages you have identified will be posted to your profile[1].

You may remember the Sunscreen Song, a smash hit in the late 1990s that gave ‘advice’, most notably to wear sunscreen.   Some of the things that we have to tell people are really important; some are not. I can certainly see this app being used to reveal secrets, leave us with whatever ‘sage’ wisdom or venom is felt necessary, and possibly to simply say goodbye, much in the same vein as the Sunscreen Song. What happens if it doesn’t stop at that? 

In Ontario, under the Succession Law Reform Act, Part I, section 3, “A will is valid only when it is in writing.”  What happens if the video posted includes a testamentary disposition? Certainly, it wouldn’t be a valid will in Ontario, having not met even the minimum writing requirement, but perhaps in other jurisdictions such a statement could be considered a valid testamentary document. In Ontario, would it be, and could it be used as, evidence of testamentary intention?  What if the ifidie post is a written message stamped with electronic signatures? Could the argument be made that it’s a Will?

Leaving aside the various other issues that relate to post-mortem social media presence, the potential for the app to be used for testamentary purposes may have serious ramifications for Estate litigation, both in Ontario and beyond. 

In our constantly changing world… can you keep up?

Nadia M. Harasymowycz - Click here for more information on Nadia Harasymowycz



[1] I could find no reference to whether messages could be deleted or amended, or the general permanency of such a posting.

Digital Legacy - Another Leap Forward

With the extreme advancements in technology, we are all struggling to keep up. Whether its asking your kids about this thing called Facebook or remembering to keep a record of your online banking information, we have reached a stage where we can’t avoid the realities of living in a world where a great deal of our life is conducted in ‘cyber-space’.  

The Will Registry, Inc. is a web site that has recently been launched in New York State. The site is a centralized database for storage of wills, trusts, powers of attorney, heath care directives and other vital legal documents. Further, it includes a directory to locate originals.   The website also makes it possible for the member to access their information from anywhere in the world. Some of the services are discussed in this blog

Notably, the website also allows for professional accounts. Allowing lawyers, trust officers, physicians, hospitals and health care providers to create their own accounts to store information relating to their records. Hypothetically, this would allow lawyers to keep a record of the wills they’ve drawn and what was done with the original. The record being preserved, and searchable, with the information being disseminated limited to that allowed by the member.  

We’ve all encountered the situation where we believe that a client or the Deceased in an estate battle made a Will, and yet no one can find it, or only a copy can be found. This could lead to a variety of possible court Applications, all costly, lengthy and ultimately with no guarantee of success. The search capabilities included in this site, as well as with the Ontario counterpart (although it is limited to Wills), could assist in general conundrums of this fashion, assuming the member has made that information available.  

The extent to which this website is used and whether there are any ethical issues for its use from a professional perspective is yet to be seen. I suppose that only time will tell how such websites impact estate planning, administration and litigation, but its certainly something to think about the next time you’re looking for a will.  

Until Tomorrow,  

Nadia M. Harasymowycz - Click here for more information on Nadia Harasymowycz

Mediating in Elder Law Matters - The Brink of a New Era

In 2007, the British Columbia legislature passed the “Adult Guardianship and Planning Statutes Amendment Act”, parts of which came into force in September of 2011. One of the key points to this legislation, finding interest in the estate world recently, is the new mandatory mediation requirement for guardianship applications.  Several of the other considerations addressed in this new legislation are considered here.

The Canadian Centre for Elder Law Studies, a division of the British Columbia Law institute, has recently prepared a report on this very issue, titled “Elder and Guardianship Mediation”.   At the risk of stating the obvious, our demographic is quickly aging, and issues surrounding anything dealing with the elder population are appropriately en vogue.   The substantial report deals with a variety of important issues in respect of the type of training a mediator might require in this particular field, ethical principles for consideration for all involved, as well as attending to an explanation of key concepts and definitions related to this field.

Although this report was prepared for British Columbia, with a detailed analysis of their legislation, certainly the parallels to Ontario are evident and likely to be found very persuasive by the Ontario Courts. Under Rule 75.01 of the Ontario Rules of Civil Procedure, mandatory mediation applies to the Substitute Decisions Act. As guardianship in Ontario is governed by the Substitute Decisions Act, it may be that the information and considerations addressed in the Report will be helpful both in practice to Ontario counsel, as well as to the judiciary when considering such matters.

Get an early start on your CPD Hours and join us for our Breakfast Series this Thursday, January 19, 2012 at 8:30 am at the Ontario Bar Association Conference Centre located at 200-20 Toronto Street, Toronto Ontario. Please see here for a link to our registration form. I hope to see you there!

Thanks for Reading,

Nadia M. Harasymowycz - Click here for more information on Nadia Harasymowycz

 

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Rectification of Mistakes - Is what is written final?

Mistakes are a fact of life. Even the most careful person, who always makes sure to double check their work, may one day inadvertently make a mistake. If luck is on your side hopefully these mistakes do not have too large an impact, and can easily be corrected. But what happens when a mistake is made in the drafting of a will? Can these mistakes easily be corrected, or is the testator (and their intended beneficiaries) stuck with the will as written, mistakes and all?
 

There has long been a debate over whether the court has the power to add new words to a will in order to correct a mistake, or merely the power to delete mistakenly included words.  Indeed A.H. Oosterhoff in his seminal text "Oosterhoff on Wills and Succession", states that while a court of probate may strike out errors, it may not substitute new words.  But is this truly the case? Are the words as written in the will the only words that may be admitted to probate? Can no additions be made?
 

Recently in Lipson v. Lipson, the Ontario Superior Court of Justice gave some guidance in understanding under which circumstances the court can add or delete words to a will. In coming to his decision, Justice Pattillo states that after reviewing the jurisprudence on the matter, it has long been an established principle in Ontario that the court has the power to delete or add words to a will by necessary implication.In Lipson, Justice Pattillo formulates a test to determine under what circumstances the court can add or delete words to a will. Justice Pattillo states that this test is to apply not only in circumstances where words are omitted, but also in circumstances in which the incorrect words were inserted. Before the court can delete or insert words to correct an error in a will, the court must be satisfied that:
 

i. Upon a reading of the will as a whole, it is clear on its face that a mistake has occurred in the drafting of the will;
ii. The mistake does not accurately or completely express the testator's intentions as determined from the will as a whole;
iii. The testator's intention must be revealed so strongly from the words of the will that no other contrary intention can be supposed; and
iv. The proposed correction of the mistake, by the deletion of words, the addition of words, or both, must give effect to the testator's intention, as determined from a reading of the will as a whole and in light of the surrounding circumstances.
 

So long as the proposed addition or deletion meets all four elements of the test as contained in Lipson, the court should be willing to rectify the mistake and allow the true intentions of the testator to become reality. Whether the courts will openly embrace Lipson remains to be seen, but hopefully with this test we will now finally have some closure on the debate of when mistakes can be rectified in a will. Mistakes happen. Hopefully we now have a mechanism to correct them.
 

Ian Hull - Click here for more information on Ian Hull

The 3rd Alternative

 

This week on Hull on Estates and Succession Planning, Ian Hull and Suzana Popovic-Montag ring in the New Year with an update to our Reading List. The book of focus is written by Dr. Steven R. Covey called "The 3rd Alternative," a reading that discusses various aspects of problem solving.  More specifically, Ian and Suzana apply the lessons of this book to issues in estate planning, those who mediate and those who litigate. More simply, he asks the question, what is the 3rd alternative?

 
If you have any questions or comments, please send us an email at hull.lawyers@gmail.com or  visit our blog at estatelaw.hullandhull.com

Nursing Homes Accept Healthier Patients

 

 

 

Nursing homes in Ontario select healthier patients over those who require more care, according to an expert in Ontario. This leads to backlogs in hospitals while patients with high needs wait for a nursing home that will accept them.

According to Healthzone, Dr. David Walker commented on the plight of an elderly woman who was threatened with a bill of $1,300 a day if she refused to vacate her bed at Toronto East General. The 84 year old patient suffered a stroke two months before and now requires a feeding tube to eat, but there are a limited number of nursing homes with the ability to care for her. 

“If she were walking around the floor of Toronto East General, looking forward to being able to go to a nursing home where she would be able to feed herself and play cards, she would be gone in a flash,” Walker said.

“The incentive at the moment is that you fill up your nursing homes with the healthiest people and our health system ends up burdened with all sorts of people with high needs,” he added.

Please join us at our Breakfast Series event on January 19, 2012 at 8:30 a.m. at the Ontario Bar Association Conference Centre located at 200-20 Toronto Street, Toronto, Ontario.
 

The Aging Brain

Age may be just a number, but a recent study published in the British Medical Journal says that our mental capacity starts to decline as early as age 45.  Previous studies on cognition focused on the changes to the brain after age 60.  But changes in memory and cognition that lead to a high risk of dementia usually starts in a person's 40s. 
 
The fact that signs of dementia appear earlier than once thought could open the door to more will challenges based on lack of testamentary capacity. 
 
The good news is that healthy lifestyle choices today such as exercise and good cardiovascular health may help prevent loss of cognition tomorrow.  "We, and others, have shown healthy lifestyles and good cardiovascular health to be important for cognitive outcomes," says lead author Archana Singh-Manoux, Ph.D., research director at the French National Institute of Health and Medical Research, in Paris. "The fact that cognition declines early implies that midlife levels of these factors -- health behaviors and cardiovascular risk factors and disease -- might be important for cognitive outcomes later in life."  So here is yet another reason to keep your healthy New Years' resolutions. 
 


 

Life Support Issue Goes to Supreme Court

An important decision will be coming out soon in an attempt to resolve the debate about whether doctors need approval from the family before removing a patient from life support.  The Supreme Court of Canada is set to hear a case where the wishes of a family of a patient in a coma are opposed to his doctors' opinion about his prognosis.  The Ontario Court of Appeal found that the patient's doctors can take him off of life support without his family's permission only if the Ontario Consent and Capacity Board approves of the decision.  The patient's wife, who is his Power of Attorney, believes that his condition is improving and says that removing his ventilator would violate his religious beliefs.  His doctors argue that they should have the right to determine whether medical intervention is working, and they should not require the family's consent to remove a patient from life support. 
 
Under the Ontario Health Care Consent Act, the Board can make a decision about a patient's care when a subsititute decision maker does not agree with the doctor's advice.   Hopefully this case will give clarity to the legal confusion that has caused end of life decisions to be decided in a court room. 
 
Please join us at our Breakfast Series event on January 19, 2012 at 8:30 a.m. at the Ontario Bar Association Conference Centre located at 200-20 Toronto Street, Toronto, Ontario.
 

Hull on Estates Episode #275 - Designation of Beneficiaries

Listen to: Hull on Estates Episode #275 - Designation of Beneficiaries

This week on Hull on Estates, Paul Trudelle and Natalia Angelini discuss a decision out of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice that deals with designation of beneficiaries under RRSPs and policies of insurance. The case, Orpin v. Littlechild et al, 2011 ONSC 7695 (CanLII), illustrates how the court determines whether a designation of beneficiaries applies in specific circumstances. 

If you have any comments, send us and email at hull.lawyers@gmail.com or leave a comment on our blog.

Click here for more information on Paul Trudelle.

Click here for more information on Natalia Angelini

Do Egyptian Mummies Have the Right to Privacy?

Mummies are exhumed and studied in the name of science, but should they have the right to rest in peace?  Scientists are tackling the issue of whether there are ethical reasons to reconsider performing invasive procedures on ancient mummies.  If studies were performed on modern tissue samples, consent would be required.  But, a mummy cannot provide consent.  In Canada, an autopsy requires the permission of the deceased's family, unless the death was sudden or from unnatural causes

On the one hand, although few religions ban autopsies, some religions place a strong emphasis on the inviolability of the human body and view anything more than cleaning the body after death as disrespectful.  On the other hand, autopsies also provide a benefit to society, such as improving medical technology. 

Is the ethical reason that it is acceptable to perform an autopsy on a mummy that the mummy has no family members who can grant consent?  However, in Pennsylvania, a coroner was put on trial in 2008 for performing autopsies on unclaimed bodies from the county morgue when there were no family members who could grant consent. 

Or perhaps a mummy is simply too old to have privacy rights.  However, the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples reported, "A final threat to the integrity of sacred and historical sites comes not from development or legislation but rather from archaeological endeavours.  The search for historically and culturally significant objects often leads archaeologists to burial grounds.  Aboriginal people have asked that these objects be left in the ground and that graves not be disturbed out of respect for the dead and in recognition that the burial grounds remain the collective property of Aboriginal people." 

Where should the balance be struck between the pursuit of research and respecting the wishes and integrity of a person after death? 

Statute of Charitable Uses - A 17th Century Framework in the 21st Century

"Relief of the aged, impotent, and poor people; maintenance of sick and maimed soldiers and mariners, schools of learning, free schools, and scholars in universities, repair of bridges, ports, havens, causeways, churches, seabanks, and highways, education and preferment of orphans, for or towards relief of stock, or maintenance for houses of correction, marriages of poor maids, supportation, aid, and help of young tradesmen, handicraftsmen, and persons decayed, relief or redemption of prisoners or captives, aide or ease of any poor inhabitants concerning payments of fifteens, setting out soldiers of soldiers and other taxes."
 

The above is the preamble to the Statute of Charitable Uses, passed by Queen Elizabeth I in 1601. Although more than 400 years have passed since the statute came into force, to this day these words play an important role in what organizations may receive the benefit of being officially registered as charities under the Income Tax Act.

In Commissioners for Special Purposes of the Income Tax v. Pemsel, [1891] A.C. 531 (H.L.). ("Pemsel") the Statute of Charitable Uses was broken down into four headings under which a charitable purpose must fall. They are: (1) the relief of poverty; (2) the advancement of education; (3) the advancement of religion; and (4) certain other purposes beneficial to the community. If a charity's "purpose" does not fall within one of these four headings, the charity cannot receive the benefit (i.e. tax free status and ability to give tax receipts) of being officially registered as a charity under the Income Tax Act.
 

The courts in Canada have strictly adhered to the charitable purpose headings contained in Pemsel (and by implication the preamble to the Statute of Charitable Uses written in 1601). In A.Y.S.A. Amateur Youth Soccer Association v. Canada (Revenue Agency) ("A.Y.S.A."), a 2007 decision of the SCC, a youth soccer association applied to the Canada Revenue Agency to become a registered charity pursuant to the Income Tax Act. The CRA refused to register the soccer association, and the soccer association appealed its ruling. In the end the SCC agreed with the Canada Revenue Agency, and refused to allow the soccer association to be registered as a charity.
 

In A.Y.S.A. the soccer association argued that its purpose was charitable as it fell under the fourth heading "certain other purposes beneficial to the community", arguing that the promotion of sport and physical fitness amongst youth was for the public benefit. The court rejected this argument, focusing on the fact that the soccer association had as its main purpose in its letters patent the "promotion of soccer" and to "increase participation in sport", goals that the court says are not charitable. In a way, because sport was not seen as "charitable" in 1601, the SCC could not accept it as "charitable" today.
 

I would like to think that in the 21st Century an organization that promotes health and physical activity amongst children would be considered "beneficial to the community". There is certainly no lack of information out there about the growing obesity rates amongst children, and the impact that it is having on their overall health. Perhaps it is finally time that we move away from our 17th Century definition of what a charity can be, and allow for a definition that is more in tune with life in the 21st Century.
 

Ian Hull - Click here for more information on Ian Hull

Planning More Than Your Money

I savoured every moment of the Christmas break.  How could I not when eating, sleeping, movie-watching and hanging out with family and friends occupied most of my time? So I couldn’t help but fantasize about how great it would be to live out my retirement as a lady of leisure.  

While it seems appealing to me now, the reality when the time comes may be something very different. For many the transition from the working world is not a smooth one – from both a financial and emotional standpoint. So how do we get ready?

 

From a financial perspective, putting your finances in order is necessary. The Wall Street Journal offers a simple list on how to do this.  An interesting article on the subject also speaks to being emotionally ready, and notes as follows:

·                    Think in terms of retiring to something, not retiring from something - "The Journal quotes Jonathan Guyton of Cornerstone Wealth Advisors in Minneapolis: If your definition of retirement is framed in terms of what you are leaving, you are setting yourself up for a much more difficult transition emotionally. Even if it’s just some relatively small thing that you are energized about and this is something you get to do right now … you generally do much better.”

·                    Phase into retirement – "first scaling back your hours and responsibilities, or maybe taking a part-time hobby job, so that you don’t suddenly have an endless amount of time to fill. This strategy has the added benefit of keeping some wage income, which will help stretch your nest egg."

Another idea the author cites is “practice retirement”, which entails staying on the job longer (either full-time or part-time), but instead of saving your income, use it to take vacations, fund a hobby or indulge in other ways that will help you figure out how you want to spend your retirement. 

Enjoy the weekend!

Natalia R. Angelini - Click here for more information on Natalia Angelini

Don't Miss Out on Early Alzheimer's Treatment

A recent study by the Alzheimer Society of Canada reportedly indicates some compelling information about Alzheimer’s diagnosis, including:

·                    it is estimated that 1.1 million Canadians will be affected by the brain disorder in the next 25 years;

·                    almost half of Canadians surveyed lived a year or more with their symptoms without seeing a doctor, and 16% of this group waited more than two years;

·                    among the most common early symptoms were frequent memory loss, disorientation of time and place and changes in personality, and more than half of the respondents indicated the reason for the delay was the belief that symptoms were part of “old age”; and almost a third of respondents cited their family member refusing to see a doctor as cause for delay; and

·                    delayed diagnosis results in a large treatment gap, and prevents people from getting valuable information about medications, support and better disease management.

The Alzheimer Society of Canada reportedly emphasizes the importance of getting the word out about investigating dementia, since awareness can help one get support, plan for the future and take advantage of the pharmacological and other ways to deal with the disease.

Have a good day,

Natalia R. Angelini - Click here for more information on Natalia Angelini

Inheritance Rights of Unmarried Couples?

A recent English article reports that its Law Commission recommends that unmarried couples who have lived together for five years or more should be able to inherit from each other without writing a Will. The author notes certain other recommendations, contained in the Inheritance (Cohabitants) Bill:

·                    the entitlement should be applied after two years of cohabiting if a couple has a child, providing the child was living with the couple when one parent died;

·                    qualifying cohabitants should have the same entitlement under the intestacy rules as a spouse; and

·                    if the deceased has a husband or wife from a "fossil" marriage – where a couple are living apart but have never divorced – the surviving cohabitant has no entitlement to any of the estate.

The Law Commission apparently notes that cohabiting couples are among the people least likely to have a will. Under the current English intestacy laws, similar to our legislation, property is passed on to family members in order of closeness of the blood relation. However, like our system, unmarried partners are currently not entitled to the deceased partner’s property, but can apply to court for support. That said, this can be a costly and time-intensive process. I have always found it unfortunate in cases where long-time common-law spouses had to bear the expense and emotional drain of fighting for their dependant support award.   

Given the reality here and abroad that cohabiting unmarried couples represent an increasing percentage of families, this type of legislative change may soon be solidified in the United Kingdom and make its way to us. It seems from the comments I read about this article that people are divided on the subject. I, for one, think that it is time for this type of review, especially if it could lead to a reduction in or narrowing of the types of dependant support claims we see in our system.

Thanks for reading,

Natalia R. Angelini - Click here for more information on Natalia Angelini

Hull on Estates and Succession Planning - Year End

 

This week on Hull on Estates and Succession Planning, Ian Hull asks the question - What should one do with their estate plan in 2012? More specifically, he discusses Will basics and Will basics planning. If you have any questions or comments, please visit our blog at estatelaw.hullandhull.com or email your questions to hull.lawyers@gmail.com

Ecclesiastical Court Records

Yet another remarkable resource of interest to the legal history buff is now available online. The York Cause Papers document the Ecclesiastical Courts of York from 1300 to 1858, detailing accounts of disputes relating to church taxes, marriage, wills and inheritance. Although the Court of Chancery became the domain for estate disputes in England and Wales after 1588, the Ecclesiastical Courts had jurisdiction to intervene in the administration of estates prior to that time. 

"Cause Papers" are the papers of individual cases heard in the Church Courts.  Those cases that deal with Testamentary Disputes are separately categorized and generally consider situations were the Court was asked to intervene when an estate had not been administered. 

Professor Mark Ormrod, University of York, quoted in an article of the York Cause Papers published online by the BBC, said the project would allow the widest possible public access to the records: "The resource is of tremendous importance to specialists in social, economic, religious and legal history and in the history of gender, sexuality, marriage and domesticity, as well as to a wide range of users with interests in family and local history."

Digitization of the records was funded by the Joint Information Systems Committee (JISC), a British technology consortium for higher and further education. The work was performed by the University of York and the Humanities Research Institute at the University of Sheffield.

David M. Smith - Click here for more information on David Smith