One Nexus of Capacity Litigation and Estate Litigation
Section 35 of the Substitute Decisions Act ("Act") states that "a guardian of property shall not dispose of property that the guardian knows is subject to a specific testamentary gift in the incapable person's will." And under s 33.1 of the Act, a guardian of property needs to make reasonable efforts to determine "whether the incapable person has a Will" and, if so, "what the provisions of the Will are."
Under the authority of these sections of the Act, a beneficiary of a specific testamentary gift can legitimately make enquiry into the actions of the guardian who, more often than not, is also the estate trustee under the Will. Take, for instance, a demonstrative legacy of a bank account at a specific financial institution. If the account is no longer in existence at the date of death, the legacy will usually be subject to ademption: the gift has failed because the account was closed before the date of death. But what if the account was accessed by the guardian either: (i) for his own purposes or (ii) for the care of the incapable person when there where other assets available to fund the care of the incapable person? In such a situation, the beneficiary of the account under the Will may seek redress.
To prove his or her case, the beneficiary will seek an accounting from the guardian in order to ascertain to what extent his or her beneficial entitlement was wrongfully encroached upon in breach of the Act. Given the imperative under s. 33.1 of the Act, it questionable whether the guardian/estate trustee could ever successfully argue ignorance of the terms of the Will as a defence to such claim.
David M. Smith
