Will Challenge Litigation - Part 4 - Hull on Estate and Succession Planning
Listen to Will Challenge Litigation Part 4
This week on Hull on Estate and Succession Planning, Ian and Suzana continue their discussion on the Will Challenge Process, step by step.
They continue to discuss the value of the discovery process and intense investigation. The goal is to get to the mediation process as soon as possible. New evidence may lead to the next stage: the pre-trial. Ian and Suzana talk about the pre-trial process and what you can expect during this stage.
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Will Challenge Litigation Part 4 - Hull on Estate and Succession Planning - Podcast #129
Posted on September 9, 2008 by Hull & Hull LLP
Welcome to Hull on Estate and Succession Planning, a series of podcasts hosted by Ian Hull and Suzana Popovic-Montag, that will provide information and insights into estate planning in Canada. From the offices of Hull Estate Mediation in Toronto, here are Ian and Suzana.
Suzana Popovic-Montag: Hi, and welcome to Hull on Estate and Succession Planning. You’re listening to Episode #129 of our podcast on Tuesday, September 9th, 2008.
Ian Hull: Hi, Suzana.
Suzana Popovic-Montag: Hello Ian.
Ian Hull: So we’ve swiftly moved out of the summer into the early Fall and we’re going to continue to work through this Will challenge discussion and the process itself. In our last podcast, we talked about the concept of when we will go to discoveries and when we will go to mediation, what mediation is, what are discoveries. And working from our flowchart, I think it’s worth emphasizing the intense investigation stage is so crucial. If we can get a good flow of information from obtaining a good, broadly comprehensive order for directions, and we can get the three corners of a law suit and a Will challenge, get the lawyer’s notes, assess it, analyze it, depending on whether you’re defending or challenging the Will. The second part, medicals, get as much of the medicals as possible. And the third component, chase down the lay witness evidence. Chase down the witnesses, what the neighbours and friends and priests and so forth are going to say.
So, if you can do that, and you can really, this is a bit of a heavy loaded stage in the law suit. This intense investigation is where this branches out into really settlement, all out war, how we’re going to manipulate the process in that sense. And that’s why it is such an important question: Do you go to mediation or do you go to discoveries? The right cases you go to discoveries or depositions right away, because what has come out of this intensive investigation are really good questions that you want to explore. And an easy example is when your case is very light on medical evidence and lawyer’s notes. The lawyers are saying, yes, say you’re challenging. The lawyers are saying, yeah the deceased knew what he was doing. And the medical evidence is light, because the deceased, although you think was completely out of it, wasn’t someone who went to doctors and just historically didn’t have that kind of record, that third party record. But, the third party witnesses, friends and neighbours who he went to church with, and those kinds of things, you’re really confident in challenging this Will, will all support you.
So one of the tactical moves you might consider then is to go to discoveries in the situation like that where you need to really develop your case. Because there’s two ways you develop your case: 1) through third party evidence, which I’m talking about, doctors and lawyers, and they kind of fall into place; and 2) from others and yourself.
Suzana Popovic-Montag: Now maybe, Ian, you could just spend a moment and explain to us why a discovery process is different, or what additional information you could try to get from lay witnesses from just perhaps interviewing these individuals that you’re suggesting.
Ian Hull: Well I think it’s a good point, and I’m not sure I can. I mean I think the interview process is probably as comprehensive as I need. What I’m thinking of is that when I move from the intense investigation and I decide to go to discoveries, it’s because I need to go, I need to take a real run at the challenger or the propounder, and I have a whole pocket full of evidence in contradiction to their position. So that maybe I rattle the challenger or maybe I don’t, but I’ll have taken that active step to really do a bit of a strategic shake-down.
Suzana Popovic-Montag: And from a lawyer’s perspective, and one of the things that discoveries really helps us with, whether we’re discovering the other side or our client is being discovered, is assessing how that individual is going to act as a witness in the actual trial. And there’s a lot of value that can come out of this whole process if you can see how your person stands up under, you know, the bright lights of the camera, so to speak.
Ian Hull: That’s good. So, keeping in the bright lights, my personal view is, discoveries is a low percentage game in most cases, but we didn’t want to sort of gloss over it. We don’t want to sort of pretend that this can be ignored and should be ignored. It is an important either tactical or evidentiary stage in the process in the right case. But, if you want to come back to what is, I think, the more effective practice, that is get to mediation as soon as possible. Because these cases are more often about emotions than they are about definitive facts, and as we’ve said before in podcasts, we’re never going to know the answer, the true, true answer. And mediation offers us such a tremendous cost-effective way to get to the nub of the case quickly and efficiently.
But let’s keep on with the process because presume we don’t pull it off. We don’t settle this case or the discoveries bring out great new evidence that is going to affect this case and we’re going to keep moving forward. The next stage certainly in Ontario, it’s required, and almost every jurisdiction that certainly I have ever been involved with insists on it, is a pre-trial.
Suzana Popovic-Montag: And what a pre-trial is, is an actual meeting where the parties meet with a judge, a pre-trial judge, who’s going to maybe once again try to settle this matter, not quite as in the mediation format, but certainly in that kind of an instructure without as much formality as you would have at a trial. So this individual is going to hear the parties, he’s going to read briefs that are presented, he’s going to meet the individuals and then assess the likelihood that one side or the other is going to win.
Ian Hull: So this pre-trial judge is, the importance of this is that you’re often looking to that person to give you their gut call. Now they won’t have had a chance to hear all of the evidence, but they’ll have read the brief, they’ll understand the case, they’ll have their own experience because they’ve sat on the bench or they practiced law and now are sitting on the bench, they have their own experience in terms of likelihood of success. And it can be really effective if we’ve got a good interaction with a judge that’s prepared to give, sort of, their views in that regard.
Suzana Popovic-Montag: And the pre-trial process really underscores how important the system itself believes that the parties try to settle their own case. Because in a Will challenge we know, Ian, that when it gets to trial there’s going to be one winner and one loser. And at the end of the day with cost consequences factored in there, you know, we even wonder if the winner is, in fact, a winner. So the fact that there’s a requirement for pre-trial and in many jurisdictions also a requirement for mandatory mediation makes us realize that this probably is the best way to try to solve the matter if, in fact, it can be. If not, then of course, we can move on to the next stage.
Ian Hull: And the next two stages we’re going to talk about fairly briefly today, because, one of them in and of itself probably is its own podcast. The next stage of course, is if you don’t settle it, is you go to trial, where you get your day or days typically in Court, in front of a judge. In Ontario, they’re typically in front of just a judge. We don’t have juries with Will challenge cases, the statute actually essentially prohibits it. But, in lots of jurisdictions there’s also Will challenges with juries itself. So we have the trial itself where we get witness in the witness’ boxes and doing all of the things that are normally done on the typical law and order kind of style trial. So there’s no magic to the trial itself, but we’re going to talk in another podcast about how we get ready for trials, for two reasons. One is that it’s helpful to talk about what you have to do but secondly, get another sense of something that is overriding this whole thing and that is, the big terrible word called costs. And the costs of all of this process can’t be ignored. So the trial obviously is, we’re into having created tremendous costs and tremendous costs to complete. So the last stage…
Suzana Popovic-Montag: And I think just to end on that, Ian, the last stage is the appeal process, because even though you’ve gone through the trial, you’ve incurred these tremendous costs that Ian just mentioned, there’s no guarantee that that’s the end of the process, because the losing side can always have the option of choosing to appeal. And here in Ontario, there’s two levels of appeal, you can appeal to the Divisional Court, sometimes you’re required to appeal directly to the Court of Appeal, and then of course if the matter is appealed, it’s heard and that result is not liked, the ultimate remedy is to appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada.
Ian Hull: All of which is delay, costs, all of it, really difficult things that you have to suffer through with litigation. But, let’s end on a happy note. That’s the process and we like to go through this with our clients so people know from start to finish generally what is going to happen. So, thanks very much, Suzana.
Suzana Popovic-Montag: Thanks to you too, Ian.
You’ve been listening to Hull on Estate and Succession Planning with Ian Hull and Suzana Popovic-Montag. The podcast you have been listening to has been provided as an information service. It is a summary of current legal issues in estates and estate planning. It is not legal advice and you are reminded to always talk with a legal professional regarding your specific circumstances.
To listen to other Hull On podcasts, or to leave any questions or comments, please visit our website at hullestatemediation.com.
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