Ian's Role as Executor
96There is material in the evidence from which it may be inferred that Ian has failed to discharge the ordinary functions expected of an executor who has taken probate. There is also material suggesting he has expressed an attitude as executor that is incompatible with the orderly future administration of the estate. Subject to such submissions as Ian may wish to put, this material may provide grounds for the making of an order for the revocation of the grant of probate to Ian and his removal as executor. The matters for such concern are his failures to account, his intermingling of his own assets and those of others to whom he is a fiduciary, and his refusal to accept that he may need legal advice.
97Failure to Account. By his own admission the defendant has not prepared any accounts for the estate for any period between the deceased's death and the hearing. This is so notwithstanding probate was granted on 24 March 2009, about 15 months after the deceased died. Mr Davis did not advance any accounts in evidence. He did not say he had filed any accounts. No other party tendered any accounts. He gave no explanation for not having filed any accounts. Accounts should be ordered in the administration proceedings.
98But upon closer analysis of Ian's attitude in relation to his sister Robyn's affairs, it can be seen that he does not seem to believe he has any obligation to account to anyone for his expenditure of money, which comes into his hands to be applied on behalf of others. His handling of Robyn's money is an example of this apparently entrenched attitude. Ian Davis regards the money that Centrelink pays to Robyn as his to deal with in consultation with Robyn, and for which dealings he should be accountable to no-one. When Ian was confronted with the accounts showing his expenditure from the CBA bank account from which Robyn's pension was paid, he explained that he did not keep an account of how he spent the money that had come in for his sister. When asked why this was so he said, "Oh, I'm illiterate, for one. I don't write nothing down. I just hand it from week to week. She got paid Thursday and I got paid Thursday. And I just pushed it between".
99It can be accepted that Mr Davis has limited literacy skills. He was asked whether he sought to overcome this disadvantage in administering Robyn's affairs by engaging assistance to write a summary of his expenditure. He explained that he did not do this for reasons that emerged in a remarkable series of answers to questions.
"Q. Mr Davis, although you might be illiterate, because of that, was there anyone that you, in effect to make sure that there was a record spent of expenditure for your sister to, in effect, give them the receipts, so that some nice friend of yours could, in effect, write up a little summary each week?
A. What for?
Q. Well, so that your family and your sister might know where the money had gone?
A. I dealt with me sister on me own. There was none of my family around me.
Q. But did it occur to you that someone other than you might want to legitimately inquire where the money had gone?
A. I wasn't worried.
Q. You weren't
A. Robyn wasn't worried.
Q. Anyway, it has never occurred to you to, despite your difficulties in writing it all down, to ask someone else to do so?
A. I never thought it was necessary. I done it for five years. It wasn't any different. I had three of the cards in me pocket at one stage for me dad.
Q. What do you mean by that?
A. I had his bank card there too, so I could do his as well. And me dad is the one that handed me Robyn's card in the first place, his and Robyn's, and told me the numbers and that's when I carried it on. I never changed it. I could have changed hers into my account at any time, into my carer's account, but I'd rather it in the two separate ones.
Q. But are you saying to the court the idea of you providing an account of how you spent this money is something that you don't think you should be required to do?
A. What do you mean "required to do" what?
Q. Are you saying to the court that you don't think you should ever have to account for how you spent this money?
A. Yeah, I didn't think I should have to.
Q. To anyone?
A. No. It's mine and Robyn's private business.
Q. Does Robyn ever ask you where the money went?
A. No. She's never worried about it in that sort of a way, just as long as you can give her money.
Q. Just so long as?
A. She can get some when she wants it."
100Ian Davis' attitude seemed to become even clearer in a further passage of evidence about whether he should be called upon to give any account for the way he dealt with Robyn's money in the future:-
"Q. Mr Davis, you've said in your submission earlier today, that you want Robyn to come back and live with you?
A. Yeah.
Q. And you want the court to deal with this estate on that basis, but you are also saying, as I understand it, that there is no way that you will account for, even in the future, for Robyn's pension or how her money is spent?
A. Just spend it as it comes.
Q. Don't you see any difficulty with asking the court for Robyn to come back into your care, in effect, either here or asking through the Guardianship Tribunal, and then saying that you don't feel that you should give an account, even with the assistance of a literate friend, of how you spend the money that comes through her pension?
A. Oh, it's really up to me. I'm her carer.
Q. You say it is solely up to you and you shouldn't have to answer to anybody; is that what you're saying?
A. Yeah.
Q. Y our attitude is that noone else has any right, once you are in control of this money, to question where it goes; is that what you're saying?
A. Yeah, but in a way where it's between me and Robyn. "
101It is arguable that there is no prospect that Mr Ian Davis would give an account in the future of how he dealt with Robyn's money unless ordered by the Court to do so. Equally it is open to infer that if the Cordeaux Road property is sold and its proceeds come into Ian's hands, that he may treat estate funds the same way, as beyond any obligation on his part to give an account. Ian Davis has refused so far to obtain any legal advice about the estate. He says he cannot afford it. This is probably right.
102Ian Davis did not keep his own assets and income separate from those of Robyn, when he was caring for her at Cordeaux Road, prior to her departure in May 2011. Nor did he see any need to keep them separate. This does raise a serious question as to whether, were he to continue as executor of the estate, that he is capable of understanding the need to separate his own financial affairs from those of the estate. The evidence on this subject paints a potentially concerning picture.
103It became clear that Ian would take Robyn out to local yacht clubs and leagues clubs for dinner and to play the poker machines. Leaving aside the fact that substantial monies appeared to have been leaving Robyn's account for this kind of expenditure, the evidence raised, in the absence of any other record of account keeping on Robyn's behalf, the issue of how Robyn's money was kept separate from Ian's money. The potentially concerning conclusion that may be drawn from the following evidence is that in Ian Davis' mind there was no self imposed rule upon which any money would be left in Robyn's account for her benefit at the conclusion of each fortnightly pension period. Ian was asked by what rule of separation he operated his own ATM card and Robyn's ATM card when both were in receipt of pension payments:-
"Q. Is there any rule as to how you use these cards? Robyn's card is available for your private expenditure, is that your attitude to it?
A. No.
Q. What is the rule in your mind? What can't you take out of her account, let me put it that way. I want to understand your system. What can't you take out of her account, just tell me?
A. Nothing really.
Q. So everything can be taken out?
A. Yeah, same as my account."
104In answer to a question from counsel for Graham, Ian then summarised concisely just how he perceived his own dealings with Robyn's and his money, "Used everything to pay for everything". There was a complete and unconstrained intermingling of their funds. It is open for the Court to infer that if Ian continues as the executor of the estate that he will administer the estate's funds in much the same way, as he has administered Robyn's funds.