Wilcox v Wilcox
[2012] NSWSC 1138
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Supreme Court of NSW
Decision date
2012-10-09
Before
Pembroke J
Catchwords
- (1988) 13 NSWLR 241 Goodsell v Wellington [2011] NSWSC 1232 Legione v Hately [1983] HCA 11
- (1994) 181 CLR 201 Summer Hill Business Estate v Equititrust [2010] NSWSC 776 Vigolo v Bostin [2005] HCA 11
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Catchwords
Judgment (7 paragraphs)
Introduction 1The plaintiffs are the only grandsons of the testator, who owned, controlled and operated considerable pastoral holdings near Walgett in New South Wales. By his last will, he left his entire estate to his only daughter (the defendant). He did so in anticipation that she would in turn leave the properties to the plaintiffs when she died and that they would in the fullness of time come into the agricultural inheritance which he had built up in his lifetime. 2Within the family group, the testator was a dominant and powerful influence, upon whom the plaintiffs and their parents were all partly dependent. He acted as a father figure to the plaintiffs, especially after their parents separated in 1992 and their father went to live in Lightning Ridge. He paid for the boys' education at The King's School. He provided them with paid work and accommodation on his properties. He shaped and directed their lives after school and, to a considerable extent, groomed them for what he expected would be their eventual inheritance. 3In the case of the first plaintiff, Robert, the elder grandson, the testator also paid for him to attend Longreach Pastoral College as well as for his travel, clothing and miscellaneous expenses associated with his attendance at the college. In the case of both young men, he encouraged them in the expectation that they would inherit the properties. In the circumstances in which they were brought up, the plaintiffs understandably developed an unhealthy sense of entitlement. 4But there were no promises and there was no agreement. The testator's intention was made objectively clear by the wills executed by him in 1987 and 2002. In both wills, he left his entire estate to the defendant and provided for the properties to go to the plaintiffs only if his daughter pre-deceased him. He trusted the defendant to provide for her sons. I am quite satisfied that he assumed that the plaintiffs would in due course inherit the properties through his daughter's estate. A different outcome would not have occurred to him. 5This then was the context in which the testator made statements from time to time encouraging the plaintiffs' expectations. He never intended to leave the properties directly to them while ever his daughter was alive and well, living on the properties and operating them. Unfortunately the plaintiffs have deluded themselves into thinking that this was their right. Their predicament has now been grimly exacerbated. When they made the fateful decision to commence these proceedings, suing their mother as the executor of their grandfather's estate and claiming that they were entitled to the entirety of his property - to the exclusion of their mother - they produced an outcome which the testator would not have anticipated. Affronted by their conduct, she made the decision to leave her sons out of her own will, so that, absent a court order, or a change of heart by her, the plaintiffs will now never receive the inheritance to which they have long aspired.