February 16, 2018
Testamentary Capacity and Suspicious Circumstances
Devore-Thompson v. Poulain | 2017 BCSC 1289 | British Columbia Supreme Court
Estates -- Will challenges -- Testamentary capacity -- Suspicious circumstances -- Lucidity of testator
Deceased was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease in 2005 and passed away in 2013 -- Deceased was unwilling
and ultimately unable to accept implications of diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease -- In 2009, deceased executed
will and in 2010, deceased married husband -- Plaintiff was deceased’s niece -- Plaintiff brought action to
challenge validity of will and marriage on grounds that deceased did not have capacity -- Action allowed --
Deceased did not have capacity to enter marriage and lacked testamentary capacity to execute will -- There was
too much credible evidence to contrary to accept husband’s story about living with deceased -- There were
numerous material inconsistencies in husband’s evidence, not only as between his evidence and that of other
witnesses regarding deceased’s health, but also as between his pleadings, his evidence at trial, and his evidence
on examination for discovery -- Given deceased’s state of dementia, deceased could not know even most basic
meaning of marriage or understand any of its implications at time of marriage -- Circumstances surrounding
2009 was suspicious, such as fact that husband’s handwriting on 2007 will was basis for instructions was
suspicious, when combined with nature of purported instructions and deceased’s known medical diagnosis --
There was absence of evidence from family witnesses that deceased had periods of lucidity or normal
functioning during this time.© Copyright Westlaw Canada, Thomson Reuters Canada Limited. All rights reserved.