Legal
The Dangers Of Marriage For Older People
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It's a hard fact that an ageing population gives rise to a variety of issues. When older people marry, for example, they may be unaware of the potential financial and legal minefields ahead.
The following guest article, part of this news service’s new series of such material, covers marital relationships. Like it or not, marriage break-ups and their consequences – arguments and claims over wealth for example – are important matters for private client advisors. Less negatively, when couples work with advisors, it is important for the latter to understand the dynamics in play. The following article comes from Melody Munro (main picture) and Lucy Sharp (see below) at law firm Farrer & Co. The editors are pleased to share this content. The usual disclaimers apply. To respond, email tom.burroughes@wealthbriefing.com
  The UK’s population is ageing. The ONS estimates that almost 20
  per cent of the population is now over the age of 65, with
  this projected to rise to almost 25 per cent in the next 15
  years (1). Sadly, with age often comes vulnerability. Mental
  faculties can change over time. Sometimes, this can progress into
  full cognitive decline and leave people unable to manage even
  small day-to-day tasks. For others, it becomes an inability to
  concentrate on details or a tendency to rely more heavily on
  others. Affections can also change – a person someone previously
  loved might fall out of favour, or a loose acquaintance might
  become incredibly important.
  
  There is no doubt that these vulnerabilities can be abused by the
  opportunist. We have seen an increase in those seeking out
  the vulnerable to take advantage for personal
  gain; sometimes even by a so-called “predatory marriage”
  which can leave a vulnerable person powerless. 
  
  What is a predatory marriage?
  A predatory marriage involves someone who is vulnerable, often
  older and open to pressure or to giving misplaced trust and
  affection, being led into marriage or civil partnership and taken
  advantage of by the other party for financial gain. 
  
  Many people are not aware of the testamentary effect of marriage
  or civil partnership. Under English law, when a person marries or
  enters into a civil partnership their will is automatically
  revoked (unless their will has been put in place in contemplation
  of the specific marriage or partnership, which needs careful
  drafting). 
Once a will has been revoked, a person’s estate will pass under the laws of intestacy, and a significant portion of their estate (if not all, depending upon the value) will pass to their surviving spouse or civil partner. In the case of a predatory marriage or civil partnership, where the vulnerable person is more likely to die first, the ‘predator’ inherits in place of the person’s children or family. This is unlikely to be the intention of the vulnerable person and the reality is that they may never even know that this has happened.
  What can be done?
  Where any marriage or civil partnership has taken place, it is
  important for the parties to the marriage or partnership to
  revisit their succession planning to ensure that their
  wishes are properly documented and a new will is
  prepared. 
  
  However, this can become complicated when a person’s mental
  capacity is in flux. The test for capacity to marry or enter into
  a civil partnership is relatively low. This is understandable:
  marriage is a key societal institution, and the Human Rights Act
  protects the right to marry and to a family life. The parties
  entering into marriage need to understand the broad concept of
  marriage and the duties that spouses owe to each other, such as
  fidelity and financial support. 
  
  However, the test for capacity to write a will (known as
  testamentary capacity) is much higher and requires the ‘testator’
  to understand the exact nature of the act of making a will. The
  disparity in these two tests can lead to a lacuna where a person
  with declining or fluctuating capacity is able to marry or enter
  into a civil partnership but cannot make a new will once their
  previous will has been revoked. In the case of a predatory
  marriage, the vulnerable person may therefore be unable to do
  anything to protect their affairs even if they are aware that
  their previous will has been revoked. 
  
  The Court of Protection has the power to put a statutory will in
  place if it is in the best interests of a person lacking
  capacity. Although statutory wills are not easily granted, they
  do provide a possible lifeline. Though the court may not be
  convinced that a person lacks capacity to marry, it may more
  easily be convinced to put a new will in place if it is clear
  that the person did not understand the effect that their marriage
  would have on their testamentary affairs. 
  
  How else can we offer protection to those who may be vulnerable
  to predatory behaviour around marriages and civil partnerships?
  Some have suggested legislative reform to stop wills being
  revoked automatically, but this has potentially undesirable
  consequences – for example, if a new spouse forgets to update
  their will, the previous version would remain valid and may leave
  the new spouse or civil partner with nothing. A simple protective
  measure could be, where possible, to require those performing
  marriages to meet with both parties separately in advance of the
  marriage and provide specialised training in spotting predatory
  marriages, and indeed other kinds of abusive behaviour.
  
  With an ageing population, we hope that the legislature might
  bring this to the top of the agenda in the not-too-distant
  future. 
Lucy Sharp
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