Disappointed Beneficiaries, Estate Disputes and Managing the Crossfire - a recorded lunchtime online conference
Hear from the experts at this online lunchtime conference. You can watch it on your computer or on your portable electronic device from anywhere.
Date/Time
About the Recorded Online Conference
Duration: 2.5 Hours
Hear from the experts at this online conference. You can watch it on your computer or on your portable electronic device from anywhere.
The conference will be based on our highly successful video webinar technology: there'll be a chairperson and presentations.
One registration can be shared by colleagues within the same firm utilising the same login.
THE PROGRAM
Session 1: Using Alternative Dispute Resolution Strategies to Manage Estate Disputes
No testator wants their estate to end up litigated in the courts and gradually whittled down by legal costs. Can alternative dispute resolution (ADR) be the answer? This session provides advisers with ideas for ways to manage anticipated fights amongst beneficiaries and potential beneficiaries, including:
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Understanding the role of ADR in estate planning: the differences between facilitation, mediation, early neutral evaluation and arbitration
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Proactively managing conflicts through using an independent person to:
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facilitate communication of testator’s wishes during lifetime
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reduce disputes after death
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Using family agreements and structuring business succession to allow for dispute resolution options
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Ideas for how to use ADR in blended families, cross-generation structures and family businesses
Session 2: The Battle Lines Are Drawn in Family Provision Claims
Family provision claims seem to be on the rise, with a spate of recent high-profile cases highlighting the court’s willingness to upturn even the most carefully designed estate plan. This session examines these recent decisions, the trends we are seeing and the lessons for practitioners in this dynamic area. This presentation will cover:
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Eligible classes of applicants – who now fits the bill? From de facto to step children
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What factors does the court need to consider?
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Was there a moral duty to provide?
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Did the distribution of the estate fail to make adequate provision?
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Was the eligible person dependent on the deceased?
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How appellate courts deal with family provision matters
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Challenges to findings of fact, exercise of discretion and challenges to statements of law
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Summary dismissal claims and family provision matters
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Recent cases
Session 3: Equitable Remedies and Estate Litigation
Equitable remedies in estate litigation may often be a more appropriate claim than anything else. This session looks at when these remedies may be relevant, what remedies are available, when they should be claimed and covers:
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Equitable remedies and elements
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Deceased induced them to believing they were provided for in the will
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Suffered a detriment in reliance on the promise
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What relief can the court grant?
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Equitable estoppel – when is it appropriate to plead?
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Constructive trusts
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When is an equitable relief likely to be refused?
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Recent cases
The Faculty
Amanda Morton, Principal, Morton Legal Consulting, Melbourne (Chair) Anand Shah, Barrister, Brisbane John Armfield, Barrister, Sydney Justin Rizzi, Barrister, Melbourne
CPD Information
Lawyers can claim up to 2.5 CPD units/points (substantive law).
Enquiries/Assistance
If you need assistance or have an enquiry, please do not hesitate to contact our Event Coordinator, Hayley Williams—Cameron on (03) 8601 7730 or email: [email protected]