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BC Supreme Court Clarifies How to Challenge Undue Influence in Wills

Hours Updated onJune 17, 2025 Categories BC
How to Challenge Undue Influence in Wills

Case Overview

McCrone v. Henry Estate, 2025 BCSC 1076 is a Supreme Court of British Columbia decision involving a dispute over the validity of a will executed by Janet Henry shortly before her death. The case centers on allegations that the Deceased’s last will, which leaves her estate to a male escort, was influenced by undue influence and lacked testamentary capacity. Two main applications were before the court: one seeking to dismiss the plaintiffs’ claim summarily and another to add a party who was the beneficiary of an earlier will.


Why This Decision is Important

This decision clarifies procedural matters in estate litigation, particularly:

  • Whether an action challenging a will under undue influence must be commenced by petition or can proceed by notice of civil claim.
  • The threshold for dismissing claims at early stages when allegations of undue influence and testamentary capacity are made.
  • The importance of joining all interested parties in estate disputes to ensure fair and complete adjudication.
  • The court’s approach to particulars in pleadings when initially unknown facts may later emerge through discovery.

Case Details

Parties

  • Plaintiffs: Jillian and Ross McCrone, niece and nephew of the Deceased, residents of Australia.
  • Defendants: Mario Montagano (Executor), Simon Garstin (Beneficiary under the last will), Carol Walkinshaw, Anita McCrone, Maryanne Litzenberger, Simon Garstin; plus Douglas Wilson (beneficiary under an earlier will) sought to be added as a party.

Background

  • Janet Henry died in 2021, leaving a Residual Estate worth about $1 million.
  • She had two wills:
    • February 2021 Will leaving the estate to Douglas Wilson.
    • August 2021 Will leaving the estate to Simon Garstin, a professional male escort who had provided companionship and sexual services for payment.
  • Plaintiffs alleged the August 2021 Will was invalid due to:
    • Lack of testamentary capacity.
    • Undue influence by Garstin.
    • No independent advice was received by the Deceased.
  • Plaintiffs filed a Notice of Civil Claim (NOCC) disputing the August 2021 Will’s validity.
  • Garstin sought to have the NOCC dismissed summarily; Wilson sought to be added as a party.

Legal Issues

  1. Should the claim be struck because it was brought by NOCC instead of petition?
  2. Should the claim be dismissed on pleadings (Rule 9-5)?
  3. Should the claim be dismissed on summary judgment (Rule 9-6)?
  4. Should the NOCC be struck for failure to provide particulars of undue influence?
  5. Should Wilson be added as a party?

Outcome

  • The court dismissed the application to strike or dismiss the NOCC.
    The plaintiffs’ action was properly commenced by NOCC; Rule 25-14(4) requiring petition applies only to solemn form probate applications, not claims under s. 52 WESA for undue influence.
  • The NOCC discloses a reasonable cause of action and there are triable issues regarding undue influence and testamentary capacity.
    Allegations combined with evidence such as text messages justified proceeding to trial.
  • The court ordered plaintiffs to provide particulars of undue influence within two weeks.
  • Douglas Wilson was added as a defendant because he has a direct interest as beneficiary under an earlier will.
  • Costs were awarded against Garstin on a Scale B basis.

Key Takeaways

  • Challenging a will under undue influence does not require starting proceedings by petition; a Notice of Civil Claim is appropriate.
  • Allegations of undue influence and lack of capacity generally require a full trial; summary dismissal is unlikely unless claims are clearly baseless.
  • Courts allow flexibility for pleadings when particulars are initially unknown but require them to be provided when facts emerge.
  • All persons with a direct interest in a will dispute should be joined as parties to ensure a comprehensive resolution.
  • Executors have a duty to prove wills in solemn form if validity is challenged, but failure to do so does not preclude actions by beneficiaries under WESA.
  • Text messages and circumstantial evidence can raise questions about undue influence sufficient to go to trial.

References

https://www.bccourts.ca/jdb-txt/sc/25/10/2025BCSC1076.htm

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Kelly Sullivan

WILLS and ESTATES PARALEGAL

Kelly is a highly accomplished Paralegal with an impressive 28-year tenure in the legal industry, specializing in estate administration and estate planning at Vest Estate Law.

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  • BC Supreme Court Clarifies How to Challenge Undue Influence in WillsJune 17, 2025
  • Executor Responsibilities in BC: A Legal ChecklistJune 4, 2025
  • Key Challenges in the BC Probate ProcessJune 3, 2025

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