Posted by: Kylie Shaw
Professor Brine was in a de facto relationship with Ms Carter when he passed away. His Will named Ms Carter, along with his three adult sons from a previous relationship, as joint Executors of his Estate.
In his will, Professor Brine
provided a life interest for Ms Carter in his principal residence and another
property and gave the rest of his estate to his three sons and grandchildren.
Professor Brine had two
superannuation accounts with UniSuper. One account was structured so that the
only beneficiary of that superannuation could be a spouse. The second was an
accumulation account from which a spouse, child, dependant or the member’s
Estate could benefit.
Rather than making a binding death
benefit nomination with UniSuper, Professor Brine had written a letter to them
expressing his wish for the beneficiary of his superannuation to be his Estate.
This was recorded with UniSuper however, given the form it was in, it was not
enforceable.
Ms Carter learnt of the two
superannuation accounts following Professor Brine’s death, and made
applications to UniSuper to have the balance of each account paid directly to
her.
For some months, Ms Carter was
found to have failed to disclose the extent of the super benefits to the three sons
and that the estate and each of them was a potential beneficiary of one of the accounts.
Once the sons found out about the
super and the potential to claim, the three sons claimed the benefit as
executors of the estate. Notwithstanding their claim, UniSuper exercised its
discretion in favour of Ms Carter.
The
Court found that, despite the
misrepresentations made by Ms Carter and breach of her fiduciary duties as an
executor up to the point in time when the three sons discovered her deceit,
thereafter the actions of the sons in making a claim on behalf of the estate
(without Ms Carter's involvement) effectively meant that they had accepted that
she was not acting as an executor in the matter so that she was therefore
entitled to pursue her claim for payment in her own personal capacity and not
as a co-executor. Since she was no longer acting as an executor, she was therefore
not in breach of her duties as such, and therefore was entitled to receive the
payment herself without having to account to the estate for it.
Ironically, if the three sons did not make a
separate competing claim (which effectively operated as a consent to Ms Carter
claiming in her own right), she would have been held to be in breach of her
duties as an executor and would have had to pay the money to the estate. As a
result, despite Ms Carter's dishonest conduct, she won the case.
This
case illustrates the importance of a valid
binding death benefit nomination if you have specific wishes as to how your
death benefit should be paid by the trustee of the Fund, as well as some of the
issues that arise for executors who are also beneficiaries in claiming those
death benefit payments.