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The ABC of DMC

27 March 2015 / Edward Rowntree
Issue: 7646 / Categories: Features , Wills & Probate
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Edward Rowntree explains why deathbed gifts are under the Appeal Court spotlight

The Court of Appeal will be examining an arcane but important requirement of the Wills Act relating to deathbed gifts next month. As the opening comments of Charles Hollander QC in his High Court judgment in King v Dubrey [2014] EWHC 2083, make clear, a donatio mortis causa (DMC) takes effect as a historic and anomalous exception to the requirements of the Wills Act.

It involves a present gift which takes effect in the future and remains conditional until the donor dies. On death it becomes absolute. It has previously been described as being of “an amphibious nature, being a gift which is neither entirely inter vivos nor testamentary.”

Testing times

The task for the court is to distinguish between a genuine DMC and an attempt to make a testamentary gift other than in accordance with the Wills Act. The test has, for over 150 years, been a high one: “...no case of this description ought to prevail unless it is

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