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NLJ this week: Predatory marriage—how the law is failing the vulnerable

11 July 2025
Issue: 8124 / Categories: Legal News , Wills & Probate , Family
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Writing in NLJ this week, Sarah Everington, Alex Adams and Farida Hindi of Penningtons Manches Cooper expose how English law enables ‘predatory marriage’—where vulnerable adults are manipulated into marriage for financial gain

Under current rules, marriage automatically revokes a will, allowing exploiters to inherit by default. The capacity to marry is judged by registrars, not medical professionals, and requires only a basic understanding of marriage—not its legal consequences.

The Law Commission’s 2025 proposals would abolish will revocation on marriage and shift the burden of proof in undue influence cases. Until then, practitioners must rely on nuptial agreements, capacity assessments and marriage caveats to protect clients.

The authors call for greater awareness, proactive legal advice and legislative reform to close loopholes that allow predators to override a person’s true testamentary wishes—often only discovered after death.

Issue: 8124 / Categories: Legal News , Wills & Probate , Family
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