Brendan Burgess
Founder
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If a donation of €500 must be made then how can it be called a free service
All we ask is that you leave a bequest/donation to the DPSCA in your Will to value of no less than €500.
I guarantee you Brendan that it's not for free. In fact, it's probably their single most lucrative day of the working year.I also applaud the solicitors who, presumably, give their service for free, for this initiative.
A particularly hard nosed pup could go in and get a will made and not leave anything to the DSPCA.
I also applaud the solicitors who, presumably, give their service for free, for this initiative.
This subject has been discussed previously here on AAM regarding fees, solicitors and release of Wills.
A will cannot be "held hostage".
A solicitor can make an admin/storage/retrieval charge when retrieving and handing over wills and any other documents.
I would say the moral of the story is to get written agreement with the deceased-to-be if you expect to be paid out of their estate!"the solicitor had sought to justify the charge on the basis that the original €80 charge for making the will was heavily discounted in the expectation the firm would be administering the estate. The solicitor said this was explained to the deceased, although there was no evidence provided to support the claim."
I suppose that the moral of this shabby saga is always to charge the client full whack for drafting a will at the time it is drawn up, on the basis that their dependants may prove to be untrustworthy and that the quango will always side with the complainant.
We don't know the full details of the LSRA case.
But if a solicitor tells the person in advance that they are going to charge for storing and retrieving the will, then it's fair enough.
I doubt that this happened in this case.
So describing the LSRA as "witless" is not fair.
Brendan
There's an appreciable difference Brendan between storing a deathbed will for 3 months and storing one for 70 years. I'd regard a storage fee as perfectly understandable in the latter example, less so in the former.If you notify the person in advance that you will be charging them - fine.
If it's only charged, or probably more exactly not waived, after the personal representatives have indicated their intention to go elsewhere, it can hardly be fairly described as a lever to get the business.But if you use it as a lever to get the business, then it's anti-competitive and wrong.
Quite likely.I also think that there might be a bit more to the story as the guy gave back the money but was escalated to the Complaints Committee.
That too.Or it might be that they are just telling solicitors "Notify people in advance of what the charges will be"
This seems like serious malpractice to me.
Granted the amount is small. And they reduced a solicitor's fee from €10,246 to €10,000 , I don't think it would qualify as overcharging.
But in this case,
The solicitor wanted to do the administration of the estate.
As he was not given it, he charged for storage.
He refused to give the will until the fee was paid.
It is anti-competitive.
Presumably, if he sent a note to the client in advance that he would charge €246 for storage it would be ok.
The LSRA felt strongly enough to issue a warning.
Brendan
Sorry - didn't see this before posting my own reply. I haven't yet bothered to research this, but I seriously doubt that the admin\retrieval charge has been found improper in and of itself - only the refusal to release the will without payment. I would be very surprised to find otherwise.Interestingly, that thread includes the following comment from MOB who appears to be a solictor:
Now, thanks to the witless precedent created by the LSRA quango, I assume that the bolded statement is no longer true!
Probably not Brendan. There is still the issue of notifying charges. But failure to notify a charge does not operate as a complete bar to recovering the charge.Hi MOB
Thanks for the clarification.
So if the solicitor had released the will and then issued the bill for €246, there would have been no issue?
Brendan
The issue is not the €246 charge. The issue is that a will cannot he held hostage for payment of that charge.
That has always been the law. I have seen that law enforced by solicitors against other solicitors (and have done so myself).
Nobody, least of all an executor who won't be paying anything out of their own pocket, can claim to be "punished" by a €200 plus VAT cost.The despicable bit is where solicitors seek to effectively “punish” executors for having the audacity to subsequently pursue other options.
That would be an extremely silly way of avoiding using any further services from the solicitor. Why not just tell your solicitor, when making the will, that you would prefer to bring the original with you?For those folk who have a will drawn up with a legal and feel that they would not be happy paying for any further service.
Draw up a new will yourself the same as the previous get it witnessed by a person of your choosing and keep in a safe place yourself.
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