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Draft Testamentary Claims Act 199– and Commentary

DRAFT TESTAMENTARY CLAIMS ACT 199–

Public Act ... of 199–

Royal assent: Day Month 199–

Comes into force: Day Month 199–

TABLE OF PROVISIONS

Part 1 Preliminary

1 Purposes

2 Principles

3 Commencement

4 Application

5 Application to testate and intestate estates

6 Act to be a code

7 Act binds Crown

8 Definitions

Part 2 The Property and Support of Partners

Subpart 1 – Partners and their entitlements

9 Who is a partner?

10 Property and support applications by partners

11 Election by partners

Subpart 2 – Partnership home and chattels

12 Partnership home and partnership chattels

13 Homesteads

14 Partnerships of short duration

15 Extraordinary circumstances

16 Adjustments where each partner owned home when partnership began

Subpart 3 – Other partnership property

17 Remainder of partnership property

18 What is partnership property?

19 What is separate property?

20 Property acquired by succession, survivorship, trust or gift

21 Sustenance or diminution of partnership property

22 Contribution of partners

23 Subtraction of debts from partnership or separate property

Subpart 4 – Support claims

24 When can a partner make a support claim?

25 Assessment of support award

Part 3 Support Claims by Children of a Deceased Person

26 Who is a child of a deceased person?

27 Which children of a deceased person can make support claims?

28 Assessment of child’s support award

Part 4 Claims by Contributors

29 Contribution claims

30 Limitation of contribution claims by partners

31 Contribution claim based on express promise

32 Contribution claim based on express promise to make provision for another person

33 Contribution claim based on unjust retention of benefit

34 Assessment of contribution award

35 Illegal benefits

36 Contractual claims by contributors

37 Contribution claim codifies restitution claims

Part 5 Jurisdiction, Awards, and Priorities

Subpart 1 – Jurisdiction

38 Jurisdiction

39 Right of appeal

Subpart 2 – Awards and orders

40 Kinds and effects of awards and orders

41 Lump sum and periodic payments

42 Retrospective support awards

43 Order for transfer of property

44 Property division orders in favour of administrators

45 Payment of awards to children

46 Provision for trusts

47 Power to vary support awards

Subpart 3 – Funds available to meet claims

48 Availability of certain assets to meet claims

49 Recovery of non-probate assets

50 Rights in respect of prior transactions and non-probate assets

51 Denial of recovery

Subpart 4 – Priorities of awards as against creditors’ claims

52 Ranking of awards on contribution claims as against creditors’ claims

53 Ranking of property division orders as against creditors’ claims

54 Ranking of support awards as against creditors’ claims

Subpart 5 – Priority of awards amongst claimants

55 Ranking of awards and orders on property divisions and contribution and support claims

56 Ranking of awards and orders as against beneficiaries of the estate

Part 6 Making and Settling Claims

57 Making claims and applications

58 Duties of administrators as to property division

59 Time limits

60 Administrator to assist court

61 Distribution of estate

62 Application treated as made by all possible applicants

63 Applications by administrators

64 Evidence

65 Costs

66 Waiver, compromise and agreement

Part 7 Miscellaneous

67 Regulations

68 Proceedings not determined before death of party

69 Repeals and consequential amendments

Schedule 1 Privity of promise provisions – s 32

Schedule 2 Appeal provisions – s 39

Schedule 3 Extensions of time – s 59(2)

Schedule 4 Enactments amended – s 69(2)

The Parliament of New Zealand enacts the Testamentary Claims Act 199–

PART 1 PRELIMINARY

1 Purposes

The principal purposes of this Act are

(a) to provide an entitlement to property division on the death of a partner in a marriage or a relationship in the nature of marriage, where no sufficient provision for property division has been made under the will or intestacy of the deceased person, or otherwise; and

(b) to provide for support claims and contribution claims to be made against the estates of deceased persons in cases where no sufficient provision has been made under the will or intestacy of the deceased, or otherwise, to meet those claims; and

(c) to empower courts to make property division orders, support awards and contribution awards against the estates of deceased persons; and

(d) to empower courts to make property division orders against surviving partners on the application of administrators of the estates of deceased partners; and

(e) to codify the law that applies to property division on the death of a partner and the law that applies to support claims and contribution claims.

Definitions: contribution award, contribution claim, court, estate, property division order, support award, support claim, s 8; partner, ss 9, 10(3)

Section 1

C1 The Draft Act provides for three categories of testamentary claims: property division entitlements, support and contribution claims. It develops and replaces in one Act the present claims under

  • the Matrimonial Property Act 1963 (preserved by the Matrimonial Property Act 1976 s 57(4)),
  • the Family Protection Act 1955, and
  • the Law Reform (Testamentary Promises) Act 1949.

It also substantially codifies a variety of general law claims for remuneration of benefits conferred on the will-maker during lifetime.

C2 The Draft Act extends the categories of claimants in one important respect. Formerly only legally married people had a right to make a statutory claim. Now both married people and those living in de facto relationships will be able to make statutory claims for property division and support. The two groups are both referred to in the Act as partners (see sections 9 and 10(2)–(3) and paras C31 and C34).

2 Principles

(1) This Act is to be interpreted with regard to the principles stated in this section.

(2) This Act recognises and presumes to be of equal value the contributions of spouses to a marriage and de facto partners to a relationship in the nature of marriage and recognises that this principle should be the basis for property division.

(3) This Act recognises that a surviving partner of a deceased person who does not have sufficient resources to enable him or her to maintain a reasonable, independent standard of living should have a right of support from the deceased’s property in respect of the period until the partner, having regard to the economic consequences of the partnership for that partner, can reasonably be expected to maintain such a standard of living for himself or herself.

(4) This Act recognises that a child of a deceased person during such period as the child remains under the age of 20 years or in certain other circumstances while unable to earn a reasonable, independent livelihood has a right of support from the deceased’s property.

(5) This Act recognises that a person who has provided a benefit to a deceased person should be entitled to provision from the deceased’s property in return for the benefit if

(a) the deceased expressly promised to make provision in return for the benefit; or

(b) it would be unjust for the estate of the deceased to retain the benefit without provision in return for the benefit being made.

Definitions: benefit, child of a deceased, estate, property division order, provision, s 8; partner, ss 9, 10(3)

Section 2

C3 This section states the principles which apply to each category of testamentary claim.

C4 Subsection (2) states the principles which apply to domestic partners’ property division entitlements. The same principles apply to the division of married partners’ property whether their relationship ends on separation or on death. This changes the present, broadly discretionary, approach to dividing spouses’ property when their marriage ends on death (Matrimonial Property Act 1963). All claims will now be governed by the rules which apply to marriages which end by separation (Matrimonial Property Act 1976). (See, however, the Note to Part 2, paras C25–C29). The Act presumes partners’ contributions to their relationship to be of equal value, and this presumption is the usual basis for partners’ property division.

C5 Subsection (3) states the principles which apply to partners’ support claims. The rights of both surviving spouses and children under the present legislation are based on a right to “adequate provision for their proper maintenance and support”. No clear and principled approach to making awards is spelt out in that legislation (Family Protection Act 1955, Matrimonial Property Act 1963). Under the Draft Act surviving partners whose resources are insufficient to permit them to maintain a reasonable, independent standard of living have a right to support from the will-maker’s estate until they can reasonably be expected to maintain themselves, having regard to the financial consequences of their partnerships.

C6 Subsection (4) provides that will-makers’ children also have a right to support from the will-maker’s estate if they are under 20, under 25 and undergoing education or training, or permanently disabled from youth. A further or alternative subsection will be needed if adult children are also to have a testamentary claim: see chapter 7, paras 233–266.

C7 Subsection (5) states the principles which apply to contribution claims. People who conferred benefits on a living will-maker must under existing law show that the will-maker promised to remunerate them for those benefits by will (Law Reform (Testamentary Promises) Act 1949). Alternatively or additionally, they may make one of many claims under the general law of contract or the law of restitution. Both the statute and the common law are now replaced by two claims based on (a) express agreement, and (b) unjust enrichment. These correspond broadly to the law of contract and restitution respectively. But they have been adapted to meet the needs of testamentary claims. In particular, it will be easier for carers of older and disabled people to bring claims than it is under the present law.

3 Commencement

This Act comes into force 6 months after the date on which it receives the Governor-General’s assent.

4 Application

(1) This Act applies in respect of entitlements and claims against the estates of persons who die after this Act comes into force, except that it does not apply in respect of entitlements to property division or to support claims where before this Act comes into force the partners ceased to live together or a partner had died.

(2) This Act applies in respect of a property division initiated by the administrator of the estate of a person who dies after this Act comes into force against a surviving partner of the deceased person.

(3) This Act does not apply to Mäori freehold land as defined in section 4 of the Te Ture Whenua Mäori/ Mäori Land Act 1993, Mäori customary land as defined in section 4 of that Act, shares in a Mäori incorporation as defined in section 4 of that Act, and trusts constituted under Part XII of that Act.

Definitions: administrator, estate, support claim, s 8; partner, ss 9, 10(3)

5 Application to testate and intestate estates

Applications to the court for property division orders, support awards, and contribution awards may be made under this Act against the estates of deceased persons whether or not the deceased persons died leaving a valid will disposing of all or part of their estate.

Definitions: contribution award, court, estate, property division order, support award, s 8

Section 3

C8 This section allows a period of 6 months for will-makers and potential claimants to become informed about and to consider how the Act affects them, so that, if they wish, they may make or alter their arrangements before the Act comes into force.

Section 4

C9 Subsection (1) provides that claims may be made against will-makers’ estates under the Act if the will-maker dies after the Act comes into force. The present law will continue to apply for those who die earlier. In the case of partners’ claims, the present law will continue to apply where they separate before the Act comes into force, or where one of the partners dies before that time.

C10 Subsection (2) provides further that property division claims may be made under the Act by administrators of will-makers’ estates against will-makers’ surviving partners (see section 10(2) and para C34).

C11 Subsection (3) provides that the Act does not apply to interests in property currently defined and disposed of in accordance with Te Ture Whenua Mäori/Mäori Land Act 1993.

C12 No provision has yet been made to deal with conflict of laws issues. In general, the law applicable to the substantial validity of provisions made in wills is well settled. It is

  • as regards immovables (that is, land), the law of the place where the land is situated; and
  • as regards movables, the law of the will-maker’s domicile.

Section 7 of the Matrimonial Property Act 1976 follows a similar pattern, though as regards movables owned by a person domiciled overseas, New Zealand law may still be applied if the owner’s husband or wife is domiciled here. The position also allows the parties to agree on the appropriate law which will apply. The Commission is currently considering what conflict of laws rules should apply to testamentary matters generally.

Section 5

C13 The Act refers to “testamentary” claims and is intended primarily to deal with wills which do not observe the testamentary obligations laid down in the Act. But it will be equally available where the deceased dies without leaving a will which disposes of all of his or her estate, and the distribution on intestacy (or under the will and on intestacy) does not adequately recognise those obligations.

6 Act to be a code

(1) Except as otherwise expressly provided in this Act, this Act has effect in place of the rules and presumptions of the common law and equity to the extent that they apply to transactions between partners in respect of property, and in cases for which provision is made by this Act, between partners, and each of them, and third persons as they would otherwise apply on the death of a partner.

(2) Without limiting the generality of subsection (1),

(a) any presumption of advancement, and

(b) any presumption of resulting trust, and

(c) any presumption that the use of a partner’s income by his or her partner with consent during the partnership is a gift,

do not apply between partners.

(3) Nothing in this section affects the law that applies where a partner is acting as trustee under any deed or will, and, for the purposes of this subsection, every enactment and rule of law or of equity continues to operate and apply accordingly as if this section had not been passed.

Definitions: partner, ss 9, 10(3)

Origin: Matrimonial Property Act 1976 s 4

7 Act binds Crown

This Act binds the Crown.

Section 6

C14 The Act will have effect in place of common law and equitable rules which apply to property disputes between partners, but will not affect the law that applies where a partner is acting as a trustee.

Section 7

C15 The Act will bind the Crown. It will apply, for example, if a testamentary claim is made against property left to the Crown in a will: see A New Interpretation Act (1990, NZLC R17) chapter 4.

8 Definitions

In this Act

administration means

(a) probate of the will of a deceased person; and

(b) letters of administration of the estate of a deceased, granted with or without a will annexed, for general, special, or limited purposes; and,

(c) in the case of the Mäori Trustee or the Public Trustee or a trustee company, an order to administer and an election to administer;

administrator means a person to whom administration is granted and the Mäori Trustee or the Public Trustee or a trustee company where that official or company is deemed to be an executor or administrator by reason of having filed an election to administer;

award means a support award or a contribution award;

benefit

(a) means money, property, work, services, and any other benefit of value, and a benefit may be of value although

(i) the person to whom the benefit is provided does not accept it, or accepts it believing that it will not be remunerated, if the benefit adds value to the deceased’s property or relieves the person from expenditure which would otherwise be necessary or desirable; or

(ii) the benefit has no significant objective value, but the person to whom it is provided requests or accepts the benefit as being of value to that person; but

(b) excludes services performed by a person without a significant expenditure of time, effort or money;

child of a deceased person has the meaning given in section 26;

contribution award means an award made by the court under this Act in respect of a contribution claim;

contribution claim means a claim made under section 29;

contributor means a person who provided a benefit to a deceased person during the lifetime of the deceased;

court means a court that has jurisdiction in a proceeding under this Act;

de facto partner has the meaning given in section 9;

estate means real and personal property of every kind, including things in action;

homestead has the meaning given in section 13;

non-probate assets has the meaning given in section 48;

parent, in relation to a child, includes a person who is taken for the purposes of section 26(1) to have assumed on a continuing and enduring basis the responsibilities of a parent of that child;

partner has the meaning given in sections 9 and 10(3);

partnership chattels, in relation to a partnership,

(a) means chattels owned by a partner, or both partners, which are

(i) household furniture or household appliances, effects, or equipment; or

(ii) articles of household or family use or amenity or of household ornament, including tools, garden effects and equipment; or

(iii) motor vehicles, caravans, trailers, or boats, used wholly or principally, in each case, for partnership purposes; or

(iv) accessories of a chattel to which subparagraph (iii) applies; or

(v) household pets; and

(b) includes any of the chattels mentioned in paragraph (a) which are in the possession of a partner under a hire purchase or conditional sale agreement or an agreement for lease or hire; but

(c) does not include chattels used wholly or principally for business purposes, or money or securities for money;

partnership home means the dwellinghouse that is used habitually or from time to time by the partners or by either partner as the only or principal family residence, together with any land, buildings, or improvements appurtenant to any such dwellinghouse and used wholly or principally for the purposes of the household and includes a joint family home;

partnership property has the meaning given in section 18;

personal debt means a debt incurred by a partner, other than a debt incurred

(a) by the partners jointly; or

(b) in the course of a common enterprise carried on by the partners, whether or not together with any other person; or

(c) for the purpose of acquiring or improving or repairing the partnership home or acquiring or improving or repairing family chattels; or

(d) for the benefit of both partners or of any child of the partnership in the course of managing the affairs of the household or bringing up any child of the partnership;

promise includes any statement of fact or representation and any expression of intention;

property division order means an order made by the court under this Act in respect of an application for property division;

provision, in reference to provision made or to be made by a deceased person, includes provision made or to be made before or after the death of the deceased and provision made by will or otherwise;

remunerate includes reward or recompense, by way of money or by the provision of any other benefit;

separate property has the meaning given in section 19;

support award means an award made by the court under this Act in respect of a support claim;

support claim means a claim made under section 24 or 27.

Definitions: partner, ss 9, 10(3)

Origins: Administration Act 1969 s 2 (administrator); Law Reform (Testamentary Promises) Act 1949 s 2 (promise); Matrimonial Property Act 1976 s 2 (homestead, partnership chattels, partnership home, personal debt, separate property)

Section 8

C16 This section defines all terms used in more than one place in the Act. The Commentary covers the more important definitions.

C17 Administration and administrator are defined to include all formal modes of administration by all possible administrators. Intestacies are also included in the legislation: see section 5, para C13.

C18 Benefit is a term used in respect of contribution claims. It means a thing of significant value that a contributor has provided to the will-maker when alive and for which the contributor claims provision from the will-maker’s estate. A benefit may be of value because it has an objective value (that is, the contributor conferring it made the estate more valuable). Or it may be valuable because the deceased person regarded it as valuable, even though others would not (eg, companionship).

C19 Contributors may make contribution claims. They are people who contributed a benefit to will-makers when the will-makers were alive.

C20 Partnership chattels are one of three categories of partnership property divided when a property division claim is made (the other two are the partnership home (section 13(5), paras C40–C41) and other partnership property, section 18, paras C52–C59). There is a strong presumption that partnership chattels, broadly, are items of personal property used in the home or for the partnership and grouped with the partnership home. They are usually divided equally between the deceased person’s estate and the surviving partner (section 12, paras C36–C39). Other partnership property is also presumptively divided equally, but the presumption of equal sharing is not so strong (section 17, paras C50–C51). Separate property is usually not divided (sections 19 and 20, paras C60–C69). The present law applying to claims against estates (Matrimonial Property Act 1963 ss 5 and 6) does not categorise partners’ property in this way nor presume that courts divide it in any particular way. At present courts divide spouses’ property as appears just. Courts must consider spouses’ respective contributions to a matrimonial home, and may consider spouses’ respective contributions to other disputed property.

C21 A partnership home is the only or principal residence used by the deceased person and his or her surviving partner. Homes settled under the Joint Family Homes Act 1964 can also be partnership homes subject to property division claims (currently they are not subject to spouses’ property claims if the spouses were cohabiting when either died: Matrimonial Property Act 1963 s 5(6)).

C22 Personal debts is a term defined for use in respect of partners’ property division entitlements. Personal debts are not usually deducted from the value of partnership property (see section 23, paras C76–C81). Personal debts are debts which do not fall within one of the expressly defined debts which will be deducted from partnership property.

C23 Promise is a term defined for use in respect of contribution claims. Contributors who claim on the basis of the deceased person’s promise of remuneration must show that the promise was express (sections 29(1)(a) and 31(1), paras C106 and C111–C113). This differs from the present law (Law Reform (Testamentary Promises) Act 1949 s 3(1)) under which courts can accept express and implied promises. Implied promises will be dealt with under the heading of unjust enrichment (sections 29(1)(b) and 33, paras C106 and C117–C122).

C24 Remunerate is also used in respect of contribution claims to refer to the provision the contributor actually receives in return for the benefit contributed. Unlike the present law (Law Reform (Testamentary Promises) Act 1949 s 3(1)), the Draft Act includes as provision; anything given or promised to be given, in return for contributions. A promise of remuneration would include, for example, a promise to transfer property during the will-maker’s lifetime; for example, in old age.


NOTE ON PART 2 OF THE DRAFT ACT

C25 The form that Part 2 of the Draft Act takes will depend in large measure on the state of the law governing property division when partners separate during their lifetime. The Minister of Justice has stated publicly that he has asked his Ministry to progress reform of the Matrimonial Property Act 1976 and also legislation governing the property of de facto couples.

C26 We do not know what these reforms will be (though issues and possible reforms were foreshadowed by the Report of a Working Group in 1988). As regards husbands and wives, therefore, the present draft is based on the present provisions of the Matrimonial Property Act 1976. Any changes in the principles governing property division would need to be reflected in this part of the Act.

C27 The Commission is not yet committed to any view on whether the provisions relating to married partners which appear in our Draft Act should ultimately appear as part of the Matrimonial Property Act 1976, or as part of a new Testamentary Claims Act. That is a matter for further discussion with the Ministry of Justice. The choice will depend on considerations such as clarity of drafting and convenience of access and application. There are, however, some wider issues which also need to be taken into account. These have to do with the concept of matrimonial property rights and issues in conflict of laws. Comment on this point is welcome.

C28 The provisions dealing with married partners have been drafted in the present form to show how matrimonial property law provisions interrelate with testamentary claims. This has had the result that some 16 provisions of this Draft Act have been taken (with necessary adaptation) from the Matrimonial Property Act 1976 (see Part 2).

C29 As regards our proposals for division of property between de facto partners, we recognise that, if they were implemented now, there would be a considerable difference between the law which applies during the partners’ lifetimes, and the law which applies after one of them dies. This may not be easy to justify, although there is something to be said for the view that the law should be more favourable to claimants against the estates of dead partners, than it is to claimants who are separated from a living partner (see chapter 5, paras 139 and 142). For the present, we assume that there will be some legislation in place governing property division during de facto partners’ lifetimes when our legislation is implemented. What form it will take we do not know. The Commission’s tentative view is that the relevant principles of matrimonial property law could readily be applied in the de facto situation, with minor modifications. We have prepared our Draft Act accordingly, hoping that it will be useful in any public debate there may be on that issue.

PART 2 THE PROPERTY AND SUPPORT OF PARTNERS

Subpart 1 – Partners and their entitlements

9 Who is a partner?

(1) A person is to be regarded as a partner of another person for the purposes of this Act if the person was at any time married to that other person or was at any time a de facto partner of that other person.

(2) A person is to be regarded as a de facto partner of another person for the purposes of this Act if the person lived in a relationship in the nature of marriage with that other person.

(3) For the purposes of this Act, a relationship in the nature of marriage includes a relationship between 2 persons of the same sex.

10 Property and support applications by partners

(1) A partner of a deceased person may, by application to the court,

(a) initiate a property division; or

(b) initiate a property division and make a support claim,

against the estate of the deceased.

(2) The administrator of a deceased may, by application to the court, initiate a property division against a partner of that deceased or against the administrator of such a partner.

(3) Any reference in this Act to proceedings that may be brought by a partner, or to procedural requirements to be observed by a partner, is to be taken to include a reference to those proceedings being brought or requirements observed by the administrator of a partner.

Definitions: administrator, court, estate, support claim, s 8; partner, ss 9, 10(3)

Section 9

C30 This Part deals with partnership property. For married couples, comparable rights exist under the Matrimonial Property Act 1976 during their joint lifetimes only (see section 5 of that Act). The provisions in this part will apply where either partner dies. Either the surviving partner, or the estate of a partner who has died, will be able to bring a claim (see section 10(2)).

C31 Section 9 defines a partner for the purposes of property division applications and support claims. A person’s partner must at some time have been either that person’s husband or wife or de facto partner. A de facto partnership is defined as a relationship in the nature of marriage, and includes a relationship between two persons of the same sex (compare Matrimonial Property Bill 1975 cl 49, Electricity Act 1992 s 111(2)(e) and Domestic Violence Act 1995 s 2 for similar definitions).

C32 At present when a relationship ends on death, only spouses may initiate statutory property divisions and make support claims (Matrimonial Property Act 1963 s 5, Family Protection Act 1955 s 3). De facto partners may make what the Draft Act styles a “contribution” claim under the Law Reform (Testamentary Promises) Act 1949 or under the general law. When both de facto partners are living, they may make property claims under the general law, and may have more limited support claims under statute (Family Proceedings Act 1980 s 81).

Section 10

C33 Subsection (1) provides that partners may institute a property division only, or initiate a property division and make a support claim. The court cannot consider a partner’s support claim without considering what division of partnership property the partner is entitled to (section 24(2), para C84). At present spouses may choose to bring any combination of property claims (Matrimonial Property Act 1963) and support claims (Family Protection Act 1955).

C34 Subsection (2) provides that the administrator of the estate of a deceased partner may institute a property division against a surviving partner (or the estate of a partner who outlived the deceased partner). This is also permitted under the present law (Matrimonial Property Act 1963 s 5(7)). In practice, it may not be worthwhile for the administrator to bring property division proceedings during the survivor’s lifetime. The claim is likely to be met by the survivor’s claim for support. But on the survivor’s death, the equalisation of estates may well be desirable, for example, to secure provision for the children from the previous marriage of the partner who dies first.

11 Election by partners

A partner in whose favour a property division order is made, with or without a support award, must elect whether to accept the benefit of the order or to accept his or her entitlement under the estate of the deceased person (whether or not the deceased left a will) and is not entitled to both the benefit of that order and an entitlement under the estate.

Definitions: property division order, s 8; partner, ss 9, 10(3)

Section 11

C35 The present law is unclear on how a partner’s property claim should be affected by any property the surviving partner receives under the will-maker’s will (Matrimonial Property Act 1963, Re Mora [1988] 1 NZLR 214). The Draft Act does not compel surviving partners to institute a property division. But when the court has determined both the property entitlements and the support award (section 10) and dealt with claims by any other person (section 62, paras C204–C207), surviving partners must choose between taking either

  • what they receive from the deceased’s estate – reduced as necessary to satisfy other valid claims against the estate (if any, section 56, paras C188–C191), or
  • the amount of the property division order the court must make in their favour.

Neither the support claim nor the property division entitlement can be used to “top-up” the provision made for the partner under the will.

Subpart 2 – Partnership home and chattels

12 Partnership home and partnership chattels

(1) A partner is entitled on a property division to be awarded an equal share of the partnership home and the partnership chattels.

(2) If

(a) the partners or either of them have sold the partnership home with the intention of applying the proceeds of the sale wholly or in part towards the acquisition of another home as a partnership home; and

(b) that home has not been acquired; and

(c) not more than 2 years have elapsed since the date when those proceeds were received or became payable, whichever is the later,

a partner is entitled on a property division to be awarded an equal share in those proceeds as if they were the partnership home.

(3) If subsection (2) does not apply and either there is no partnership home or the partnership home is not owned by the partners or one of them, a partner is entitled on a property division to be awarded an equal share in such part of the partnership property as the court thinks just to compensate for the absence of an interest in the partnership home.

(4) This section is subject to sections 13, 14, 15, 21 and 66.

Definitions: partnership chattels, partnership home, partnership property, s 8; partner, ss 9, 10(3)

Origin: Matrimonial Property Act 1976 s 11

Section 12

C36 This section sets out how courts on property division applications divide the partnership home or its equivalent, and also partnership chattels.

C37 Under subsection (1) courts divide the partnership home and partnership chattels equally between the surviving partner and the deceased partner (or the estates of two deceased partners) unless (subsection (4))

  • the partnership home was a homestead (section 13, paras C40–C43), or
  • the partnership was one of short duration (section 14, paras C44–C47), or
  • extraordinary circumstances make equal sharing repugnant to justice (section 15, para C48), or
  • each partner owned a home capable of becoming a partnership home when the relationship began (section 16, para C49), or
  • one partner’s separate property has been sustained by the application of matrimonial property or the actions of the other partner, or one partner’s separate property has been diminished by the deliberate actions of the other partner (section 21, para C70), or
  • the partners agreed in a fair manner on a different division of this partnership property (section 66, paras C214–C219).

C38 Subsections (2) and (3) provide that where there is no partnership home, equivalent funds may be set aside and divided as the partnership home would have been. This applies

  • where there is no partnership home, or
  • where the partnership home was not owned by one or both partners, or
  • where the partnership home was sold with the intention of applying the proceeds of the sale towards the acquisition of another home.

C39 The present law which applies on the death of a spouse (Matrimonial Property Act 1963 ss 5 and 6) does not categorise spouses’ property in this way nor does it presume that courts divide it in any particular way. Currently courts divide spouses’ property as appears just. Courts must consider spouses’ respective contributions to a matrimonial home, and may consider spouses’ respective contributions to other disputed property.

13 Homesteads

(1) If the partnership home is a homestead which is owned by the partners or either of them, section 12(1) does not apply but a partner is instead on a property division entitled to be awarded an equal share of a sum of money equal to the equity of the partners or either of them in the homestead.

(2) A partner who does not have a beneficial interest in the land on which the homestead is situated is, until his or her share of that sum is paid or otherwise satisfied, to be taken to be beneficially interested in that land.

(3) For the purposes of subsection (1), the value of the homestead is to be determined in accordance with an apportionment of the capital value of the land on which the homestead is situated. Such apportionment is to be made and the capital value is to be determined by the Valuer-General on the requisition of either partner as at the date of the making of the valuation.

(4) Either partner may appeal to the Administrative Division of the High Court against any apportionment made or any value determined by the Valuer-General under this section.

(5) In this section, homestead means a partnership home where the dwellinghouse that is the partnership home is situated on an unsubdivided part of land that is not used wholly or principally for the purposes of the household, but does not include a partnership home that is occupied

(a) under a licence to occupy within the meaning of Part VIIA of the Land Transfer Act 1952; or

(b) because of the ownership of a specified share of any estate or interest in the land on which the dwellinghouse that is the partnership home is situated and because of reciprocal agreements with the owners of the other shares; or,

(c) in the case of a flat or town house which is part of a block of flats or town houses or is one of a number of flats or town houses situated on the same piece of land, under a lease or other arrangement under which the occupants of the flat or town house are entitled to exclusive possession of it.

(6) This section is subject to sections 14, 15, 21 and 66.

Definitions: homestead, partnership home, s 8; partner, ss 9, 10(3)

Origin: Matrimonial Property Act 1976 s 12

Section 13

C40 Homestead is a term used to distinguish partnership homes from other unsubdivided land on which they are situated, such as farms or business properties. Paragraphs (a)–(c) of subsection (5) make clear that while landsharing schemes (like licences to occupy and tenancies in common with cross-leases or licences) do not count as homesteads, they may still be partnership homes.

C41 When dividing partners’ property, courts must separate partnership homes from other unsubdivided land where they are situated, such as farms or business properties. If the partnership home, whether owned by one or both partners, is a homestead, then the partners share equally in the equity of the partners or either of them in the homestead (unless any of sections 14, 15, 21 or 66 apply: see para C37), but not necessarily in the rest of the land on which the homestead is situated.

C42 Subsection (2) protects partners making property division claims by deeming them to have beneficial interests in the land until their shares of the equity of homesteads are paid.

C43 Subsections (3) and (4) set out a process for deciding how much of the land on which the homestead is situated should be apportioned to the homestead and what the value of that apportioned land should be. The Valuer-General makes these decisions, which either partner may challenge by appeal to the Administrative Division of the High Court.

14 Partnerships of short duration

(1) If a partnership was of short duration, sections 12 and 13 do not apply

(a) to an asset owned wholly or substantially by a partner when the partnership began; or

(b) to an asset that has come to a partner after the date the partnership began by succession or by survivorship or as the beneficiary under a trust or by gift from a third person; or

(c) where the contribution of a partner to the partnership has clearly been disproportionately greater than that of the other partner.

(2) If subsection (1) applies, the share of the partnership property that is to be awarded to a partner on a property division is to be determined in accordance with the contribution of that partner to the partnership.

(3) A partnership is to be regarded for the purposes of this section as of short duration if the partners have lived together in marriage or in a relationship in the nature of marriage

(a) for a period of less than 3 years (in the computation of which any period of resumed cohabitation with the motive of reconciliation may be excluded if it lasts for not more than 3 months); or

(b) for a period of longer than 3 years, if the court having regard to all the circumstances of the partnership considers it just.

Definitions: partnership property, s 8; partner, ss 9, 10(3)

Origin: Matrimonial Property Act 1976 s 13

15 Extraordinary circumstances

If in the opinion of the court extraordinary circumstances render it repugnant to justice that a partner should be awarded an equal share of any property to which section 12 applies or of any sum of money under section 13, the court may award a partner on a property division an amount determined in accordance with the contribution of that partner to the partnership.

Definitions: partner, ss 9, 10(3)

Origin: Matrimonial Property Act 1976 s 14

Section 14

C44 While the partnership home and the partnership chattels are normally divided equally between the partners (sections 12 and 13, paras C36–C43), this does not occur when the partners’ relationship was one of short duration.

C45 Subsection (3) defines a partnership of short duration as one where the partners have lived together in marriage or in a de facto relationship for a period of less than three years (or longer if the court considers it just having regard to all the circumstances). In calculating this (usually three-year) period, the court may deduct periods where separated partners live together again for less than three months in an attempt at reconciliation.

C46 Subsection (1) provides that if the partnership was one of short duration, then equal sharing of the partnership home (or equity in the homestead) and partnership chattels does not apply

  • if they were owned wholly or substantially by a partner when the relationship began; or
  • if one partner received them during the relationship by inheritance, under a trust or as a gift; or
  • where one partner’s contribution to the relationship was clearly disproportionately greater than the other partner’s contribution.

C47 Subsection (2) provides that if equal sharing does not apply, then the partnership home (or equity in the homestead) and partnership chattels are divided in accordance with the partners’ respective contributions to the partnership (section 22, paras C71–C75).

Section 15

C48 Partnership homes (or equity in homesteads) and partnership chattels will not be shared equally if courts consider that extraordinary circumstances make equal sharing repugnant to justice. Courts divide this property instead according to the partners’ respective contributions to the partnership (section 22, paras C71–C75).

16 Adjustments where each partner owned home when partnership began

Notwithstanding anything in sections 12 to 15, where, at the date the partnership began, each partner owned a home capable of becoming a partnership home, but the home (or the proceeds of its sale) of only one partner is included in the partnership property at the time when a property division is to be made under this Act, the court may make such adjustments to the shares of the partners in any of the partnership property (including the partnership home and partnership chattels) as it thinks just to compensate for the inclusion of the home of only one partner in the partnership property.

Definitions: partnership home, partnership property, s 8; partner, ss 9, 10(3)

Origin: Matrimonial Property Act 1976 s 16

Subpart 3 – Other partnership property

17 Remainder of partnership property

(1) On a property division, a partner is entitled to be awarded an equal share in partnership property other than property to which section 12 or 13 applies unless that partner’s contribution to the partnership has been clearly greater than that of the other partner.

(2) If under subsection (1) a partner is not entitled to an equal share in partnership property, or any part of it, the share of that partner in the partnership property or in that part of it is to be determined in accordance with the contribution of that partner to the partnership.

(3) This section is subject to sections 21, 22 and 66.

Definitions: partnership property, s 8; partner, ss 9, 10(3)

Origin: Matrimonial Property Act 1976 s 15; compare Matrimonial Property Act 1963 s 6

Section 16

C49 Sometimes both partners owned homes when the partnership began. Either property could have become the partnership home, but only one is chosen. So, when the court divides the partnership property, only one partner’s home (or the proceeds of it after it is sold) is included in this property for division. This section permits the court to adjust the sharing of partnership property so as to compensate for that imbalance.

Section 17

C50 This section sets out how courts on property division claims divide the residual category of partnership property (section 8, paras C21–C22). For a definition of partnership property see section 18, paras C52–C59. The method of division laid down in this section does not apply to

  • the partnership home (or homestead), and
  • the partnership chattels

which are divided under section 12, paras C36–C39. Separate property is not divided at all.

C51 Under subsection (1), courts will divide the residual partnership property equally between the surviving partner and the deceased partner (or the estates of two deceased partners) unless

  • one partner’s contribution to the relationship has been clearly greater than that of the other partner, in which case under subsection (2) courts divide this property in accordance with the partners’ respective contributions to the partnership (section 22, paras C71–C75), or
  • one partner’s separate property has been sustained by the application of matrimonial property or the actions of the other partner, or one partner’s separate property has been diminished by the deliberate actions of the other partner (section 21, para C70) – see subsection (3), or
  • the partners agreed fairly on a different division of this partnership property (section 66, paras C214–C219) – see subsection (3).

18 What is partnership property?

Partnership property consists of

(a) the partnership home, whenever acquired; and

(b) the partnership chattels, whenever acquired; and

(c) all property owned jointly or in common in equal shares by the partners; and

(d) all property owned immediately before the partnership began by either partner if the property was acquired in contemplation of the partnership beginning and was intended for the common use and benefit of both partners; and

(e) except for property that is separate property under section 19 or 20, all property acquired by either partner after the beginning of the partnership; and

(f) except for property that is separate property under section 19 or 20, all property acquired after the beginning of the partnership for the common use and benefit of both partners out of property owned by either partner or both of them before the beginning of the partnership or out of the proceeds of any disposition of any property so owned; and

(g) any income, and gains derived from, the proceeds of any disposition of, and any increase in the value of, any property described in paragraphs (a) to (f); and

(h) any policy of assurance taken out by one partner on his or her own life or the life of the other partner, for the benefit of either partner (not being a policy that was fully paid up at the time of the beginning of the partnership and not being a policy to the proceeds of which a third person is beneficially entitled), whether the proceeds are payable on the death of the assured or on the occurrence of a specified event or otherwise; and

(i) any policy of insurance in respect of any property described in paragraphs (a) to (f); and

(j) any pension, benefit, or right to which either partner is entitled or may become entitled under any superannuation scheme if the entitlement is derived, wholly or in part, from contributions made to the scheme after the beginning of the partnership or from employment or office held since the beginning of the partnership; and

(k) all other property that the partners have agreed under section 21 of the Matrimonial Property Act 1976 is to be regarded as matrimonial property for the purposes of that Act; and

(l) all other property that is partnership property because of any other provision of this or any other Act.

Definitions: partnership chattels, partnership home, partnership property, s 8; partner, ss 9, 10(3)

Origin: Matrimonial Property Act 1976 s 8

Section 18

C52 This section defines partnership property, which courts divide when partners apply for a property division. Partners’ property will often be included for division under one or more subparagraphs.

C53 Under paragraphs (a) and (b) partnership property includes the partnership home, and the partnership chattels, both defined elsewhere in the Act (section 8, paras C21–C22).

C54 Paragraph (c) includes property owned jointly or in common or in equal shares by the partners.

C55 Other partnership property is defined by reference to the date the partners acquired it or the purpose for which it was acquired.

C56 Under paragraph (d) property either partner owned immediately before the partnership began, if acquired in contemplation of the partnership beginning and intended for the common use and benefit of the partners, is partnership property.

C57 Paragraph (e) defines partnership property to include property acquired by either partner after the partnership began (except property which is separate property under sections 19 and 20). Similarly, under subparagraph (f) any property which either partner acquired for the partners’ common use and benefit out of their own separate property after the partnership began, is partnership property. Subparagraph (g) includes any increase in value in any of the property described in subparagraphs (a)–(f).

C58 Paragraphs (h)–(j) include as partnership property specified policies of assurance, policies of insurance and superannuation pensions, rights or benefits.

C59 Paragraph (k) permits partners to agree in a fair manner (section 66, paras C214–C219) that any other property may be partnership property. Under subparagraph (l) other provisions in the Act or other Acts may declare specified property to be partnership property.

19 What is separate property?

(1) Separate property consists of all property of a partner which is not partnership property.

(2) Subject to subsection (6) and to sections 16 and 18(f), all property acquired out of separate property, and the proceeds of any disposition of separate property, is separate property.

(3) Subject to subsection (6), any increase in the value of separate property, and any income or gains derived from such property, is separate property unless the increase in value or the income or gains are attributable wholly or in part

(a) to actions of the other partner; or

(b) to the application of partnership property,

in either of which events the increase in value or the income or gains are partnership property.

(4) All property acquired by either partner while they are not living together as partners or after the death of a partner is separate property unless the court considers that it is just in the circumstances to treat such property or any part of it as partnership property.

(5) Subject to any agreement made under section 21 of the Matrimonial Property Act 1976 and to any agreement made under section 66 of this Act, all property acquired by either partner after an order of the court (other than an order under section 25(3) of that Act) has been made defining their respective interests in the partnership property, or dividing or providing for the division of that property, is separate property, except that where the partnership property has been divided on the bankruptcy of a partner,

(a) the partnership home and any partnership chattels acquired after division may be partnership property; and

(b) any other property acquired by either partner after the discharge of that partner from bankruptcy may be partnership property.

(6) Subject to section 20, any separate property which is or any proceeds of any disposition of, or any increase in the value of, or any income or gains derived from, separate property, which are, with the express or implied consent of the partner owning, receiving, or entitled to them, used for the acquisition or improvement of, or to increase the value of, or the amount of any interest of either partner in, any property referred to in section 18 is partnership property.

Definitions: partnership chattels, partnership home, partnership property, s 8; partner, ss 9, 10(3)

Origin: Matrimonial Property Act 1976 s 9

Section 19

C60 This section defines separate property, which courts do not divide on partners’ property division claims.

C61 Subsection (1) defines separate property negatively as all property of a partner which is not partnership property (section 18, paras C52–C59).

C62 Subsection (2) provides that separate property may become partnership property where

  • income or gains derived from separate property is used, with the express or implied consent of the spouse entitled to them, to acquire or improve partnership property: subsection (6); or
  • separate property is used, after the partnership began, to acquire property for the common use and benefit of the spouses (section 18(f), para C57); or
  • the court adjusts the division of partnership property to compensate where both partners owned homes when the partnership began, and only one is included as partnership property when the partners’ property is divided (section 16, para C49).

C63 Subsection (3) provides that courts will regard as partnership property any increases in the value of separate property which are attributable to the actions of the other partner or the application of partnership property.

C64 Subsection (4) provides that property either partner acquires, while the partners are not living together as partners or after the death of a partner, will be separate property unless the court considers it just in the circumstances to treat it as partnership property.

C65 Subsection (5) deals with any property either partner acquires after the court has made an order for the division of partnership property. It must be separate property unless

  • the parties agreed fairly otherwise under the Matrimonial Property Act 1976; or
  • the parties agreed fairly otherwise under section 66 of the Act (paras C214–C219); or
  • the partnership property was divided on the bankruptcy of a partner under the Matrimonial Property Act 1976 and
– a partnership home and partnership chattels are acquired after the division, and
– other property is acquired after the discharge of that partner from bankruptcy and that property, according to the principles set out in section 18, is partnership property.

20 Property acquired by succession, survivorship, trust or gift

(1) Property that is

(a) acquired by succession or by survivorship or as a beneficiary under a trust or by gift from a third person; or

(b) the proceeds of a disposition of property to which paragraph (a) applies; or

(c) acquired out of property to which paragraph (a) applies,

is not partnership property unless, with the express or implied consent of the partner who received it, the property or the proceeds of any disposition of it have been so intermingled with other partnership property that it is unreasonable or impracticable to regard that property or those proceeds as being separate property.

(2) Property acquired by gift from the other partner is not partnership property unless the gift is used for the benefit of both partners.

(3) Notwithstanding subsections (1) and (2) and section 19(4), both the partnership home and the partnership chattels are partnership property unless designated separate property by an agreement made in accordance with section 21 of the Matrimonial Property Act 1976 or section 66 of this Act.

Definitions: partnership chattels, partnership home, partnership property, separate property, s 8; partner, ss 9, 10(3)

Origin: Matrimonial Property Act 1976 s 10

21 Sustenance or diminution of separate property

(1) Notwithstanding anything in sections 12 to 15 and 17, if the separate property of one partner has been sustained by the application of partnership property or the actions of the other partner, the court may increase the share on a property division to which the other partner would otherwise be entitled in relation to the partnership property.

(2) Notwithstanding anything in sections 12 to 15 and 17, where the separate property of one partner has been materially diminished in value by the deliberate actions of the other partner, the court may decrease the share on a property division to which the other partner would otherwise be entitled in relation to the partnership property.

Definitions: partnership chattels, partnership home, partnership property, separate property, s 8; partner, ss 9, 10(3)

Origin: Matrimonial Property Act 1976 s 17

Section 20

C66 This section further defines separate property, which courts do not divide on partners’ property division claims.

C67 Subsection (1) provides that property acquired by inheritance, under a trust or by gift from a third person (or the proceeds of that property or property acquired with them) is separate property. An exception is made if, with the implied or express consent of the partner who received it, the property is so intermingled with partnership property that it is unreasonable or impracticable to regard it as separate property.

C68 Subsection (2) provides that property one partner acquires by gift from the other partner is partnership property only if used for the benefit of both partners.

C69 Subsection (3) provides that the partnership home and partnership chattels are partnership property, even if acquired

  • by inheritance, under a trust or by gift from a third party (section 19(1), para C61), or
  • by gift from the other partner (section 19(2), para C62), or
  • when the partners were not living together as partners or after the death of a partner (section 19(4), para C64);

unless the partners fairly agreed otherwise under the Matrimonial Property Act 1976 s 21 or section 66 (paras C214–C219) of this Act.

Section 21

C70 This section deals with actions of a partner which increase or diminish the partners’ separate property. Here exceptions are made to the general principles of division based on equal sharing or contribution. The exceptions apply to all partnership property, including the partnership home and chattels:

  • Under subsection (1), where one partner’s separate property has been sustained by the application of partnership property or the actions of the other partner, the other party’s share of the matrimonial property may be increased.
  • Under subsection (2), where one partner’s separate property has been materially diminished in value by the other partner’s deliberate actions, the other party’s share of the matrimonial property may be decreased.

22 Contribution of partners

(1) For the purposes of this Act, a contribution to the partnership means all or any of the following:

(a) the care of a child of the partnership or of any aged or infirm relative or dependant of a partner;

(b) the management of the household and the performance of household duties;

(c) the provision of money, including the earning of income, for the purposes of the partnership;

(d) the acquisition or creation of partnership property, including the payment of money for those purposes;

(e) the payment of money to maintain or increase the value of

(i) the partnership property or part of it; or

(ii) the separate property of the other partner or part of it;

(f) the performance of work or services in respect of

(i) the partnership property or part of it; or

(ii) the separate property of the other partner or part of it;

(g) the foregoing of a higher standard of living that would otherwise have been available;

(h) the giving of assistance or support to the other partner (whether or not of a material kind), including the giving of assistance or support which

(i) enables the other partner to acquire qualifications; or

(ii) aids the other partner in the carrying on of his or her occupation or business.

(2) The court is not to presume that a contribution of a monetary nature (whether under subsection (1)(c) or otherwise) is of greater value than a contribution of a non-monetary nature.

(3) In determining the contribution of a partner to a partnership or in determining what order to make on a property division, the court may take into account any misconduct of a partner that has been gross and palpable and has significantly affected the extent or value of the partnership property, but the court must not otherwise take any misconduct of a partner into account, whether to diminish or detract from the positive contribution of that partner or otherwise.

Definitions: partnership property, separate property s 8; partner, ss 9, 10(3)

Origin: Matrimonial Property Act 1976 s 18

Section 22

C71 This section defines partners’ contributions to a partnership for the purposes of partners’ property division claims.

C72 The present law for property division (when a marriage ends on the death of a spouse) requires courts to divide the spouses’ property “as appears just” (Matrimonial Property Act 1963 s 5). Courts must consider spouses’ respective contributions to a matrimonial home, and may consider spouses’ respective contributions to other disputed property (Matrimonial Property Act 1963 s 6(1)–(1A)). Courts may consider spouses’ contributions whether in the form of “money, payments, services, prudent management, or otherwise howsoever”. Courts may make orders even though spouses make no contributions in the form of money payments and their other forms of contribution are of a “usual and not extraordinary character” (see Haldane v Haldane [1976] 2 NZLR 715, 726–727).

C73 The Draft Act instead follows the present law for property division when marriages end on separation (Matrimonial Property Act 1976 s 18; Angelo and Atkin (1977) 7 NZULR 237, 251). Under subsection (1) courts must consider partners’ respective contributions to the partnership, which need not be monetary in form nor directly related to acquiring, preserving or improving particular property.

C74 Under subsection (2) courts must not presume monetary contributions to be more valuable than non-monetary contributions.

C75 Under subsection (3) courts may consider partners’ misconduct in determining partners’ respective contributions to partnerships, and the appropriate property division award to make, only if that misconduct

  • was gross and palpable, and
  • significantly affected the extent or value of partnership property,

but not otherwise.

23 Subtraction of debts from partnership or separate property

(1) The value of the partnership property that may be divided between partners under this Act is to be ascertained by deducting from the value of the partnership property owned by each partner

(a) any secured or unsecured debts (other than personal debts or debts secured wholly on separate property) owed by that partner; and

(b) the unsecured personal debts owed by that partner to the extent that they exceed the value of any separate property of that partner.

(2) Where any secured or unsecured personal debt of one partner is paid or satisfied (whether voluntarily or pursuant to legal process) out of the partnership property, the court may order that

(a) the share of the other partner in the partnership property be increased proportionately;

(b) assets forming part of that partner’s separate property be taken to be partnership property for the purposes of any division of partnership property under this Act;

(c) that partner pay to the other partner a sum of money by way of compensation.

Definitions: partnership property, personal debt, separate property, s 8; partner, ss 9, 10(3)

Origin: Matrimonial Property Act 1976 ss 20(5), 20(6)

Section 23

C76 Parties to a domestic relationship will incur (separately or together) a variety of debts which may be unpaid when one of them dies. It will make a significant difference to the division whether those debts are charged to one or both partners. This section sets out whether courts on property division claims should deduct particular debts from either

  • partnership property (which courts divide between surviving partners and deceased partners’ estates); or
  • separate property (which courts do not usually divide).

C77 Debts which are seen as “personal” to a partner should generally be charged to that partner’s separate property. Personal debts are defined in section 8 (see para C22). Subsection (1) provides that courts will deduct from partnership property,

  • under subparagraph (a), any joint debts of the partners (whether secured or unsecured), and,
  • under subparagraph (b) (as regards property owned by a debtor partner), any personal debts which exceed the value of the debtor’s separate property.

C78 The latter subparagraph has important practical effects as regards any particular property owned legally by one of the partners. Creditors of that owner will take priority over the claims of the other partner, if the debtor’s separate property is insufficient to meet the debts (see sections 52–53, paras C171–C179). The other partner can claim priority only in respect of partnership property which is held in that partner’s name.

C79 By contrast the present law which applies on the death of a partner does not classify spouses’ debts as joint or personal nor deduct them from disputed property in a similar way. Secured creditors’ rights are unaffected where the court makes an order, and spouses’ claims are sometimes accorded the same priority as creditors’ claims (Matrimonial Property Act 1963 s 8; Re Madden (1993) 11 FRNZ 45).

C80 Subsection (2) permits courts, when one partner’s personal debts have been satisfied out of partnership property, to

  • increase the other partner’s division of partnership property proportionately, or
  • include in the partnership property assets which form part of the other partner’s separate property, or
  • have the other partner pay compensation out of his or her separate property.

C81 The subsection is of little assistance to the partner who is not the debtor, if the debtor partner is insolvent.

Subpart 4 – Support claims

24 When can a partner make a support claim?

(1) A partner of a deceased person who initiates a property division against the estate of the deceased may at the same time make a support claim against that estate if the partner does not have sufficient resources to enable him or her to maintain a reasonable, independent standard of living.

(2) An assessment under subsection (1) of whether a partner has sufficient resources must take into account any property division order made in favour of the partner.

(3) Despite subsection (1), in the case of a partnership that terminated during the lifetime of the partners, a partner cannot bring a support claim against the estate of a deceased later than the time limit fixed under section 59 or later than 5 years after the partners most recently ceased to live together as partners, whichever is the earlier.

Definitions: estate, property division order, support claim, s 8; partner, ss 9, 10(3)

Section 24

C82 This section sets out the requirements for surviving partners’ support claims.

C83 To make a support claim, subsection (1) requires surviving partners to show that they have insufficient resources to maintain a reasonable, independent standard of living. At present, the law of support requires widows and widowers to show that they have not received “adequate provision for their proper maintenance and support” (Family Protection Act 1955 s 3). Instead the Draft Act broadly follows the present spousal support rules for when a marriage ends on dissolution of marriage during spouses’ joint lifetimes (Family Proceedings Act 1980 s 64).

C84 Under subsection (2) survivors whose resources are insufficient to maintain a reasonable, independent standard of living are required, before making a support claim, to make a property division claim to enhance their financial resources. Surviving partners cannot make a support claim without first resorting to their division of partnership property.

C85 Under subsection (3), where two partners’ relationship ends by separation during their joint lifetimes, then one partner dies, the survivor can claim support from the estate. But the claim must be made within five years after the partners most recently ceased to live together as partners. This is consistent with the general policy (applicable after a separation) that spouses who separate during their joint lifetimes must assume responsibility, within a time that is reasonable in all the circumstances, for meeting their own reasonable needs (Family Proceedings Act 1980 s 64(2)).

C86 At present a will-maker’s estate can be liable to support a spouse from whom the will-maker was separated if the marriage was not dissolved when the will-maker died (Family Protection Act 1955 s 3(1)(a)). This could be many years after separation, though in practice such claims are rare.

25 Assessment of support award

(1) A support award made to a partner of a deceased person is to be the amount required to enable the partner to maintain a reasonable, independent standard of living during the period for which the partner is entitled to support.

(2) A partner is entitled to support for the period until the partner can reasonably be expected to maintain a reasonable, independent standard of living for herself or himself, having regard to the economic consequences of the partnership for that partner, to the extent that these can be ascertained.

(3) An assessment of the period for which a partner is entitled to support must take into account

(a) the age of the partner; and

(b) the duration of the partnership, and in particular whether the partnership was of short duration as defined in section 14(3); and

(c) the partner’s custodial responsibilities for a child or children of the partnership; and

(d) the partner’s physical or mental illnesses or disabilities; and

(e) the partner’s ability to continue in, or train or qualify for, or secure and undertake reasonably suitable and rewarding paid employment; and

(f) any conduct of the partner which amounts to a device to prolong the partner’s need for support.

(4) In making a support award to a partner of a deceased, the court is to disregard any benefit payable under Part I of the Social Security Act 1964 or under any other Act which is or may become payable to the partner, unless the benefit is payable to the partner irrespective of the income or assets, or income and assets, that the partner has or is legally entitled to have.

Definitions: support award, s 8; partner, ss 9, 10(3)

Section 25

C87 Subsection (1) states that the amount of support awarded will be what is required to enable the partner to maintain a reasonable, independent standard of living for the period in respect of which the partner may claim support. Currently, widows’ and widowers’ support awards are of an amount which is “adequate . . . for their proper maintenance and support” (Family Protection Act 1955). The Draft Act instead follows the law applicable to support of spouses whose marriages end on separation during their joint lifetimes (Family Proceedings Act 1980 s 64).

C88 Subsection (2) provides that a partner may claim support from the will-maker’s estate for the period until he or she can reasonably be expected to maintain a reasonable, independent standard of living herself or himself.

C89 Subsection (3) sets out matters the court must consider when determining the period during which support will be payable. This period will vary according to the financial consequences of the partnership for the partner. Where the partnership is of long duration and the financial consequences for the partner are very significant, permanent support will be appropriate. Where however the partnership was of short duration and the financial consequences limited, only transitional support will be required.

C90 Subsection (4) requires the court, when a partner claims support, to disregard any welfare benefit the partner is receiving, unless the benefit is paid irrespective of the partner’s income or assets or both. Support awards will therefore be partners’ primary source of support, with welfare benefits playing only a secondary role if the support award is insufficient. In this respect the Draft Act broadly follows the present law of support for widows and widowers (Family Protection Act 1955 s 13). The Draft Act does, however, differ from the present law in generally not permitting welfare authorities to refuse, reduce or terminate welfare payments to surviving partners who choose not to make support claims (compare Social Security Act 1964 s 73 and see Schedule 4).

C91 The present law on support of spouses who divorce during their joint lifetimes also provides that support liability is not extinguished because the claimant spouse is receiving a “domestic benefit” (Family Proceedings Act 1980 ss 2, 62). Welfare authorities may refuse, reduce or terminate welfare payments to divorced spouses who choose not to claim support from their former husband or wife (Social Security Act 1964 s 74(e)). No change is proposed.

PART 3 SUPPORT CLAIMS BY CHILDREN OF A DECEASED PERSON

26 Who is a child of a deceased person?

(1) For the purposes of this Act, a child of a deceased person may be a person of any age and includes a person who was accepted by the deceased as his or her child, the deceased having assumed on a continuing and enduring basis the responsibilities of a parent of that child.

(2) When deciding whether a person is to be regarded under subsection (1) as having been accepted as a child of a deceased, the court must have regard to the following:

(a) the extent to which and the basis on which the deceased assumed responsibility for the maintenance of the child; and

(b) the period of time during which the deceased maintained the child; and

(c) whether the deceased was at any time the lawful guardian of the child; and

(d) whether any other person has or had any liability or responsibility to maintain the child or contributed to the child’s maintenance during the period the deceased assumed some responsibility for the child.

(3) When deciding whether under subsection (1) a person is to be regarded as a child of a deceased, the court may also have regard to the following:

(a) whether the deceased assumed or discharged responsibility for maintaining the child in the knowledge that he or she was not the natural parent of the child; and

(b) whether the deceased was ever married to or a de facto partner of a parent of the child.

(4) For the purposes of subsection (2)(a), a person is not to be taken to have assumed responsibility for the maintenance of a child only because that person has met or contributed to the maintenance responsibilities for that child of another person who is wholly or partly maintained by him or her.

Origin: Child Support Act 1991 ss 2, 7, 99

Section 26

C92 This section defines who may make a child’s support claim against the estate of a will-maker.

C93 Under subsection (1) there are two classes of claimant:

  • the will-maker’s children; and
  • those for whom the will-maker has assumed enduring parental responsibilities.

C94 “Children” include natural children (Status of Children Act 1969), adopted children (Adoption Act 1955) and children born as a consequence of assisted reproductive technologies (to the extent that this is provided for in the Status of Children Amendment Act 1987).

C95 The second class of claimant is new. The present law (Family Protection Act 1955 s 3(1)(d)) limits such claims to stepchildren who are being, or are legally entitled to be, maintained by the will-maker immediately before death. The definition, and the following provisions, are adapted from comparable provisions applicable to lifetime support, in the Child Support Act 1991, ss 2, 7 and 99.

C96 Subsection (2) lists the principal criteria to be followed in determining whether the will-maker has in fact assumed parental responsibility for claimants who are not their own children. Courts should look at how much responsibility has been assumed, why this was done, the period the child has been maintained, guardianship arrangements, and the responsibility of others for the child.

C97 Subsection (3) refers to matters to do with the will-maker’s intent:

  • Did the will-maker, when assuming responsibility, believe mistakenly that this was their natural child? A fundamental mistake like this could vitiate the assumption of responsibility.
  • Was the will-maker married to, or a de facto partner of, the parent of a child? It should not be assumed that a step-parent automatically assumes responsibility for their partner’s child on an enduring basis; support may be no more than an incident of the partnership arrangements.

C98 This is reinforced by subsection (4). Someone who maintains another person, and for that reason meets or contributes to the maintenance costs of that person’s children, does not necessarily assume responsibility for the child as well.

27 Which children of a deceased person can make support claims?

A child of a deceased person may make a support claim against the estate of the deceased in respect of the period or periods

(a) until the child attains the age of 20 years;

(b) during which the child is undertaking education or technical or other vocational training before attaining the age of 25 years;

(c) during which the child does not have or is unable to earn sufficient income to enable her or him to maintain a reasonable, independent standard of living because of a physical, intellectual or mental disability that arose before the child attained the age of 25 years.

Definitions: child of a deceased person, support claim, s 8

Section 27

C99 This section sets out the basic rules governing support. A claim may be made only if the child is

  • under 20; or
  • under 25 and still being educated or trained; or
  • unable to earn a reasonable, independent living because of disability arising before the child reached 25.

When making an award, the court cannot fix an amount which would take support beyond the age limits set out above, or (in the case of disabled children) beyond the time when the child might be expected to earn an independent living.

C100 For the form an award might take, see section 41 (lump sum or capital, paras C138–C141) and section 46 (establishment of trust fund, paras C148–C152).

C101 Under the present law, the court has much more extensive powers, which are not limited by reference to the age or the means of the will-maker’s children (Family Protection Act 1955). It has been the basis for substantial awards of capital to adult children who have obtained their independence. In many cases these are mature people who are approaching retirement.

C102 The Commission has not at this stage included a provision which would limit, or state more clearly, courts’ current powers under the Family Protection Act 1955 to make awards in favour of adult children. Examples of such provisions can be seen in chapter 7, paras 233–266. The Commission has not yet formed a view on which, if any, of these provisions is to be preferred. They are intended to assist discussion by showing various methods of stating the courts’ powers. The provisions set out in chapter 7, if adopted, will be either alternative or additional to sections 27–29 (which provide only for the claims proposed in chapter 6).

28 Assessment of child’s support award

(1) A support award made in favour of a child of a deceased person is to be of such a kind as to secure that during the period in respect of which the child is entitled to support the child is maintained in a reasonable way and to a reasonable standard, and so far as is practical, educated and assisted towards the attainment of economic independence.

(2) The amount of a support award made to a child of a deceased is not to exceed what is reasonably necessary to achieve the purpose described in subsection (1).

(3) In determining what is reasonable for the purposes of a support award to a child of the deceased, the court must have regard to

(a) the age and stage of development of the child, including the level of education or technical or vocational training reached by the child; and

(b) any other actual or potential sources of support available to the child, including support from a surviving parent or a support award from the estate of another deceased parent; and

(c) the amount of support provided by the deceased to the child; and

(d) the actual and potential ability of the child to meet his or her reasonable needs.

(4) In making an award in respect of a support claim by a child of the deceased under the age of 25 years, the court is to disregard any benefit under Part I of the Social Security Act 1964 which is or may become payable to the child, unless the benefit is payable to the child irrespective of the income or assets, or both income and assets, that the child has or is legally entitled to have.

Definitions: child of a deceased person, support award, support claim, s 8

Origins: Family Protection Act 1955 s 13

Section 28

C103 Subsection (1) requires a reasonable standard of support, covering maintenance, education and assistance to achieve independence. The court may not award more than is reasonably necessary to achieve that standard: subsection (2). The criteria the court is to take into account are set out in subsection (3).

C104 Subsection (4) provides that the court is not to take into account means-tested social welfare payments in making an award. The will-maker must support the child in full, and not just top up the amounts payable by the Department of Social Welfare. That Department remains provider of last resort.

C105 An exception is made for children over 25. They will be means-tested on what they in fact receive from the estate, but will not be expected to make testamentary claims in order to relieve the State from the cost of support. This is a change from the existing law (Family Protection Act 1955 s 13; Re B (unreported, District Court, Auckland, 16 August 1995, FP004/1343/92).

PART 4 CLAIMS BY CONTRIBUTORS

29 Contribution claims

(1) A contributor who provided a benefit to a deceased person during that person’s lifetime may make a contribution claim against the estate of the deceased in accordance with this Part if

(a) the deceased expressly promised to make provision for the contributor in return for the benefit; or

(b) it is unjust for the estate of the deceased to retain the benefit without provision being made for the contributor.

(2) A contributor cannot make a claim in respect of a benefit for which the contributor has been fully remunerated.

(3) A contribution claim may be made either by the contributor or by the administrator of the contributor’s estate against the estate of the person on whom the benefit was conferred.

Definitions: administrator, benefit, contribution claim, contributor, estate, promise, provision, remunerate, s 8

30 Limitation of contribution claims by partners

A person cannot make a contribution claim in respect of any benefit provided to a partner of that person if the benefit

(a) has been taken into account in a property division under the Matrimonial Property Act 1976 or under the law applying to the division of property of de facto partners during their joint lifetime; or

(b) has been or could be taken into account in any property division under this Act.

Definitions: benefit, contribution claim, s 8; partner, ss 9, 10(3)

Section 29

C106 There are two broad grounds on which claims will be able to be made for contributions to the will-maker or to the will-maker’s estate (subsection (1)):

  • The fact that the will-maker expressly promised to make provision for the contributor (see section 31).
  • The fact that the will-maker’s estate has been unjustly enriched as a result of the benefit conferred by the contributor. The concept of unjust enrichment is already well known in the law, and is further refined here by the provisions of section 33.

C107 No claim may be made if the contributor has already been fully remunerated: subsection (2). A claim does not die with the death of the contributor, but may be made by the contributor’s administrator for the benefit of the contributor’s own estate: subsection (3).

C108 This Part of the Act does not greatly change existing law. However, the present law is complex and is derived from a variety of legal sources. Part of it is found in the Law Reform (Testamentary Promises) Act 1949, which applies where there is an express or implied promise to leave property by will, made in return for services. Another part derives from the common law actions for quantum meruit and quantum valebat. Yet another part is equitable, based on the doctrines of estoppel and constructive trust. More recently, these general law doctrines have been grouped together as part of the law of restitution. But they remain separate sets of rules, whose precise definition is still subject to debate.

C109 This complex set of laws is replaced by the two principles referred to in the section.

Section 30

C110 This section sets out the relationship between the contribution claim and the property division claim which is available to domestic partners. Generally the process of property division takes precedence. That is to say, any contribution made to a partnership by one of the partners will be taken into account in the course of the property division, and not otherwise. Contribution claims cannot be made unless they are independent of the partnership (eg, for benefits provided after the partners have divorced, and their property has been divided).

31 Contribution claim based on express promise

(1) A contributor who makes a contribution claim based on an express promise to make provision for the contributor in return for a benefit provided by her or him must satisfy the court that the deceased person expressly promised to make such provision to take effect either in the lifetime or after the death of the deceased.

(2) The promise may have been made either before or after the benefit was provided.

Definitions: benefit, contribution claim, contributor, promise, provision, s 8

Origin: Law Reform (Testamentary Promises) Act 1949 s 3(2)

32 Contribution claim based on express promise to make provision for another person

(1) This section applies in respect of a benefit provided by a contributor where an express promise is made that the recipient of the benefit will make provision in return for the benefit to a person (other than the contributor) designated by name, description or reference to a class, whether or not the person was in existence when the benefit was provided or the promise made.

(2) Where this section applies, a contribution claim may be made against the estate of the deceased person by a person designated as a promisee under subsection (1) in the same way and to the same extent as if the promise had been made to make provision for the contributor; and the promise is enforceable by the designated person accordingly.

(3) This section does not apply to a promise which is not intended to create an obligation in respect of the benefit enforceable by the promisee.

(4) Schedule 1 applies to a promise to which this section applies.

Definitions: benefit, contributor, contribution claim, promise, provision, s 8

Origin: Contracts (Privity) Act 1982 s 4

Section 31

C111 The essential requirements of the claim based on a promise are

  • the contributor provided a benefit during the will-maker’s lifetime (see the definition of benefit, section 8, para C18); and
  • the will-maker expressly promised to make provision for the contributor, either by will or else during the will-maker’s lifetime.

C112 These provisions are wider than those of the present Law Reform (Testamentary Promises) Act 1949. First, the concept of “benefit” is probably more general than the concept of “work or services” used in that Act (though those words have been generously construed by the courts). Second, these provisions cover any form of promised provision (eg, by way of gift or transfer at an undervalue during the will-maker’s lifetime), whereas the 1949 Act is limited to promises to make testamentary provision. However, the limitations of the 1949 Act are for the most part made up by principles of general law.

C113 In one respect section 31 is narrower than the 1949 legislation. It does not apply to implied promises. These are promises gathered from the circumstances (eg, the will-maker may show the contributor the terms of a will, without actually saying that provision will continue in force until death; or may give the contributor the idea that “he will be looked after”, no specific promise being made). Implied promises are dealt with instead by section 33.

Section 32

C114 The purpose of this section is to deal with express promises to provide for someone other than the contributor. For example, a neighbouring farmer may look after the will-maker’s stock for a substantial period of time, on the understanding that the will-maker will in due course transfer certain paddocks to the farmer’s son. In general, contractual promises to benefit a third party, such as the son, can be sued on by that party (Contracts (Privity) Act 1982). The section follows that principle.

C115 Subsection (1) sets out the main condition under which third parties may enforce the promise. They must be designated in some way (even if only by reference to a particular class of people: eg, “my sons”). They may then make a claim based on the promise in the same way as if they were the contributor: subsection (2). But they cannot do so unless the promise is intended to create a benefit which is enforceable by them: subsection (3).

C116 Various issues can arise where defences against liability (eg, the set-off of another debt owed by the contributor) would be available against the contributor, or where the contributor subsequently agrees with the will-maker to vary or discharge the contract. Are third party beneficiaries bound by such defences or variations? In general they are, but in some circumstances they ought to be able to enforce the original contract. These have been fully worked out in the provisions of the Contracts (Privity) Act 1982. Subsection (4) and Schedule 1 adapt these provisions to contribution claims based on express promises.

33 Contribution claim based on unjust retention of benefit

(1) A contributor who makes a contribution claim based on the unjust retention of a benefit must satisfy the court that

(a) the deceased person was aware of the provision of the benefit or was not sufficiently competent to be aware of the provision of the benefit; and

(b) the benefit is retained by the estate; and

(c) it is just that provision be made for the contributor in return for the benefit.

(2) A contribution claim cannot be made if,

(a) when the benefit was conferred, the deceased informed the contributor, or it was agreed between the deceased and the contributor, or it was otherwise clear from the circumstances, that no provision would be made in return for the benefit; or

(b) the contributor conferred the benefit gratuitously.

(3) The court can decide that it is just that provision be made to a contributor in return for a benefit if

(a) the contributor hoped or expected to receive provision in return for the benefit and the deceased knew of that hope or expectation; or

(b) the contributor was under pressure of a moral or social obligation to provide the benefit; or

(c) the deceased needed the benefit provided by the contributor and, if there was any other person who might reasonably have been expected to provide the benefit, that person unreasonably failed to do so; or,

(d) in the special circumstances of the case and for any other reason, it is inequitable that the estate should retain the benefit.

(4) A benefit which has been provided to the deceased is retained by the estate of that deceased if the circumstances of that deceased or the deceased’s estate have not so changed since the benefit was provided that it is inequitable to require that provision in return for it be made from the estate.

Definitions: benefit, contribution claim, contributor, court, estate, provision, s 8

Section 33

C117 This section defines the circumstances in which it is “unjust” for the will-maker or the will-maker’s estate to retain a benefit which has been conferred by the contributor, without making appropriate remuneration.

C118 Under subsection (1), the basic elements of the claim are that

  • the contributor provided a benefit during the lifetime of the will-maker; and
  • the will-maker either knew it was being provided, or else was not sufficiently competent to know of it; and
  • it is just that provision be made for the contributor.

C119 These elements are qualified in various ways. The term benefit is defined so as to exclude services provided without significant expenditure of time, effort or money (section 8, para C18). Even where it is a significant benefit, the contributor will not succeed if the benefit was conferred on the understanding that nothing is to be paid for it, or if the contributor intends the benefit as a gift: subsection (2).

C120 The contributor must then establish that the claim is “just”. This is a matter for the court to decide. But there are three situations in which, according to subsection (3), the court may find the claim is just, without further inquiry:

  • the contributor hopes for or expects a provision, and the will-maker knows of that hope (eg, the contributor daughter frequently refers to the fact that her mother had done the same for her grandfather, and her mother had received something under the grandfather’s will); or
  • the contributor has a strong moral or social obligation to confer the benefit (eg, an unmarried daughter living in the same town as her aged parent feels that both the parent and her brothers and sisters expect her to look after the parent); or
  • the will-maker needs to be provided with the benefit, and no-one else might reasonably be expected to provide it (eg, a person in an advanced state of dementia is placed in a rest-home, and her brother – her sole close relative – cleans up her house and arranges to sell it, meets her expenses until the house is sold, and generally looks after her welfare during her last illness).

C121 If none of those three criteria are met, the court may still look to the particular circumstances of the case to find a justification for a contribution award: subsection (3)(d).

C122 The definition of the terms retained and retention is important for those contribution claims where the claimant alleges that a benefit has been conferred on the will-maker and it is unjust for the estate to retain that benefit. It will not be necessary for the claimant to point to any particular asset the estate still owns, or any particular way in which the estate remains the richer as a result of that benefit. Continuing enrichment will be presumed unless the estate can show that the circumstances of the deceased or the deceased’s estate have so changed since the benefit was provided, that it is inequitable for the estate to be made to pay for the benefit: subsection (4). This is a recognised method of dealing with the question used also in other New Zealand statutes: for example, Administration Act 1969 ss 49–51; Insolvency Act 1967 s 58 (see A New Property Law Act (1994, NZLC R29) 76, 297–299).

34 Assessment of contribution award

(1) An award made on the basis of an express promise must be an award of the value of the promise unless a greater or lesser award is made under subsection (3).

(2) An award made in recognition of the unjust retention of a benefit must be an award of the value of the benefit unless a greater or lesser award is made under subsection (3).

(3) The court can make a greater or lesser award than that provided for by subsection (1) or (2) after having regard to

(a) an arrangement or understanding between the contributor and the deceased person; and

(b) the fairness and reasonableness of the terms of an arrangement or understanding between the contributor and the deceased; and

(c) the fairness of the operation of an arrangement or understanding between a contributor and the deceased; and

(d) the length of time that has passed since the benefit was provided by the contributor and any subsequent change in any circumstance the court considers relevant; and

(e) any other circumstances, including the possible implications of the award for third parties, that the court considers relevant.

(4) An award made to a contributor on a contribution claim may be of a sum of money or may direct the transfer to the contributor of specific property.

Definitions: award, benefit, contribution claim, contributor, court, s 8

35 Illegal benefits

(1) A court may make an award to a contributor in respect of a benefit that was conferred unlawfully or was conferred under an unlawful agreement or arrangement.

(2) In considering whether to make an award to a contributor under subsection (1), the court must have regard to

(a) the conduct of the parties; and,

(b) in the case of a breach of an enactment, the object of the enactment and the gravity of the penalty expressly provided for a breach of it; and

(c) such other matters as the court thinks proper;

but the court must not make such an award if it considers that to do so would not be in the public interest.

(3) The court may make an order under subsection (1) notwithstanding that the contributor conferred the benefit with knowledge of the facts or law giving rise to the illegality, but the court must take such knowledge into account in exercising its discretion under that subsection.

Definitions: award, benefit, contributor, s 8

Origin: Illegal Contracts Act 1970 s 7(2), (3)

Section 34

C123 This section sets out the normal approach to fixing the amount of a contribution award. If there is an express promise, the amount awarded will be the value of the thing promised: subsection (1). The promised provision may be worth more or less than the benefit given by the contributor. But if there is no express promise, the amount awarded will be the value of the benefit conferred: subsection (2). These amounts can be varied, by the court having regard to the criteria set out in subsection (3).

C124 Under subsection (4) the award may take the form of an order to pay a specified sum of money, or else an order that a particular item of property be transferred to the contributor.

Section 35

C125 If arrangements are unlawful, the courts have in the past refused to give the parties who have entered into them any relief under the common law at all. In the case of illegal contracts, however, courts are now empowered by the Illegal Contracts Act 1970 to validate the contract (if appropriate), or to make orders by way of restitution or compensation. It is not at present possible to apply these provisions to all testamentary claims. While some contribution claims are based on contracts, others are not. The purpose of this section is to extend the remedial provisions of the Illegal Contracts Act to all arrangements which are the subject of contribution claims.

36 Contractual claims by contributors

(1) If a contributor brings a proceeding under the law of contract against the estate of a deceased person in respect of a benefit provided by the contributor to the deceased in his or her lifetime, the court in which the proceeding is brought may order

(a) that the contractual claim be heard in the same manner as is followed for contribution claims; or

(b) that the contributor make a contribution claim to be heard with the contractual claim.

(2) When making an order under this section, the court may further order that the proceeding be transferred to another court with jurisdiction to hear a proceeding under this Act.

(3) This section does not apply in respect of a contract for the provision of a benefit on a strictly commercial basis by a person with no close personal relationship to the deceased.

(4) This Act is not to be construed so as to inhibit or prevent the administrator of the estate of a deceased from lawfully settling any contractual claim against the estate.

Definitions: administrator, benefit, contribution claim, contributor, court, s 8

37 Contribution claim codifies restitution claims

(1) This Act codifies the law relating to claims made under the law of restitution (unjust enrichment) by contributors who conferred benefits on persons who have subsequently died anticipating that the deceased person would make provision for them in return for the benefits.

(2) Subject to subsection (3), no claim other than under this Act can be brought in any court in respect of the unjust enrichment of a deceased as a result of any benefit provided by a contributor, whether by way of quantum meruit, quantum valebat, beneficial interest under constructive trust, proprietary estoppel or otherwise.

(3) A proceeding based on the law of unjust enrichment may be brought by special leave in any court if that court is satisfied that the enrichment occurred in the context of a strictly commercial transaction with a person who had no close personal relationship with the deceased.

Definitions: benefit, contributor, s 8

Section 36

C126 The purpose of this section is to ensure that all contribution claims are dealt with in accordance with appropriate procedures. In many cases, contributors will be family members and others with a close personal association with the will-maker. Especially if they claim a sizeable amount from the estate, it is important to treat the matter as a family one. Other members of the family should be drawn into discussions, mediation should be encouraged, and the claim should be understood in the context of the general family background.

C127 As has already been pointed out (paras 323–324), some contribution claims relate to agreements which could be enforced as contracts. But these are not like the great majority of contractual claims against the estate. Most ordinary creditors will not accept arrangements under which they are unlikely to be paid until the will-maker dies. Of course, when the will-maker dies some current commercial liabilities need to be met. This section does not apply to them: subsection (3).

C128 With respect to contribution claims generally, however, the court will be able to order that any contractual aspects be dealt with in accordance with the procedures for testamentary claims: subsection (1). The claimant may be asked to institute a contribution claim. If the contractual claim has been brought in the District Court or the High Court, it may be transferred to the Family Court: subsection (2).

C129 It will be for the administrators, in the first instance, to decide whether to treat the claim as an ordinary contractual one and pay it: subsection (4). If there are grounds for defending the claim, they may concur in proceedings brought by the claimant in the District Court or High Court. They may, on the other hand, resist that form of procedure and ask the court in which proceedings are brought to transfer them to the Family Court.

Section 37

C130 The Act codifies the law of restitutionary claims which can be made on the ground that the claimant conferred a benefit expecting remuneration out of a will-maker’s estate: subsection (1). This means that claims based on the relevant common law and equitable principles can no longer be sustained. Reference is made, in subsection (2), to traditional actions based on quantum meruit (for services rendered), quantum valebat (for goods supplied), and to claims for beneficial interests under constructive trusts and proprietary estoppel.

C131 Not all restitutionary claims are codified, however. For example, actions based on duress or mistake will still be brought at common law or in equity. Only those claims where the plaintiff asserts that he or she has conferred a benefit on the will-maker, in anticipation of being remunerated for that benefit, are brought within the Draft Act.

C132 Subsection (3) exempts commercial transactions between the will-maker and those with whom the will-maker has no close personal association. These too may be brought and determined in the High Court or District Court, and the principles of general law will apply. However, the court in which the proceedings are brought must give special leave to allow the action to proceed.

PART 5 JURISDICTION, AWARDS, AND PRIORITIES

Subpart 1 – Jurisdiction

38 Jurisdiction

(1) A Family Court has jurisdiction in respect of proceedings under this Act, except that, if a proceeding under this Act has been brought in the Family Court and has been removed to the High Court under subsection (2), another person may bring a proceeding under this Act in respect of the estate of the same deceased person only in the High Court.

(2) The High Court may, on the application of a party to a proceeding under this Act or of its own initiative, order a proceeding to be removed from a Family Court into the High Court if it is satisfied that the proceeding would be more appropriately dealt with in the High Court.

(3) The High Court has jurisdiction in respect of a proceeding under this Act which has been brought in that court under subsection (1) or removed to it under subsection (2).

Origins: Family Courts Act 1980 s 11(1A); Matrimonial Property Act 1976 s 22; Family Protection Act 1955 s 3A; Law Reform (Testamentary Promises) Act 1949 s 5

39 Right of appeal

Parties to proceedings under this Act and other persons prejudicially affected have the right to appeal as provided for in Schedule 2.

Section 38

C133 This section is drafted on the basis that the Family Court and the High Court will have concurrent jurisdiction to deal with claims under the Act (but see chapter 10, paras 333-337). As with claims under the Matrimonial Property Act 1976, there will be no monetary limit on the Family Court’s jurisdiction: subsection (1). The High Court may order that a proceeding commenced in the Family Court be transferred into its own jurisdiction: subsections (2) and (3).

Section 39

C134 In general the rights of appeal will be governed by the District Courts Act 1947 Part IV and the Family Courts Act 1980. Some slight modifications of the general rules for appeals from decisions of Family Courts have been made for proceedings under the Family Protection Act 1955 and the Law Reform (Testamentary Promises) Act 1949. These are not applied consistently to the Matrimonial Property Act 1963. The modifications have been carried forward in Schedule 2 and will apply to all claims under the Draft Act.

C135 It is expected that new court rules will be needed to simplify the present procedures used under the three Acts. The Commission intends to raise these matters with the Chief Justice, the Principal Family Court Judge and the Rules Committees at an appropriate time.

Subpart 2 – Awards and orders

40 Kinds and effect of awards and orders

(1) A court may in accordance with this Subpart make an award or a property division order that directs one or more of the following:

(a) the payment of a lump sum;

(b) the making of periodic payments;

(c) the transfer of specific property;

(d) the establishment of a trust.

(2) An award has effect as if it were a provision in a will made by the deceased person, and a property division order has effect as if it were an order partitioning the property of the partners, but awards and property division orders are subject to

(a) any orders made by the court relating to funds available to satisfy awards and property division orders; and

(b) the provisions as to priorities in Subparts 4 and 5.

Definitions: award, property division order, s 8; partner, ss 9, 10(3)

41 Lump sum and periodic payments

(1) A court may make a support award directing the payment to the claimant from the estate of a deceased person of either a lump sum or periodic payments, or both a lump sum and periodic payments.

(2) A court may make a property division order directing the payment to the applicant from the estate of a deceased of a lump sum or, on the request of the applicant, periodic payments or a lump sum and periodic payments.

(3) A court may make a property division order directing the payment to the administrator of a deceased by a partner of the deceased of either a lump sum or periodic payments, or both a lump sum and periodic payments.

Definitions: court, property division order, support award, s 8

Origin: Family Protection Act 1955 s 5

42 Retrospective support awards

A court may make a support award directing that periodic payments be made to the claimant from the estate of a deceased person with effect from a date not earlier than the date of death of the deceased.

Definitions: court, estate, support award, s 8

Section 40

C136 Subsection (1) introduces a series of provisions dealing with the form of the orders and awards that courts may make under the Draft Act. The principal forms are

  • lump sum (section 41),
  • periodic payments (section 41),
  • transfer of specific assets (section 43), and
  • establishment of a trust (section 46).

C137 While awards have effect as if they were provisions in the will-maker’s will, property division orders have effect as if they were orders partitioning partners’ property: subsection (2).

Section 41

C138 The court will have power to make a support award a lump sum payment or periodic payments, or both: subsection (1). Normally a partner’s property division entitlement will be a lump sum, representing the value of their share or contribution. A support award too may take that form. A sum can be calculated or estimated which (with interest) will provide the appropriate level of support for the period covered by the claim, and which will then be exhausted.

C139 Under subsection (2), the court may make a partner’s property division order in the form of periodic payments, or as an interest in a trust, where this is requested by the claimant, or as is consistent with what has been agreed between the claimant and the will-maker. There is no reason, for example, why a widow or widower could not take a property division entitlement in the form of a life interest over all, or the balance of, the matrimonial property, if they so wish and the other claimants and beneficiaries have no serious ground of objection.

C140 Unlike the present law (Law Reform (Testamentary Promises) Act 1949 s 3(4)), section 41 does not give courts specific power to make an order for periodic payments under a contribution award.

C141 Subsection (3) deals with the case where the estate of a dead partner makes a claim against the surviving partner. It assumes that the surviving partner owns the greater share of the matrimonial assets, and this needs to be equalised (subject to any support claim the survivor may wish to bring). An order in favour of the estate may take the form of either a lump sum, or periodic payments, or both a lump sum and periodic payments. Further orders may be made under section 43.

Section 42

C142 Support awards may be made retrospective to the will-maker’s death.

43 Order for transfer of property

(1) A court may make a property division order or a contribution award directing the administrator of a deceased person’s estate to transfer property specified in the award to the claimant if

(a) the deceased promised to transfer the property to that claimant; or

(b) the order relates to property of the deceased’s estate which has been provided or improved by the claimant, or which is the proceeds of sale or exchange of that property, or is property acquired with such proceeds.

(2) An order or award under subsection (1) may be expressed to take priority over the claims of creditors or other claimants or other classes of creditors or claimants.

(3) A court may in any proceeding under this Act, other than a proceeding of a kind referred to in subsection (1), make a property division order directing

(a) the administrator of a deceased’s estate to transfer property specified in the award to the claimant; or

(b) a partner of a deceased to transfer property specified in the award to the administrator of the estate of the deceased.

(4) In this section

claimant includes a person who initiates a property division under this Act; and

property includes the proceeds of the sale or exchange of property.

Definitions: administrator, contribution award, property division order, s 8; partner, ss 9, 10(3)

Origins: Matrimonial Property Act 1963 s 5; Matrimonial Property Act 1976 s 33; Law Reform (Testamentary Promises) Act 1949 s 3(3)

44 Property division orders in favour of administrators

When making a property division order in favour of the administrator of the estate of a deceased partner against a surviving partner, the court may make any order that it might have made under the Matrimonial Property Act 1976 if the deceased partner had not died.

Definitions: administrator, property division order, s 8; partner, ss 9, 10(3)

Section 43

C143 When making a property division or contribution award, the court may order that specific assets in the will-maker’s estate be handed over to the claimant: subsections (1) and (3). An obvious example would be the house the partners have been living in, or the property which a contributor has improved in anticipation of being given it by will. The court must of course ensure that the value transferred to the claimant is within the general guidelines laid down in Part 2 (partners) and section 34 (contributors). In most ordinary cases, this will simply be a matter of convenience, since the estate would normally sell the assets, or pass them on to beneficiaries who want them. But there may be cases where a beneficiary and a claimant want the same asset. The court will have to settle that dispute. This is generally provided for in subsection (3).

C144 In certain situations the problem becomes one of right rather than convenience. This is where the estate is insufficient to meet all the claims made against it, especially those of claimants and contributors. An award of a specific asset may disturb the normal priorities between these two groups. A specific award may still be appropriate, as long as the conditions in subsection (1) are complied with. The will-maker may have expressly promised to convey the property in return for the benefit. Or the property in question may represent in substance the benefit the contributor has conferred on the will-maker. In these cases, subsection (2) then permits the court to make an order which will take precedence over creditors and other claimants, as regards the asset in question. (Similar orders can at present be made under the general law). See also subsections 48 and 49 (non-probate assets).

Section 44

C145 This section deals with the unusual situation where the administrator of a deceased partner makes an application for a property division award against the surviving partner. For example, the deceased may have left her property to her children by an earlier marriage. If the application is successful, the powers already conferred on the court by the Draft Act are inappropriate, since they are all directed at the administrator of an estate. In this case, the general powers available under the Matrimonial Property Act 1976 will be needed. The relevant powers are found in sections 25, 27–33, 43–45 of that Act.

45 Payment of awards to children

A court may direct that payments made in accordance with a support award to a child of a deceased person are to be paid directly to the child or to a custodian of the child for the benefit of the child.

Definitions: court, support award, s 8; child of a deceased person, ss 8, 26

46 Provision for trusts

(1) When making a property division order or an award, a court may order that an amount or particular property specified in the order is to be set aside out of the estate of a deceased person and held on trust for the benefit of 2 or more persons specified in the order.

(2) The court may specify as a beneficiary of a trust established under this section any partner of the deceased, child of the deceased, contributor in relation to the deceased, beneficiary under the will of the deceased or a beneficiary on the intestacy of the deceased, and such persons may take as a class, or as regards specified amounts or property, or consecutively, subject to such conditions and contingencies or otherwise as the court may specify.

(3) The trustee may apply the income and capital of such an amount in the manner provided by subsection (2) although only one of the persons for whose benefit the trust was established remains alive.

(4) The court is to appoint a person to be the trustee of the trust and may do so by the order creating the trust or subsequently.

(5) A trust established by the court under this section is subject to every enactment, including the Trustee Act 1956, and every rule of law or of equity governing or regulating trusts in New Zealand as if it were a trust created by the will of the deceased.

Definitions: award, contributor, court, estate, property division order, s 8; partner, ss 9, 10(3); child of a deceased person, ss 8, 26

Origin: Family Protection Act 1955 s 6

Section 45

C146 There are some legal difficulties where children who are under the age of 20 have rights in a will or an estate. At common law, they could not give a receipt, so if they received a distribution from the estate during minority they may have been able to claim the same sum a second time. But it is now recognised in law that children have different capacities, depending on what they are called upon to do (see Age of Majority Act 1970). Particularly if a payment relates to immediate support needs, there seems no reason to withhold the money from the child, or to go to the expense of appointing a trustee.

C147 Section 45 allows the court, in appropriate cases, to order that payments under a child’s award be paid direct to the child, or to a custodian of the child for the child’s benefit.

Section 46

C148 The Court will have power to make an award which establishes a trust and gives the claimant an interest in it. What the claimant receives under the trust may vary according to future events. This flexibility is useful where there are several potential beneficiaries, who may in the future have differing needs.

C149 For example, a sum could be set aside for the education and training of three children until they reach 25. If one of them becomes a paid apprentice, another undertakes full-time study at a university or polytechnic, and the third undertakes work for which no period of training is necessary, their respective needs will be very different in their early twenties. A discretionary trust, established years before, would allow the court to distribute the fund in accordance with those needs.

C150 Similarly, a trust fund might be set up which is available in full to a surviving spouse, if she needs it while the couple’s children are living with her, but part of which is separated off and paid to the children when they leave home for training or education.

C151 The section is designed to give the court that flexibility in making awards. Subsection (1) authorises the creation of a trust. Subsection (2) allows both claimants and existing beneficiaries to be included, with the respective interests specified by the court. Subsection (3) provides for a discretionary trust, with the trustee making decisions as to which of the beneficiaries will receive benefits. Subsection (3) allows the trust to continue even if only one potential beneficiary remains alive. Subsection (4) provides for the appointment of a trustee, either at the time of creating the trust or subsequently.

C152 The section is based on section 6 of the Family Protection Act 1955. However, that section is limited to funds for claimants who together form a single class of people, for example children or grandchildren. The present section allows both claimants and beneficiaries, and people of different classes (eg, a parent and a child) to be joined in the same trust fund. The court’s power to create such a trust has necessary limits. The value of each person’s expectancy in the trust when it is created should correspond approximately to the value of their respective claims, as ascertained under Parts 2, 3 and 4 of the Act. But the total amount of money available to meet their needs will be applied flexibly over a period of time. Additional flexibility is given, in subsection (5), by reference to provisions in the Trustee Act 1956 allowing variation of the administrative arrangements under a trust. See also section 47 (paras C153–C155).

47 Power to vary support awards

(1) If the court has made a support award for periodic payments or has ordered the establishment of a trust, the court may at any later time inquire into the adequacy of the provisions and may

(a) increase or reduce the provisions so made; or

(b) discharge, vary or suspend the award and make such other award as the court thinks appropriate in the circumstances.

(2) If after a support award has been made, a claim is made by a person who is not bound by the award, the court may vary the previous award in such manner as it thinks appropriate.

Definitions: award, support award, s 8

Origin: Family Protection Act 1955 s 12

Section 47

C153 This provision dealing with variation of earlier awards has been brought forward from the Family Protection Act 1955 s 12.

C154 Subsection (1) applies to support awards made in the form of periodic payments or a trust. These may be varied by later court order, if they prove to be too generous or insufficient. In the latter case, it may be necessary to recover further property from the beneficiaries, unless funds have already been set aside from the estate, or are available in the trust, for that purpose. Applications to vary periodic payments are not often encountered in current practice.

C155 Subsection (2) applies where there has been an award, or a series of awards, and then someone who has not been a party to the earlier proceedings brings a successful claim. Again, this is unusual, since every effort will be made in the earlier proceedings to ensure that all potential claimants are before the court (see section 62, paras C204–C207). Where all potential claims have not been brought in, and another claim is brought later, the court may have to vary its previous orders.

Subpart 3 – Funds available to meet claims

48 Availability of certain assets to meet claims

(1) If in the opinion of the administrator so much of the estate of a deceased person as is disposed of by will or intestacy is significantly affected by a claim or claims or a property division application under this Act, the administrator may

(a) require that all or part of the non-probate assets of the deceased should be taken into account and required to bear a proportionate and equitable part of the burden of satisfying such claims or property divisions; and

(b) take all reasonable and practical steps to secure that result.

(2) For the purposes of this Subpart, the non-probate assets of a deceased consist of all property passing on the death of the deceased by reason of any of the following transactions:

(a) contracts to make or not to revoke a will; and

(b) contracts with a bank or other financial institution providing for the property in an account or policy to pass to a co-owner or nominated beneficiary on the death of the deceased; and

(c) gifts that the deceased made in contemplation of death (donationes mortis causa); and

(d) trusts settled by the deceased that were revocable by the deceased in her or his lifetime; and

(e) beneficial powers of appointment that were exercisable by the deceased in her or his lifetime; and

(f) joint tenancies held by the deceased and any other person.

(3) Property is to be regarded as a non-probate asset for the purposes of this Subpart only if that property was or could have been (if the deceased had so desired or requested) available to the deceased immediately before his or her death.

(4) If the property needs to be valued for the purposes of this Act, the valuation is to be carried out as if the deceased had made the property available to himself or herself immediately before death.

Definitions: administrator, estate, s 8

Section 48

C156 The next four provisions enlarge the estate which will be available to claimants in the event of a successful claim. The term “estate” normally only includes the property which will be got in by the administrator after obtaining “probate”, or other authority granted by the court to administer the estate. The property is used first to pay the debts of the deceased person. The balance of the estate is passed on to the beneficiaries under a will, or the statutory successors on an intestacy. But, for the purposes of meeting testamentary claims, the estate will now include

  • the non-probate assets, and
  • property comprised in certain transactions entered into by the will-maker before death.

C157 This section deals with what the Draft Act calls the non-probate assets of the will-maker. The non-probate assets are that part of the will-maker’s property which he or she owns at the date of death, and which pass to another person otherwise than by will. Property of this kind is listed in subsection (2). It includes joint property (where the will-maker’s interest passes automatically to the other joint tenant), nominated bank accounts and insurances (the rights pass to the person named in the bank account or insurance contract), and gifts made in contemplation of death (the gifted property passes to the donee).

C158 In nearly all cases, the will-maker could at any time during their lifetime have reclaimed the property. It would then have come back into the estate and been available to meet testamentary claims when the will-maker dies. It would also, in many cases, have been matrimonial property available for division under the Matrimonial Property Act 1976. The section allows the administrator to require non-probate assets to help meet the burden of the claim. If the administrator fails to take this step, the beneficiaries and affected owners may apply for a review: section 49(2).

C159 At present, property comprised in a gift in contemplation of death (donatio mortis causa) is the only part of the non-probate estate which is available under the Family Protection Act 1955 (see s 2(5)). Nominated account arrangements are limited to amounts not exceeding $6 000 (see Administration Act 1969, Part 1A). Otherwise they will come into the probate estate and will also be available. But in principle, all non-probate assets should be available to testamentary claimants, even though technically they no longer form part of the estate when the will-maker dies. This is required in fairness to testamentary claimants, since the will-maker’s obligations apply irrespective of the technical arrangements used to dispose of property upon death. It is also required in fairness to the will-beneficiaries, who may otherwise bear a disproportionate burden which cannot be passed on to the successors to the non-probate assets.

C160 If an adult children’s claim is adopted (see chapter 7, paras 232–266), sections 48-51 will not apply to it, except possibly in the case of property gifted in contemplation of death (donationes mortis causa).

49 Recovery of non-probate assets

(1) An administrator who makes a requirement under section 48 must file in the court a notice of the requirement in the prescribed manner and must serve copies of the notice in accordance with the regulations.

(2) A person who has an interest in the estate or the non-probate assets of a deceased person may apply to a Family Court for a review of any action taken under section 48 by the administrator of the estate or of any failure to act under that section by that administrator and, after giving all affected parties an opportunity to be heard, the Family Court may affirm, vary or revoke any such action.

(3) If no application is made for a review within 45 days after service of the notice referred to in subsection (1) or an application is made for a review of an administrator’s failure to act under section 48, the court may order that the person in favour of whom the transaction was made, or that person’s personal representative, or any person claiming through that person,

(a) must transfer to the administrator the property, or any part of it or interest in it retained by that person;

(b) must pay to the administrator such sum, not exceeding the value of the property as the court thinks proper,

and the powers in sections 49 and 50 of the Administration Act 1969 are available to and may be exercised by the court subject to any necessary modifications.

(4) The court may make any further order that it thinks necessary in order to give effect to an order made under subsection (3).

Definitions: administrator, estate, s 8; non-probate assets, s 48(2)

Origin: Insolvency Act 1962 s 58

Section 49

C161 The non-probate assets will not be required to meet claims unless the administrator considers that the estate will be significantly affected by a claim: section 48(1). This section lays down the procedures which will be used.

C162 The administrator begins by filing a notice of his or her requirements in court and serving notice on those affected: subsection (1). Within 45 days, those served with the notice who disagree with the requirement must apply to the court to have the decision reviewed: subsection (2). In dealing with that application, the court may make appropriate orders: subsection (3). Normally the only necessary order would be one revoking or amending the administrator’s requirement.

C163 Sometimes beneficiaries or other owners of non-probate assets may take the view that the administrator has not made a requirement, or not directed it at all the available property, when he or she should have done so. They too may apply for a review of the administrator’s decision. If the application is justified, an appropriate order might be that the administrator make the requirement which the applicant seeks.

C164 On the expiry of the 45-day time period, the administrator may make a further application to the court to recover the assets, or to order such payments as may be necessary to meet the claims. This may not be necessary until the size of the claims has been fixed by the court. In the meantime, however, owners of the non-probate assets will have been put on notice of their potential liability. If they do spend or dispose of the assets they have received, they will still be liable to repay the equivalent sum – the change of circumstance defence provided for in section 51 will not be available because they knew of the pending claim.

50 Rights in respect of prior transactions and non-probate assets

(1) A person who has commenced a proceeding to initiate a property division or to claim an award against the estate of a deceased person may apply to the court in the course of that proceeding for an order under this section and the court may make such an order if the court is satisfied that the exercise of the powers conferred by this section would facilitate the making of appropriate orders or awards under this Act which cannot otherwise be made equitably from the estate of the deceased and if further satisfied

(a) that there are non-probate assets of the deceased which have not been called in under sections 48 or 49; or

(b) that the deceased, with the fraudulent intention of removing property from the reach of proceedings under this Act or otherwise with a fraudulent intention of prejudicing the interests of persons claiming awards or initiating a property division under this Act, made a disposition of property; or

(c) that, less than 3 years before the death of the deceased, the deceased made a disposition of property and that full valuable consideration for that disposition was not given by the person to whom the disposition was made (“the donee”) or by any other person.

(2) On an application under this section, the powers conferred by sections 49 to 51 of the Administration Act 1969 are available to and may be exercised by the court subject to any necessary modifications.

(3) If the court makes an order under subsection (1), the court may give such consequential directions as it thinks appropriate for giving effect to the order or for the fair adjustment of the rights of the persons affected by the order.

(4) In deciding whether and how to exercise its powers under this section, the court must have regard to the circumstances in which any disposition was made and any valuable consideration which was given for it, the relationship (if any) of the donee to the deceased, the conduct and financial resources of the donee, the availability of other assets within the estate of the deceased to meet claims and orders under this Act, and all the other circumstances of the case.

Definitions: award, court, estate, s 8; non-probate assets, s 48(2)

Section 50

C165 This section confers on claimants rights (like those beneficiaries enjoy at present) to have non-probate assets made available to satisfy a successful claim. But it goes further and allows claimants to bring in property comprised in transactions made by the will-maker before death. In most cases these transactions will be made within a short period before death, but if there is fraudulent intent, there is no time limit. These transactions diminish the estate and tend to defeat testamentary claims. The same considerations of fairness discussed in respect of section 48 apply here too.

C166 Subsection (1) provides that property passing under the following transactions can be recovered in order to meet testamentary claims:

  • gifts and other transactions for less than full consideration, made within three years before the will-maker died; and
  • transactions entered into with a view to prejudicing the rights of testamentary claimants and having that effect as regards the particular claim.

There is no time limit on the second class of case, except that long-standing transactions are unlikely to “prejudice” claimants of more recent standing.

C167 Again, a donee or other person benefiting from any such transaction would have the same defences as a beneficiary to whom property had been distributed under the will: subsection (2).

C168 If a successful application is made, the relevant property or a sum representing its value can be brought back into the estate: subsection (2). Appropriate adjustments can be made to avoid any unfair or unequal results: subsections (3) and (4). It is not necessarily a bar to recovery that the person who received property from the will-maker gave value, but this is a matter which the court may take into account: subsection (4).

51 Denial of recovery

(1) The court must not make an order under section 49 or 50 against a person if that person proves that he or she

(a) acquired the property for valuable consideration and in good faith without knowledge of the fact that the property is subject to a claim or application under this Act; or

(b) acquired the property through a person who acquired it in the manner described in paragraph (a).

(2) The court may decline to make an order under section 49 or 50, or may make such an order subject to conditions or with limited effect, against a person if that person proves that

(a) he or she received the property in good faith without knowledge of the fact that the property is subject to a claim or application under this Act; and

(b) his or her circumstances have so changed since the receipt of the property that it is unjust to order that the property be transferred or compensation paid.

Definitions: court, s 8

Origin: Insolvency Act 1967 ss 58(5), 58(6)

Section 51

C169 This section provides protection for those who have received non-probate assets or property which have been transferred under a prior transaction which can be attacked under section 50. It protects

• bona fide purchasers of the property: subsection (1); and

• those whose circumstances have so changed, as a result of receiving the property, that it is inequitable to make them return it or pay compensation for it: subsection (2).

C170 Subsection (2) does not follow the statutory form of change of circumstance previously used in, for example, the Judicature Act 1908 s 94B (as inserted by the Judicature Amendment Act 1958 s 2). On the difficulties which have been encountered with the wording in the earlier legislation, see Contract Statutes Review (1993, NZLC R25) chapter 4.

Subpart 4 – Priorities of awards as against creditors’ claims

52 Ranking of awards on contribution claims as against creditors’ claims

(1) If the estate of a deceased person has insufficient assets to fully satisfy all the liabilities of the deceased and the awards made in respect of contribution claims and other claims by creditors against the estate, the assets of the estate are to be applied so that an award on a contribution claim ranks equally with unsecured liabilities of the deceased.

(2) Despite subsection (1), the court may permit a contributor to make a proprietary or tracing claim against specific property formerly owned by the deceased and may confer priority over claims and creditors in accordance with section 43(2).

Definitions: award, contribution claim, contributor, court, estate, s 8

Section 52

C171 This section is the first of a series of sections dealing with priority of claims. The present law has no express or consistent system for ranking claims. In practice, the courts take into account the fact that there are other claims in settling the size of each award. This approach is satisfactory where the courts are given no clear objectives in settling how large an award should be, although it is unsystematic and may lead to unpredictable results. With the Draft Act, however, it is assumed that the size of an award can usually be ascertained independently of the existence of other claims. It is therefore necessary to provide for the priority of claims, both as regards each other, and as regards the will-maker’s general creditors.

C172 Section 52 deals with the first category of priority, unsecured creditors’ and contributors’ claims. Each ranks equally with the other: subsection (1). However, it sometimes happens that a contributor is entitled to an order for the transfer of specific property (see section 43). In practical terms, such an order may have the effect of promoting the contributor to the status of secured creditor, as regards that particular asset: subsection (2).

53 Ranking of property division orders as against creditors’ claims

(1) Except as otherwise expressly provided in this Act, the right to bring a property division proceeding does not

(a) affect the title of any person other than a partner to any property, or affect the power of either partner to acquire, deal with, or dispose of any property or to enter into any contract or other legal transaction as if this Act had not been passed; or

(b) limit or affect the operation of any mortgage, charge, or other security for the repayment of a debt given by either partner over property owned by that partner and every such instrument has the same effect as if this Act had not been passed.

(2) Subject to subsection (3), if the estate of a deceased person has insufficient assets to fully satisfy all the liabilities of the deceased and property division orders,

(a) secured and unsecured creditors of a partner have the same rights against that partner and against the property owned by the partner as if this Act had not been passed; and

(b) all property that would have passed to the administrator of an insolvent deceased appointed under section 159 of the Insolvency Act 1967 if this Act had not been passed (and no other property) shall so pass.

(3) Despite subsections (1) and (2), the court may permit a partner to make a proprietary or tracing claim against specific property formerly owned by the deceased and may confer priority over claims and creditors in accordance with section 43(2).

(4) If a property division order is made against the estate of a deceased partner, the surviving partner may take priority because of a protected interest in the partnership home which interest is,

(a) if section 12(1) or (2) applies, to the extent of the specified sum or one half of the equity of the partners in the partnership home, whichever is the lesser; or,

(b) if section 12(3) or 13 applies, to the extent of the specified sum or one half of the property or money shared under the section, whichever is the lesser.

(5) A protected interest is not liable for the unsecured personal debts of the deceased partner.

(6) In this section, specified sum means $61 000 or such greater sum as the Governor-General may prescribe by regulation as the specified sum for the purposes of this section.

Definitions: administrator, partnership home, personal debts, property division order, ss 8; partner, ss 9, 10(3)

Origin: Matrimonial Property Act 1976 ss 20(1)–(3)

Section 53

C173 Section 53 deals with the second category of priority: property division orders. Where, during the partners’ lifetimes, there is competition between the will-maker’s partner and the will-maker’s creditors, the Matrimonial Property Act 1976 s 20 applies (as between married couples). The principles in that section have been adopted in the Draft Act. They will apply both to married partners and to de facto partners.

C174 The first principle is that New Zealand law recognises only deferred matrimonial property rights. That is to say, until the event occurs which triggers a general division of property, the partners can hold property in their own names and each is expected to meet debts out of the property which he or she owns. This is reflected in subsection (1), which provides that each partner may legally transfer or mortgage their own property. Similarly, subsection (2)(a) provides that a security given to a creditor over the partner’s own property is not prejudiced when the other partner institutes division of the partnership property.

C175 Of particular importance is the further provision in subsection 2(a) which gives precedence to the partner’s own unsecured debts in any distribution of property that partner owns. The practical effect is that, if a partner is insolvent, all that partner’s property will be applied to meet his or her debts. In the event of bankruptcy all that property passes to the Official Assignee: subsection 2(b). These are rules which, in any review of the Matrimonial Property Act 1976, may require careful consideration. But the present legislation is not the place to propose changes.

C176 A significant qualification to the general rule is found in subsection (1), which follows section 20 of the Matrimonial Property Act 1976. The rights of the creditors or Official Assignee take effect “as if this Act had not been passed”. Husbands, wives and de facto partners, under the general law, can make claims to specific property, based on their contribution to that property. As in the case of contributors’ claims (see para C102), this right may confer priority over unsecured creditors. Admittedly the provisions of the Act (especially section 6) take those rights away from a husband and wife in their relations with each other. But the words quoted reinstate them for the purpose of meeting creditor claims, so the non-debtor partner can rely on their general law right to specific property which is legally owned by the debtor partner.

C177 A partner who institutes a property division may be able to assert priority over creditors if an order is made in respect of specific property under section 43(2): see subsection (3). This follows on from subsection (2).

C178 Subsection (4) contains an additional qualification drawn from the Matrimonial Property Act 1976. It relates to the non-debtor partner’s protected right to a half share of the equity in the partnership home: subsection (4). This is protected against the other partner’s personal debts. The “equity” is what is left after deduction of any amounts charged on the property. There is a maximum protected sum of $61 000: subsection (6).

C179 It will be noted that the protection applies to partnership homes and homesteads. It may even apply where there is no matrimonial home. The court may set aside part of the other matrimonial property for the same purpose. The protected interest applies only to personal debts of the other spouse. Personal debts of the claimant spouse, and matrimonial debts of both partners, can be enforced against the protected interest: subsection (5).

54 Ranking of support awards as against creditors’ claims

If the estate of a deceased person has insufficient assets to fully satisfy all the liabilities of the deceased and all support awards and claims by creditors against the estate, the assets of the estate are to be applied so that the unsecured liabilities of the deceased take priority over any support award.

Definitions: estate, support award, s 8

Subpart 5 – Priority of awards amongst claimants

55 Ranking of awards and orders on property division and contribution and support claims

(1) If the estate of a deceased person has insufficient assets available after satisfaction of liabilities to fully satisfy property division orders and contribution and support awards, the assets of the estate are to be applied so that every contribution award

(a) ranks equally with any other contribution award, but subject to section 43(2);

(b) takes priority over any property division order, but subject to section 43(2);

(c) takes priority over any support award.

(2) If the estate of a deceased has insufficient assets available after satisfaction of liabilities to fully satisfy property division orders and support awards, the assets of the estate are to be applied so that,

(a) in the case of successive partnerships, property division orders take priority in accordance with the chronological sequence of the partnerships;

(b) in the case of contemporaneous partnerships, a property division order is to be satisfied from that part of the estate of the deceased person as the court is able to attribute to the partnership concerned and, to the extent that such attribution is not practical, the court is to make an order that is proportionate to the contribution of each partnership to the acquisition of the assets;

(c) every property division order takes priority over any support award.

(3) If the estate of a deceased has insufficient assets available after satisfaction of liabilities to fully satisfy support awards, the assets of the estate are to be applied so that every support award ranks proportionately with any other support award.

Definitions: contribution award, estate, property division order, support award, s 8; partner, ss 9, 10(3)

Section 54

C180 Support claims always cede priority to creditors’ claims.

Section 55

C181 This section deals with the priority of awards and orders as between themselves. Contribution awards rank equally with each other and ahead of property division entitlements and support claims: subsection (1). This priority may be affected if an order is made in respect of specific property under section 43(2).

C182 Property division claims rank second in priority, again subject to the possibility of an order in relation to specific property under section 43(2): subsection (2).

C183 Competition may occur within the group of partnership awards and orders. This can occur even under the present law, where a marriage relationship ends, and one of the partners marries again, or enters a de facto relationship. If that too ends before the property division of the earlier marriage is settled, the assets owned by the common partner will be claimed by the two other partners. This is complicated further with the recognition of the property rights of de facto partners. Under the Draft Act, it will be possible for one person to live in two contemporaneous partnerships. Both of the other partners will now have property division entitlements against the common partner.

C184 Subsection (2) contains two rules to deal with this situation. First, where the partnerships are one after the other, priority is determined in accordance with time. Second, where partnerships exist at the same time, property which is attributable to each partnership is first separated out. The balance is distributed between the two partnerships in proportion to the extent to which each contributed towards its acquisition, maintenance and improvement.

C185 The first rule is not as arbitrary as it may at first sight appear. The first partnership will stop accumulating partnership property when the couple cease living together. The common partner can take into the second partnership, only that part of the matrimonial assets which is not claimable by the first partner. So it is sensible to determine the first partner’s claim first, before determining what balance is available to the second partner’s claim.

C186 The second rule is inconsistent with the well-established presumption of equal sharing, and with the principle that the courts generally assess contributions to the partnership, and not exclusively to the property the partners acquire while the partnership exists. But these two principles cannot apply where there are two partnerships. The fact that two partners are assumed to contribute equally as between themselves tells the court very little about how much each partnership contributes to the overall well-being of the three people concerned. One may be an indolent, childless partnership, the other a hard-working business and family partnership. And in any event, any comparison of the worth of the two partnerships in an abstract sense would be invidious. It is simpler and safer to enquire only into their respective contributions to asset formation and maintenance.

C187 The third priority group is support claims. These rank below the other two classes of claim and equally with each other: subsection (3). If adult children’s claims are recognised (chapter 7), they will rank below support claims (paras 225–231).

56 Ranking of orders and awards as against beneficiaries of the estate

(1) If the estate of a deceased person has insufficient assets to fully satisfy property division orders, awards and entitlements under testamentary dispositions of the deceased and non-probate assets that have been called in under section 48 or 49, the assets of the estate are to be applied so that every property division order and every award takes priority over all entitlements under the deceased’s testamentary dispositions and dispositions of non-probate assets and every entitlement under the testamentary and the non-probate asset dispositions is to abate proportionately according to its value to the extent necessary to fully satisfy property division orders and awards.

(2) Despite subsection (1), a court may direct that entitlements under the testamentary dispositions and the disposition of non-probate assets of the deceased are to abate in the manner directed by the court if the court considers that a proportionate abatement would not have accorded with the intentions of the deceased had the deceased contemplated the making of awards and property division orders under this Act.

(3) For the purposes of carrying this section into effect, a Family Court may, on the application of the administrator or of any person interested, make such orders as it thinks appropriate with respect to the administration of the estate of the deceased and may make such order to facilitate the sale and for the sale of property and the vesting of the property in the administrator or the appointment of a receiver of the rents, profits or income of property as it thinks appropriate.

(4) If property is sold under such an order, the Family Court may make an order vesting the property in the purchaser.

(5) Every such vesting order has the same effect as if all persons entitled to the property had been free from all disability, and had duly executed all property conveyances, transfers, and assignment of the property for such estate or interest as is specified in the order, and the purchaser’s title may be registered in any relevant register as if it were a conveyance, transfer, or assignment by an owner or a registered owner.

Definitions: administrator, award, court, estate, non-probate assets, property division order, s 8

Section 56

C188 The lowest priority group is that of beneficiaries. Assuming the appropriate procedural steps are taken by the administrators of the estate, beneficiaries will also include those who have acquired the will-maker’s non-probate estate (section 48). Property comprised in dispositions which defeat testamentary claims will also (to the extent that the court orders under section 50) be brought into the pool.

C189 All the beneficiaries in this group will normally share the burden of a testamentary claim equally: subsection (1). However the court may direct that the burden be shared differently, if that more closely accords with the intentions of the will-maker: subsection (2).

C190 This is a departure from existing law, under which the court has a much wider discretion to allocate the burden of claims amongst individual beneficiaries, irrespective of the will-maker’s wishes (see Matrimonial Property Act 1963 s 8A; Matrimonial Property Act 1976 s 48; Family Protection Act 1955 s 7; Law Reform (Testamentary Promises) Act 1949 s 3(6)).

C191 The court may make appropriate orders to achieve that end, including orders directing the sale of property and vesting the property in a purchaser. These powers are contained in subsections (3) and (4).

PART 6 MAKING AND SETTLING CLAIMS AND APPLICATIONS

57 Making claims and applications

(1) A claim under this Act for an award and an application for a property division may be initiated by filing an application in court containing a brief statement of the nature of the claim or application and the relevant facts, including a statement of the facts on which the applicant’s claim or application is based.

(2) A claim or application is to specify whether the applicant

(a) requires a property division; or

(b) makes a support claim; or

(c) requires a property division and makes a support claim; or

(d) makes a contribution claim; or

(e) makes a support and contribution claim.

(3) A claimant or applicant must supply such further information as the court may direct.

(4) A claimant or applicant is to serve a copy of the application on the administrator of the estate of the deceased person.

Definitions: administrator, award, contribution claim, court, support claim, s 8

58 Duties of administrators as to property division

(1) An administrator of the estate of a deceased person is not under a duty to initiate a property division against a surviving partner of the deceased unless instructed by a beneficiary of that estate.

(2) If an administrator of a deceased’s estate is instructed by a beneficiary of the estate to initiate a property division, the administrator may decline to proceed unless adequate provision to indemnify the administrator is made out of the estate or by the beneficiary.

Definitions: administrator, estate, s 8; partner, ss 9, 10(3)

59 Time limits

(1) An application for an award or property division order against the estate of a deceased person must be made to the court within 3 years after the death of that person.

(2) Despite subsection (1), an application for an award or property division order against the estate of a deceased person may be made to the court later than 3 years after the death of that person in the circumstances referred to and to the extent provided in Schedule 3.

Definitions: award, court, estate, property division order, s 8

Section 57

C192 The procedures for making applications will be governed by rules of the High Court and Family Court: see paras 40–45, C133–C135. This section lays out the basis for that procedure. A claim will be instituted by a single statement of claim, which sets out the basis of the claim very briefly: subsection (1). There will be no need at that point to file affidavits on matters of fact, or supply the court with details of family members, beneficiaries and potential claimants. Service of a copy of the application on the administrator will in general be sufficient at that time: subsection (4).

C193 It is anticipated that the next stage would involve the administrator notifying beneficiaries and other family members that there is a claim. Mediation processes would need to be seriously considered by the parties. No provisions governing this stage of the process are included in the Draft Act. However, provision is made to permit the court to order claimants or potential claimants, the administrator and beneficiaries to file further information in their possession in the court: subsection (3). This should facilitate mediation.

C194 If mediation is not undertaken, or if it fails, any further affidavits which may be needed would be filed, and the case would be set down for hearing in much the same way is it is now.

Section 58

C195 Administrators of a will-maker’s estate need institute a property division against the will-maker’s surviving partner only when requested and sufficiently indemnified by a beneficiary of the will-maker’s estate.

Section 59

C196 The general time limit for bringing testamentary claims is three years after the will-maker’s death: subsection (1). It may be extended in certain cases, particularly

  • where a claimant is unaware that the will-maker has died, or has not made an appropriate provision for the claimant; or
  • where the claimant is less than 18 years of age.

The full list of extensions is found in Schedule 3.

C197 This section replaces the present time limit for testamentary claims, which is one year (or sometimes two years where a claimant is under a disability: see, Matrimonial Property Act 1963 s 5A; Family Protection Act 1955 s 9; Law Reform (Testamentary Promises) Act 1949 s 6). This time limit is frequently extended by the court, sometimes after long periods of time have elapsed. The only mandatory limit under the present law is that no extension can be sought after the estate has been distributed. Under the Draft Act, the fact of distribution is not an absolute bar to bringing a claim, whether within the three-year period or beyond it.

C198 The period of three years, and the general pattern of extensions, is derived from the Law Commission’s Report, Limitation Defences in Civil Proceedings (1988, NZLC R6). If adult children’s claims are recognised (chapter 7), they will have a much shorter time limit (six months), except in exceptional circumstances. The time limit will not be able to be extended once the property in the estate has been distributed (see para 230).

60 Administrator to assist court

When an application is made for an award or property division order against the estate of a deceased person and notice of the application is served on the administrator, that notice is to have the same effect (subject to necessary modifications) as an order for discovery and the administrator must place before the court all relevant information in the administrator’s possession concerning details of members of the deceased’s family, the financial affairs of the estate, persons who may be claimants under the Act, and the deceased’s reasons for making the testamentary dispositions made by the deceased and for not making provision or further provision for any person.

Definitions: administrator, estate, property division order, s 8

Origin: Family Protection Act 1955 s 11A

61 Distribution of estate

(1) An application for an award or property division order against the estate of a deceased person may be made although the assets of the estate have been fully distributed.

(2) When distributing any part of the estate of a deceased to a beneficiary of the estate, the administrator must

(a) warn that beneficiary of the possibility that a claim may be made under this Act despite the distribution; and

(b) inform the beneficiary whether any potential claimant has indicated to the administrator that he or she will or may bring a claim.

(3) Despite subsection (2), a notice is not required in respect of a distribution which is one of a series if

(a) notice was given in accordance with that subsection concerning an earlier distribution in the series; and

(b) the administrator has not been informed of any intended claim or application since the notice was given.

(4) If an administrator who has observed the provisions of subsections (2) and (3) knows that an application for an award or property division order has been filed in court in respect of the estate, the administrator must not distribute any part of the estate otherwise than by authority of an order of the court (unless subsection (2) or (3) of section 47 of the Administration Act 1969 applies).

(5) An administrator is not liable to a claimant for an award or applicant for a property division order in connection with the distribution of the assets of an estate unless the administrator distributed property

(a) knowing that a such a claim or application had been or was expected to be made; and

(b) knowing or having reason to believe that the recipient of the distributed property intended to deal with the property in such a way that it could not be recovered by a claimant.

Definitions: administrator, award, estate, property division order, s 8

Section 60

C199 If the proceedings are to be heard by the court, it is important to ensure as far as possible that all persons who have an interest in the estate are formally notified, and that any other claims are heard at the same time. Under section 60, the administrator will have the responsibility of providing the court with information in his or her possession relating to the assets and administration of the estate, the beneficiaries and people who may have a claim, and the will-maker’s reasons for the provisions in the will. That information will be used as part of the factual basis for the claim, and will inform the court who should be served with a notice of proceedings.

C200 On receiving an order under section 60, an administrator may decline to provide certain information on the ground of privilege. If any of the beneficiaries or claimants wish to dispute a claim of privilege they will do so according to the usual process (see Evidence Law: Privilege (1994, NZLC R23), chapter 6; Draft Evidence Code s 14). Section 11A of the Family Protection Act 1955 extended the privileges normally available to administrators when it was first passed in 1959. But the provisions of the Commission’s proposed Draft Evidence Code on privilege (see Evidence Law: Privilege (1994, NZLC R23), Parts II and III; Draft Evidence Code ss 3, 5 and 11) and the present general law (Evidence Amendment Act (No 2) 1980 s 35) now cover the same ground. Section 11A is not therefore brought forward in this legislation.

Section 61

C201 If no claim has been lodged, an administrator is not obliged to retain the estate assets, even if he or she knows that a claim might be made: subsection (4). But if the administrator also knows that the person to whom a distribution is made intends to deal with the property with a view to defeating the claim, then the administrator can be made personally liable for the distribution.

C202 Once a claim has been lodged in court, no further distributions may be made: subsection (2). Subsection (3) ensures that administrators need not always provide the notice to beneficiaries required by subsection (2) with every payment in a series of periodic payments.

C203 It is accepted that the estate may well have been distributed during the three-year limitation period provided in section 59. But the property so distributed, or its value, may be recovered from the beneficiaries under the Administration Act 1969 ss 49–51. Subsection (1) provides that the distribution is no bar to proceeding.

62 Application treated as made by all possible applicants

(1) The court may treat an application for an award or a property division order filed by a person as an application on behalf of all persons who might apply for an award or order.

(2) An application is to be treated for the purposes of section 59 as an application on behalf of all persons on whom the application is served and all persons whom the court directs should be represented by persons on whom the application is served.

(3) A person who is entitled to apply for an award need not be served with an application or provision made for that person to be represented on an application unless the court considers that the person should be served or represented.

Definitions: award, court, property division order, s 8

Origin: Family Protection Act 1955 s 4(2)

63 Applications by administrators

(1) An administrator of the estate of a deceased person may

(a) apply for an award or property division on behalf of a person who is not of full age or mental capacity in any case where that person might apply; or

(b) apply to the court for advice or directions whether the administrator should so apply.

(2) The court may treat an application for advice or directions as an application on behalf of a person for the purpose of avoiding the effect of the time limitation in section 59.

Definitions: administrator, award, court, property division order, s 8

Origin: Family Protection Act 1955 s 4(4)

64 Evidence

In any proceeding under this Act, whether at first instance or on an appeal, the court may receive any evidence that it thinks appropriate, whether the evidence would be otherwise admissible in a court or not.

Definitions: court, s 8

Origin: Matrimonial Property Act 1976 s 36

Section 62

C204 This section ensures that, as far as possible, all claims are brought in the single set of proceedings, and are disposed of at the same time. It follows corresponding provisions in the Family Protection Act 1955 s 4.

C205 Subsection (1) provides that an application by one person may be treated as an application by all people who may apply under the Draft Act. However, only those who are served with proceedings, and those whom the court directs should be represented, will be bound by any award the court makes.

C206 For the purposes of time limitations on bringing claims, the date of the first application is treated as the date when all applications are brought: subsection (2). Time limitation periods stop then. This is useful because, when the first application is made, it may be necessary for beneficiaries in the estate to respond with their own claim. But for the application they might have been content with the provision made for them in the will. That provision may be reduced as a result of the award the applicant seeks. So the beneficiary should not be time-barred from responding with their own claim, as long as the initial claim is in time.

C207 Subsection (3) makes it clear that it is for the court to decide who is to be served or represented. Until an order is made for service, it is sufficient for the applicant to serve notice of the application on the administrator.

Section 63

C208 If a person is not of full age or capacity, the administrator may apply on their behalf, or apply to the court for directions about what is to be done: subsection (1). If either of these applications is made, the time limitation period on bringing claims in section 59 will stop running: subsection (2).

Section 64

C209 Courts which hear testamentary claims are not bound by the normal rules of evidence. This section follows a similar provision in the Matrimonial Property Act 1976 s 36.

65 Costs

(1) A court is not obliged to order that the estate pay its own costs or the costs of any party to a proceeding under this Act but may order that costs are paid by the party who does not succeed in the proceeding.

(2) A court is not obliged to order that an unsuccessful claimant or applicant pay the costs of any other party or parties if that claimant or applicant had sufficient and reasonable grounds to make a claim or initiate a property division having regard to his or her knowledge or means of knowledge of relevant facts.

(3) A court may take into account any unreasonable failure of a claimant, applicant or beneficiary to settle a claim or reduce the scope, length or complexity of the proceeding when considering the matter of costs.

Definitions: court, s 8

Section 65

C210 The courts generally have power to decide whether any party should be ordered to pay or contribute to the costs of the proceedings. In proceedings under the Family Protection Act 1955, the courts have tended to order that costs be met out of the estate, even where a party is unsuccessful. This section is designed to alter that emphasis, without abrogating the general principle that costs are in the court’s discretion.

C211 Subsection (1) provides that whenever a party brings or defends proceedings unsuccessfully, consideration must be given to whether that party should be ordered to pay the costs of the estate and the other parties.

C212 Subsection (2) qualifies that rule for cases where the claimant had reasonable grounds to bring proceedings, having regard to what he or she knows of the facts.

C213 Subsection (3) allows the court to take into account any unreasonable failure to settle a claim, or reduce its length and complexity, when making an order as to costs. This section might apply, for example, if a party refuses unjustifiably to submit a testamentary claim to the processes of mediation. It can be invoked against either the successful or the unsuccessful party.

66 Waiver, compromise and agreement

(1) A person may at any time agree

(a) to waive or compromise any claim for an award or property division order of any kind that the person has or might have against the estate of another person;

(b) on the status, ownership or division of any property (or future property) which might be affected by a proceeding under this Act.

(2) An agreement under this Act is enforceable if it

(a) is in writing; and

(b) is signed by each party and the signature of each party is witnessed; and

(c) contains or has attached a certificate signed by a solicitor certifying that the solicitor has given independent advice to the applicant or potential applicant who appears to the solicitor to understand clearly the effect and implications of the agreement.

(3) A court may enforce an agreement under this section although the agreement does not comply with subsection (2) if the court is satisfied that the agreement

(a) was made and represents the true intent of the parties to the agreement; and

(b) is not vitiated by undue influence.

(4) Despite subsections (2) and (3), a court may refuse to enforce an agreement to waive or compromise a claim or property division if the court considers it would be unjust to enforce it after considering

(a) whether the agreement was fair and reasonable when it was made; and

(b) the time that has elapsed since the agreement was made; and

(c) whether the agreement is fair and reasonable in the light of any changes in the circumstances since it was made.

(5) An agreement to waive or compromise an application for a property division that relates to all or a substantial part of partnership property is to be taken, unless the agreement provides or implies otherwise, to constitute a waiver or compromise of a partner’s claim to support.

(6) This section does not apply to a support claim of a child under 25 years of age.

Definitions: award, court, partnership property, property division order, support claim, s 8

Origin: Matrimonial Property Act 1976 s 21(1)–(10)

Section 66

C214 With the exception of one class of claim, any testamentary claim may be waived or compromised, either before the will-maker’s death or afterwards: subsection (1). This is a change from the present law under the Family Protection Act 1955. It is in line, however, with the Matrimonial Property Act 1976 s 21.

C215 Subsection (2) adopts the formal requirements laid down in the Matrimonial Property Act 1976 for matrimonial property agreements. The agreement must be in writing, signed by both parties, and contain a certificate signed by a solicitor certifying that the claimant has been given independent advice on the effect and implications of the document.

C216 Where the formal requirements are complied with, the agreement may nevertheless not be enforced by the court, after considering whether it was fair and reasonable when made, the time that has elapsed since it was made, and whether it is still fair and reasonable in the light of any new circumstances: subsection (4). This provision too follows the Matrimonial Property Act 1976 s 21(10).

C217 Where the formal requirements are not met, the agreement may still be enforced if the court is satisfied that the agreement was in fact made and represents the true agreement of both parties, and is not vitiated by undue influence: subsection (3). This approach is more favourable to informal agreements than the corresponding provision in the Matrimonial Property Act 1976 s 21(4). That section allows enforcement if non-compliance has not “materially prejudiced the interests of any party to the agreement”.

C218 The “prejudice” test is too strict for disputes arising after death. First, in making arrangements which principally affect their children and other relatives, partners often see no need to get separate solicitors. Secondly, lack of writing will almost inevitably make finding out the truth harder for the successors of a claimant than it would for the claimant themselves. Yet an agreement fairly entered into is likely to be a better basis for determining the successors’ rights than the principles set out in the Act. The cost of ascertaining it is therefore justified. Thirdly, it is doubtful whether successors should be able to repudiate such agreements simply because they might have worked out badly for one of the partners had both lived. “Prejudice” as between two domestic partners is often irrelevant to the issues which arise between one partner and the estate of the other.

C219 The class of claim which is excepted from the general rule permitting waiver and compromise is the support claim of the child under 25 years of age: subsection (6). This exception is based on considerations of public policy relating to the support of children, and also the risk of undue influence as between parents and adolescent children.

PART 7 MISCELLANEOUS

67 Regulations

The Governor-General may from time to time, by Order in Council, make regulations for all or any of the following purposes:

(a) prescribing the nature and extent of the information required to be provided in respect of a claim or application under this Act;

(b) prescribing the procedure for the recovery by administrators of non-probate assets under sections 48 and 49;

(c) providing for such matters as are contemplated by or necessary for giving full effect to the provisions of this Act and for its due administration.

Definitions: non-probate assets, s 48

Origin: Matrimonial Property Act 1976 s 53

68 Proceedings not determined before death of party

(1) Where a proceeding has been brought by a spouse under the Matrimonial Property Act 1976 and that proceeding has not been determined before the death of one of the spouses, the proceeding is to be continued as if the proceeding were an application for a property division order under this Act.

(2) In the case of a proceeding continued under subsection (1) as an application for a property division order by the administrator of the estate of a deceased spouse against a surviving spouse, the court may make any order that it might have made under the Matrimonial Property Act 1976 if the spouse had not died.

(3) Where a proceeding has been brought by a de facto partner by virtue of a constructive trust, a contract or a restitutionary claim in respect of a matter that could have been brought as a property division application if one partner had died before the proceeding had commenced, the proceeding is to be continued as if the proceeding were an application for a property division under this Act.

(4) Where a proceeding has been brought for maintenance under the Family Proceedings Act 1980 on or after the dissolution of a marriage and that proceeding has not been determined before the death of one of the spouses, the proceeding is to be continued as if the proceeding were a support claim under this Act.

(5) Where a proceeding has been brought under the law of contract in respect of a benefit provided by a person to another person or under the law of restitution (unjust enrichment) by a person who anticipates provision for benefits conferred and that proceeding has not been determined before the death of one of the parties, the proceeding can be continued as if the proceeding were a contribution claim under this Act.

(6) Subsection (5) applies subject to sections 36(3) and 37(3).

Definitions: contribution claim, court, estate, property division order, support claim, s 8; de facto partner, s 9

Section 67

C220 This section provides for the making of regulations.

Section 68

C221 This section concerns cases where proceedings are brought by a claimant during the lifetime of the parties, and one party dies before the proceedings are disposed of. At that point in these proceedings, the Draft Act should apply. This may arise in proceedings brought by spouses under the Matrimonial Property Act 1976 or Family Proceedings Act 1980, by de facto partners under the general law, and by contributors. The proceedings will be transferred to the appropriate jurisdiction under the Draft Act.

69 Repeals and consequential amendments

(1) The Law Reform (Testamentary Promises) Act 1949 [1949, No. 33] and the Family Protection Act 1955 [1955, No. 88] are repealed.

(2) The enactments specified in Schedule 4 are amended in the manner indicated in that schedule.

Section 69

C222 The Draft Act replaces the Law Reform (Testamentary Promises) Act 1949, the Family Protection Act 1955, and the Matrimonial Property Act 1963 (as preserved by the Matrimonial Property Act 1976 s 57(4)). It also redefines the relationship between testamentary claims and the provision of welfare benefits and subsidies under the Social Security Act 1964. Consequential amendments are made to various provisions relating to the administration of estates in Schedule 4. At present, Schedule 4 does not provide for all necessary consequential amendments.

SCHEDULE 1 PRIVITY OF PROMISE PROVISIONS

See section 32

1 Definitions

In this Schedule, in relation to a promise to which section 32 applies,

beneficiary means a person (other than the promisor or promisee) on whom the promise confers, or purports to confer, a benefit;

promisee means a contributor to whom the promise is made;

promisor means a recipient of a benefit by whom the promise is made.

2 Application of the Contracts (Privity) Act 1982

Where a claim is brought by a beneficiary in respect of a promise to which section 32 applies, the provisions of the Contracts (Privity) Act 1982 apply to the extent that the promise is

(a) enforceable as a contract made between the deceased person and the promisee; and

(b) enforced by the promisee

(i) before the death of the deceased; or

(ii) against the estate of the deceased under section 37(3).

3 Availability of defences

In a claim brought by a beneficiary in respect of a promise to which section 32 applies, other than a claim to which clause 2 applies, the administrator of the deceased person’s estate may advance

(a) any defence which would have been available against the promisee;

(b) any accord and satisfaction, or contract of settlement made by the promisee in relation to the obligation;

(c) any set-off or counterclaim arising out of or in connection with the promise,

as if the promise had been made for the benefit of the promisee and the promisee had subsequently brought a proceeding to enforce the promise.

4 Enforcement of promise

Despite clause 3, the court may order that such provision be made as appears just in respect of the promise to which section 32 applies if the beneficiary satisfies the court that

(a) the beneficiary, or a person acting in the interests of the beneficiary, was aware of the promise; and

(b) the beneficiary’s circumstances have so changed, since the promise was made and knowledge of the promise was acquired, that it would be inequitable not to make provision in respect of the promise.

5 Restricted application of clauses 3 and 4

Clauses 3 and 4 do not apply to actions taken or defences or set-offs arising after

(a) the beneficiary has begun a proceeding against the deceased person’s estate to enforce the promise; or

(b) the parties have submitted to arbitration any matter relating to the promise.

6 Availability of defences

This schedule does not affect any defence, set-off or counterclaim that might be available at law or in equity as between the beneficiary and the deceased person’s estate.

SCHEDULE 2 APPEAL PROVISIONS

See section 39

1 Right of appeal

If a Family Court has made or refused to make an award or property division order in a proceeding under this Act, or has otherwise finally determined or dismissed a proceeding under this Act, a party to the proceeding or any other person prejudicially affected may, within 28 days after the making of the award, order or decision or, within such further time as the court may allow in accordance with section 73(1) of the District Courts Act 1947, appeal to the High Court in accordance with Part V of that Act (except subsections (1), (3), and (5) of section 71A) and those provisions apply with any necessary modifications.

2 Security for appeal

The court appealed from may, on the ex parte application of the appellant, order that security under section 73(2) of the District Courts Act 1947 is not required to be given under that section.

3 Further appeals to Court of Appeal

The provisions of the Judicature Act 1908 relating to appeals to the Court of Appeal against decisions of the High Court apply with respect to any award or decision of the High Court under this schedule.

4 Further appeals to Her Majesty in Council

Subject to the rules governing appeals to Her Majesty in Council against a decision of the Court of Appeal or of the High Court, such an appeal may be made in a proceeding under this Act to Her Majesty in Council.

5 Rehearing or further evidence on appeal

The High Court or the Court of Appeal may rehear the whole or any part of the evidence, or may receive further evidence, if it thinks that the interests of justice so require.

SCHEDULE 3 EXTENSIONS OF TIME

See section 59(2)

1 Extension when knowledge is delayed

A person may make an application for an award or a property division order against the estate of a deceased person within 3 years after the day when the person learned that the deceased had died and had not satisfied the person’s claim or entitlement by testamentary disposition or otherwise.

2 Extension when alternative dispute resolution is sought

(1) A person may make an application for an award or a property division order against the estate of a deceased person within 3 years after the date the person learned that the deceased had died and had not satisfied the person’s claim or entitlement by testamentary disposition or otherwise plus any period during which a person or body having statutory authority to seek resolution of disputes or another court or arbitrator was attempting to resolve the claim or entitlement.

(2) If 2 or more of the periods referred to in subclause (1) overlap, the period of the overlap is not to be taken into account twice.

3 Extension for persons under 18 years of age

A person who is under the age of 18 years when that person learns that a person has died and has not satisfied the person’s claim or entitlement against the estate of that deceased person by testamentary disposition or otherwise may make a claim or initiate a property division against the estate of the deceased person within 3 years after reaching the age of 18 years.

4 Extension because of incapacity or impairment

(1) A person may make an application for an award or a property division order against the estate of a deceased person within 3 years after the day when the person learned that the deceased had died and had not satisfied the person’s claim or entitlement by testamentary disposition or otherwise plus any period during which the person was incapable of or substantially impeded in managing the person’s affairs with respect to the claim or entitlement for any period or periods of 28 consecutive days or more because of

(a) the person’s physical or mental condition; or

(b) the lawful or unlawful detention of the person; or

(c) war or warlike operations or circumstances arising from them affecting the person.

(2) If 2 or more periods referred to in subclause (1) overlap, the period of the overlap is not to be taken into account twice.

5 Cumulative time extensions

(1) A person may establish the period of extended time for making an application for an award or a property division order under this Act by adding the following periods:

(a) the period before which the person learned that the deceased person had died and had not satisfied the person’s claim or entitlement against the estate of that deceased by testamentary disposition or otherwise; and

(b) the period or periods described in clauses 2 and 4 that may be added to the 3 year period; and

(c) the period between the date when the person learned that the deceased had died and had not satisfied the person’s claim or entitlement against the estate of that deceased by testamentary disposition or otherwise and the date on which the person reached the age of 18 years; and

(d) the 3 year period after the date when the person learned that a person had died and had not satisfied the person’s claim or entitlement against the estate of that deceased by testamentary disposition or otherwise.

(2) If 2 or more periods referred to in subclause (1) overlap, the period of the overlap is not to be taken into account twice.

6 Extension after acknowledgment or part payment

(1) A person may make an application for an award or a property division order against the estate of a deceased person within 3 years after the date the administrator of the estate of the deceased

(a) acknowledged to the person a liability to that person under this Act; or

(b) made a payment to that person in respect of liability to the person under this Act, or

(c) made a payment to that person under a will subsequently found to have been revoked or in accordance with an interpretation of a will subsequently determined to have been wrong in law or in accordance with the law of intestacy when a will is subsequently found to exist;

in reliance on which the person did not bring a claim within the period allowed by section 59(1).

(2) For the purposes of this clause, payment or part payment of interest is to be regarded as an acknowledgment of liability to pay both the interest and the principal in respect of which the interest was paid.

SCHEDULE 4 ENACTMENTS AMENDED

See section 69(2)

Social Security Act 1964 (1964/136)

section 69F

Insert subsections (3A) to (3D)

“(3A) The Director-General may include in the financial means assessment of a person to whom this section applies an additional sum calculated in accordance with the formula

a – b – c – d

where a, b, c and d represent the following

a half the property owned by that person and that person’s spouse immediately before the death of that person’s spouse,

b the property owned by that person immediately before the death of that person’s spouse,

c the property that person received from that person’s spouse by reason of the death of that person’s spouse,

d the amount or value received by that person as a result of claims made against the estate of that person’s spouse;

and valuations are to be made (except in the case of item d)

(a) as at the day immediately after the death of the person’s spouse; and

(b) deducting all debts and other valid claims (other than claims and entitlements under the Testamentary Claims Act 199– and claims by that person or his or her spouse against each other or each other’s estate) outstanding on that day.

(3B) An amount included in the financial means assessment under subsection (3A) is to be reduced to the extent that the person who is the subject of the assessment proves to the satisfaction of the Director-General

(a) that there is good reason to believe that, if the person had made a claim against the estate of the deceased spouse immediately after that spouse’s death, it would not have been successful or would have resulted in a lesser award than the sum calculated under subsection (3A); or

(b) that it would be unreasonable at the date of the assessment to expect the person to bring a claim for an award equivalent to the amount calculated under subsection (3A) because of one or more of the following

(i) the time that has elapsed since the death of that person’s spouse; or

(ii) the extent that any remedies open to the person have become exhausted by the expiry of any relevant limitation period; or

(iii) the actual disposition of the deceased spouse’s estate and the reasons why that disposition ought not to be disturbed; or

(iv) the benefits that the person received from the estate or from the deceased spouse during the deceased spouse’s lifetime; or

(v) any other relevant factors.

(3C) No amount is to be included under subsection (3A) in the financial means assessment of a person

(a) while that person is pursuing diligently a proceeding against the estate of that person’s spouse for an amount equivalent to the sum calculated under that subsection; or

(b) if all claims which that person could have made against that person’s spouse have been determined by a court or settled by way of a compromise in good faith.

(3D) The Director-General may include in the financial means assessment of a person to whom this section applies a further additional sum being an amount of interest which in the opinion of the Director-General would have been earned on any amount included under subsection (3A) or (3B) calculated from the later of

(a) the date of death of that person’s spouse; or

(b) the date of the financial means assessment.”.

section 73

Repeal the whole section

Substitute:

73 Limitation where applicant entitled to claim under Testamentary Claims Act 199–

(1) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Part of this Act, the Director-General may, in the Director-General’s discretion, refuse to grant any benefit (other than New Zealand superannuation, or a veteran’s pension, not subject to an income test), or may grant any such benefit at a reduced rate or may cancel any such benefit already granted, in any case where any person, being a relative of the applicant, has died and the applicant has, in the opinion of the Director-General failed without good and sufficient reason to begin a proceeding under the Testamentary Claims Act 199– against the estate of the relative for an award or order under that Act and to prosecute with all due diligence any proceeding so begun by that person or on that person’s behalf or treated as if made on that person’s behalf.

(2) In any such proceeding, the Director-General is entitled to appear and show cause why an award or provision or further provision should be made for the applicant from the estate of the relative.

(3) In this section, “relative” means a person out of whose estate the applicant is entitled to make an application for an award or order under the Testamentary Claims Act 199–.

(4) In this section a reference to a proceeding under the Testamentary Claims Act 199– does not include an application for a support award

(a) by a surviving partner of the relative under section 22, except to the extent of the difference between 50% of the combined assets of the relative and the surviving partner, and (if it is a lesser sum) the surviving partner’s property division entitlement; and

(b) by a child of the relative under paragraph (c) of section 25 of that Act.”.

Estate and Gift Duties Act 1968 (1968/35)

section 31A

Insert after “ Act 1976”

“or a property division order under the Testamentary Claims Act 199–”.

Administration Act 1969 (1969/52)

section 47(1)

Repeal paragraphs (a), (b), (ca) and (d).

section 49(1)

Insert in paragraph (a), (b), and (c) after “section 47 of this Act applies,” in each paragraph

“or any order to which the Testamentary Claims Act 199– applies,”.

section 49(3)(a)

Delete “for an order under the Family Protection Act 1955 or the Law Reform (Testamentary Promises) Act 1949”

Substitute “the Testamentary Claims Act 199–”.

Delete in the second place where it occurs “for an order under the Family Protection Act 1955”

Substitute “or the Testamentary Claims Act 199–”.

section 49(4)

Insert after “section 47 of this Act applies”

“, or any order to which the Testamentary Claims Act 199– applies,”.

Stamp and Cheque Duties Act 1971 (1971/51)

section 11

Insert in subsection (2) after paragraph (o)

“(oa) The Testamentary Claims Act 199–:”.

Insert after subsection (2)

“(3) No stamp duty shall be payable on any instrument in so far as that instrument waives or compromises a claim under the Testamentary Claims Act 199– nor on any disposition made in accordance with such an instrument.”.

Matrimonial Property Act 1976 (1976/166)

section 57

Repeal subsection (4).


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