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Nelligan News
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Happy New Year!

At the start of another year, it is worth asking: do you have a Will?

Dying intestate or dying without a valid Will can cause problems for those who are left behind. For example, without a Will, who should be named the Estate Trustee of your estate? Who has the authority to make funeral or burial arrangements?

Where the deceased has left a Will, the person who is named as the Estate Trustee has the authority to make such decisions. While it is advisable for an Estate Trustee to consider the wishes of the deceased and his or her next-of-kin when making the funeral arrangements, the Estate Trustee’s decisions are only constrained by a legal duty to dispose of the remains in a dignified manner.

If you don’t pre-plan your funeral or if you die without a Will, who will plan your funeral or make your burial arrangements? In the case of Catto v Catto, Justice Smith had to determine who had that right.

Facts

In Catto, Mark Catto died after less than a year of marriage to his spouse, Donna. The deceased had no children and was survived by his mother, Nan, and his brother, Chuck. The deceased died without a Will. Donna made arrangements for the deceased’s funeral in his hometown of Lacolle, Quebec and for his ashes to be buried in the family plot in Lacolle. However, before the ashes were buried in the Catto family plot, Donna advised the funeral director that she wished to take the ashes with her back to Peterborough. Six months later, Donna interred the urn containing the deceased’s ashes in Peterborough instead of in the family plot in Lacolle.

The deceased’s mother brought an application alleging that the deceased had wished to be buried in the family plot in Lacolle, and sought orders that the deceased’s ashes be exhumed and that half of the ashes be returned to the family plot.

When a person dies without a Will, section 29 of the Estates Act gives the court the discretion to appoint as the Estate Trustee either a spouse or common-law partner, the next-of-kin or both the spouse and the next-of-kin. In the Catto decision, Justice Smith found that the deceased’s mother lived outside of Ontario, that Donna was the sole beneficiary of the deceased’s Estate, that there was no potential conflict of interest between Donna and the Estate, and that there was no possible conflict between any children and Donna. Therefore, as the married spouse, Donna was entitled to receive all of the assets from the Estate. Justice Smith held that Donna should be given priority over the deceased’s mother and should be named as the Estate Trustee of the deceased’s Estate.

As a result of being the Estate Trustee, Donna had the right to make the burial arrangements for the deceased.

Conclusion

The Catto decision reminds us that if you don’t have a Will, conflicts can arise for your family members who are left behind to make your final decisions.

If you would like to create a Will, contact our Wills and Estates Group today and we can get the process started for you.

This content is not intended to provide legal advice or opinion as neither can be given without reference to specific events and situations. © 2021 Nelligan O’Brien Payne LLP.

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