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Making Your Inheritance Intentions Clear

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Written by: Rachel Roche

Rachel Roche LL.M. TEP is the founder and owner of Roche Legal, an award-winning private client solicitor with over 15 years' experience in Wills, Probate, and estate planning.

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Last reviewed: 11 August 2025

Making your inheritance intentions clear

Please note that the following content is general information and not legal advice. If you would like legal advice on the matter, please contact the Roche Legal team.

Any specialist Wills and probate solicitor will tell you that – when dealing with your post-death intentions – if it’s not written down, it might not happen. This is one of the best reasons for making a Will. It shows the people dealing with your property and assets what you want to happen. Not only does this mean your intentions take effect, it helps avoid family or friends arguing over what your intentions might have been.

That said, as crucial as Wills are, some situations can mean assets you own (or part-own) pass outside the terms of your Will. The most common circumstances where this can happen include:

  • Owning an asset jointly with someone else as ‘joint tenants’. For more information on this, read our blog post on Joint Ownership and Wills.
  • Certain investments or pension funds, which allow you to nominate someone to receive them after your death.
  • Certain life insurance policies, which involve trust arrangements for the benefit of named beneficiaries.
  • Partnership interests. Where you own an asset through a partnership, you may only be able to pass on a share of the asset to your heirs. A lot will depend on the terms of the partnership agreement. However, where there is no formal partnership agreement, partnership assets will usually be shared amongst the partners. This can cause problems, as will be seen below.

If you own any assets or property in these ways, it is important to factor these into your inheritance plans. Contradictory, or completely undocumented intentions cause confusion to the people dealing with your estate after you’ve gone. Worse still, it could lead to legal disputes arising.

To illustrate, let’s look at a recent case: Wild v Wild [2018] EWHC 2197 (Ch). This involved a farming family bitterly divided over how a home was to pass – either through a Will or as a partnership asset.

The case background

In 1978, Ben Wild, a dairy farmer, went into partnership with his eldest son, Malcolm. Ben’s younger son Gregory joined the partnership in 1994, along with Ben’s wife, Jean (although she went on to leave the partnership again 5 years later). When Ben died in 2003, Malcolm and Gregory were the remaining partners. They continued the partnership for several years until relations between them deteriorated. Each viewed the other with mistrust. There were allegations of concealing livestock and milk sales from the other and sabotaging milk rounds with spoiled milk. Malcolm was even convicted of assaulting his brother in 2013 – he unsuccessfully argued it was self-defence.

In 2016, Gregory began proceedings to dissolve the partnership and for the partnership assets to be shared out. This gave rise to many points of contention over what was owned by the partnership and what wasn’t. The partnership accounts were ambiguous and at no time during the partnership’s near-40-year history had any kind of partnership agreement been drawn up.

At the centre of the dispute was a bungalow on the farm. Malcolm and his wife, Abigail had been living in the bungalow since 1988, but if this was ruled to be a partnership asset, Gregory could be entitled to a share of it as one of the partners.

The judge’s decision

The judge found that Ben Wild had given several assurances to Malcolm over the years that the bungalow would be his. Unfortunately, Malcolm and his family were left in this precarious position regarding their home for several reasons:

  • It was not clear from partnership accounts whether the bungalow was a partnership asset or not.
  • There was no partnership agreement to clear up the matter or confirm what the terms of the partnership were.
  • Ben’s Will made no mention of the bungalow and simply left his entire estate to Jean. Whether Ben saw the bungalow as being an asset of the partnership or not could not then be inferred from his Will.

Fortunately for Malcolm and his family, the judge ruled that the bungalow was not a partnership asset on the facts. Much of the judge’s reasoning involved piecing together Ben’s intentions. The judge believed Ben intended for his sons to inherit the farm one day but that there was no intention on Ben’s part to give up control of it to be held in the partnership during his lifetime.

As such, the bungalow passed to Jean with the rest of the farm through Ben’s Will.

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Further reading

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    How often should I update my Will?

    Life has a habit of changing dramatically when we least expect it. The further in advance we plan for something, the greater the potential for life to upset those plans.
  • Three people in a meeting

    Understanding the Probate Timeline

    The term ‘probate’ is often used to refer to the period of winding up someone’s estate after their death. However, ‘probate’ can more specifically mean a document issued by the Probate Office.

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