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Home / The Country

Sister fails to get bigger slice of family's farming fortune

Matthew Theunissen
By Matthew Theunissen
NZ Herald·
10 Nov, 2017 12:19 AM3 mins to read

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The Talbot family has been farming in South Canterbury for generations. Photo / File

The Talbot family has been farming in South Canterbury for generations. Photo / File

A woman who claimed it was unfair her brother was left the family farm while she received $1 million and a bach has again failed to get a bigger slice of their parents' estate.

After failing to revise her parents' will in a High Court trial last year, Jillian Talbot took the dispute to the Court of Appeal, claiming the previous judge had adopted too narrow an approach when assessing how much money she needed to get by.

As well as challenging the court costs she was ordered to pay, her counsel said the High Court's estimate of the estate being worth some $6.5m was too low. Both of these assertions were rejected by the Court of Appeal.

The Talbot family has been farming in South Canterbury for generations. The principal farm, Kingsborough Farm, was initially bought by the siblings' grandfather in 1915.

It was run by Edwin and Pamela Talbot until their elder years when their only son, Graham, took over the management and financial responsibility of Kingsborough from 2006.

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When Edwin and Pamela died in 2014 and 2015, respectively, they granted probate of their estates to Graham in their wills - something that had previously been discussed among the whole family.

"The evidence at trial established that Graham worked long hours on Kingsborough, that he took minimal drawings, and that it is likely that the farm would have had to have been
sold if Graham had not left school to work on it," the Court of Appeal's decision said.

Jillian and her sister Rachel - an "unwilling but necessary" participant in the court proceedings - had not shown an interest in working on the farm, which their parents had wanted to keep in the family.

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"It was their intention from at least 1999, and probably earlier, that Graham, as the only child who had shown any interest in farming Kingsborough, should receive the family farm, and that Rachel and Jillian should share equally in the remainder of their estates."

The couple left Jillian and Rachel over $1m each with Jillian also being given the family bach.

The Court of Appeal said the key issue for it to determine was whether or not adequate provision had been made from the estate to meet Jillian's needs.

During the trial, it was established that Jillian already had significant personal assets and income earning potential.

Her partner was independently wealthy and, in cross-examination, she had acknowledged she and her family did have a comfortable lifestyle.

The Court of Appeal agreed with the previous decision that it was hard to see how an inheritance of just over $1m was insufficient to adequately provide for her.

"In our judgment, a sum a little in excess of $1 million is, on any objective assessment, and at the least, a moderate amount. It is not provision so small as to leave a justifiable sense of exclusion from participation in the family estate," the decision said.

"We consider that Jillian has not been excluded from the family, and that appropriate recognition has been given to her as a dutiful and loving daughter."

Jillian was ordered to pay Graham and Rachel's court costs for the failed appeal.

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