Until 1 October 2014 when the Presumption of Death Act 2013 (the Act) came into force, if someone disappeared it could be difficult or impossible to obtain a death certificate. For example, Rachel Elias, sister of Manic Street Preachers lyricist and guitarist Richey Edwards, spent 13 years struggling to register her brother’s death, the procedure for the registration itself having taken over three years.
Without a death certificate, a person is generally assumed to be alive. This obviously presents great problems for ownership and control of the missing person’s property, neither of which change as a result of a disappearance. Furthermore, before the Act, different procedures had to be followed to: (i) obtain a Grant to gain access to the property and (ii) end a marriage or civil partnership.
This situation has greatly improved since the coming into force of the Act: a court declaration of presumed death is conclusive against all persons and for all purposes, including the acquisition of interests in any property and the ending of marriages or civil partnerships. In the recent Lord Lucan case, although a Grant had been obtained in 1999, this did not permit Mr Bingham to inherit the family title or take his father’s seat in the House of Lords. Hence Mr Bingham’s application under the Act to obtain a declaration which is binding for all purposes. In other words, as close to ‘closure’ as he could hope for.
After seven years of disappearance, on application by spouses, certain relatives or persons with sufficient interest, the court has a wide range of powers, including:
• Obtaining information from third parties (for example, banks) which would otherwise probably be impossible to obtain as a mere representative of a missing person.
• Determining the domicile of the missing person at the time of death (important for obtaining a Grant, and if, say, the spouse or any other person dependent on the presumed deceased is considering a claim under the Inheritance (Provision for Family and Dependants) Act 1975).
• Making any order it considers reasonable on any interest in any property (including real estate) acquired following the declaration.
Should the missing person reappear, the court can make a variation of the declaration, but missing people beware: this will only be made in exceptional circumstances if the reappearance occurs more than five years after the declaration. Accordingly, the court also has powers to:
• Make an order to protect an asset, which has been acquired as a result of a declaration, from being recovered on reappearance. A third party who has acquired the presumed deceased’s property in good faith for value is protected under the Act.
• Make an order that beneficiaries of life insurance pay-outs must take out their own insurance to repay the life insurance company on reappearance.
• Make an order that trustees take out missing beneficiary insurance to compensate on reappearance.
So, whilst we may never know what happened on that fateful night in 1974 when Lord Lucan disappeared, at least we now have this Act to plug long-standing estate administration gaps in cases like his.