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Pym v Lockyer: 1840

It can be sufficient for a gift to be adeemed as a portion where the donor is a parent: ‘in the case of a parent, a legacy to a child is presumed to be intended to be a portion . .’ The court queried the likelihood of an intention in a grandfather who was in loco parentis disturbing the whole scheme of distribution he had set up in his will to have given an inter vivos gift without its adeeming the gift by will – ‘to the necessary prejudice of all the other children’. The rule against double portions is ‘founded on good sense and adapted to the ordinary transactions of mankind’.
References: (1840) 5 My and Cr 29, [1841] EngR 340, (1840-1841) 5 My and Cr 29, (1841) 41 ER 283, [1841] EngR 1054, (1841) 12 Sim 394, (1841) 59 ER 1183
Links: Commonlii, Commonlii
Judges: Lord Cottenham LC
Jurisdiction: England and Wales
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Last Update: 27 November 2020; Ref: scu.194481 br>

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