면책조항: 이것은 법률 자문이 아닙니다. 법률과 판례는 변경됩니다. 귀하의 특정 상황에 대해 항상 자격을 갖춘 변호사와 상담하십시오.

모든 판례
Tort Law
House of Lords
1995

White v Jones

[1995] 2 AC 207

판결 이유

A solicitor retained by a testator to prepare a will owes a duty of care to the intended beneficiaries. If the solicitor's negligence results in the beneficiaries receiving less than intended, they may recover damages in tort.

사실관계

A testator instructed his solicitor to change his will to include legacies of £9,000 each to his two daughters. The solicitor delayed, and the testator died before the new will was prepared. The daughters received nothing under the original will and sued the solicitor.

판결 요약

The House of Lords held (3-2) that the solicitor owed a duty of care to the disappointed beneficiaries. Lord Goff applied the assumption of responsibility principle, finding that practical justice required a remedy for the beneficiaries — without it, the solicitor's negligence would go without sanction and the testator's intentions would be frustrated.

주요 인용문

"The real reason for the decision is the impulse to do practical justice."

Lord Goff

후속 처리

Good law

Established the 'disappointed beneficiary' principle and extended Hedley Byrne to wills cases. Applied in subsequent negligent will-drafting claims.