If you are trying to apply for a grant of probate, and are informed by the probate registry that someone has entered a caveat, you can take steps to try and have it removed. You will not be able to obtain a grant of probate, or administer the estate, until the caveat is removed.
To challenge the caveat, you have to send a “warning” to the Leeds District Probate Registry. There is no fee for the warning. This document will be sent to the person who entered the caveat, and in order for their caveat to remain in place, they will have to enter an “appearance” at the Probate Registry.
This is not a physical appearance, but is simply a further document which they will have to send to the probate registry within eight days of receiving your warning.
If they do not enter an appearance, their caveat will be removed, and you will be able to apply for a grant. If they do enter an appearance, then the caveat will remain in place.
The only way for it to then be removed is for both you and your opponent to both consent to its removal. If you cannot reach an agreement, then you will have to start court proceedings to have it removed.
If you cannot come to an agreement with the person who applied for the caveat, you should seek legal advice as soon as possible. This is where matters become more complicated. The question of costs may arise and there is a possibility that you could become liable to pay not only your own costs but those of the other person as well.
We can advise you in relation to your dispute. If you would like to speak to us call 01207.655178.
What to do if you receive a warning
If you have applied for a caveat at the probate registry, you may at some point receive a “warning” from them. This means that someone, usually the person appointed as the executor in the Will, has discovered your caveat when they have tried to apply for the grant.
If you receive a warning, you must act very quickly, as you only have eight days from receiving it, to respond. If you fail to respond within this period, your caveat will automatically be removed, and the executor will then be able to apply for a grant.
To respond to the warning, you have to send an “appearance” to the District Probate Registry where you originally applied for the caveat. This is not a physical appearance. You must complete this form, briefly stating your reasons for believing that the Will is not valid, and send it to the District Probate Registry. It is advisable to send it by recorded delivery, or special delivery, to ensure that they receive it.
Once you do this, your caveat will remain in place. The only way for it to then be removed is for either both you and the executor to consent to it’s removal, or the executor may issue court proceedings against you to remove it. If you cannot come to an agreement with the executor, you should seek legal advice as soon as possible. This is where matters become more complicated. The question of costs may arise and there is a possibility that you could become liable to pay not only your own costs but those of the other person as well.