PacLII Home | Databases | WorldLII | Search | Feedback

High Court of Fiji

You are here:  PacLII >> Databases >> High Court of Fiji >> 2001 >> [2001] FJHC 99

Database Search | Name Search | Recent Decisions | Noteup | LawCite | Help

In re Suruj Dulari [2001] FJHC 99; HPC38626d.2001s (21 December 2001)

wpe3.jpg (10966 bytes)

Fiji Islands - In re Suruj Dulari - Pacific Law Materials

ass=MsoNormal align=cenn=center style="text-align: center; margin-top: 1; margin-bottom: 1"> IN THE HIGH COURT OF FIJI

(AT SUVA)

PROBATE JURISDN NO. 38626

CAVEAT NO. 6 OF 2001

IN THE MATTER OF:

SURUJ DULARI deceased

(a.k.a. Suruj Dulari Singh)

P. Howard for the Caveators

A.K. Singh for the Caveatee

DECISION

On 2 February 2001 this Court ordered that a document appearing to bhotocopy of a will of Suruj Dulari deceased be admitted to d to proof and that probate be granted to be deceased’s niece Shayl Kumari Singh.

On a date unknown to me the deceased’s three sisters entered a caveat in the deceased’s estate. This is an application for that caveat to be removed.

Three affidavits were filed:

(i) & p; &nbp;&nbp;  p; &nnsp;&&nsp; &nbp; Coveat24s, y 2001;<001;p class=MsoNormal style="text-indent: -36.0pt; margin-left: 72.0pt; margin-top: 1; margin-bgin-bottom: 1"> (ii) &nnsp;&&nsp;;&nspp;&nssp;&nsp; Caveatee,ne 2u01;

(iii)&t;"> &nnsp;&&nsp;; saveataveatee, 16 July 2001.

<1"> The Caveators claimed in their affidavit that the will was not the true will of the deceased. They averred that the signature on the will was not the same as that on the deceased’s passport, that the deceased “greatly disliked” the Caveatee, that she did not trust Mr. Veretawatini (the barrister and solicitor who prepared the will) and that she had declared that she would give him no further work. In paragraph 3 of the affidavit the sisters averred that:

“In the conduct of our business and personal affairs we consult closely with each otherare familiar with the ways ways of each other. We have over the years had very few arguments. We are very close.”

What the caveators did not reveal emerged e caveatee’s second affidavit. This was that two weeks prior to swearing their affidavit onit one of the caveators, Shakuntala Devi was indicted on a charge of manslaughter by knifing her sister, the deceased, to death the previous November.

On the third page of her sentencing remarkllowing a plea of guilty by Shakuntala Devi to the charge, the presiding Judge said:span>

“Shiu Dulari is the accused’s and the deceaseister. She gave evidence that all the sisters shared a good good relationship except for the deceased who was universally disliked. She said that she and the deceased had not spoken since 1966 and that the deceased was trouble maker with a violent propensity who had also stabbed one Akosita Rabuli. She said she had not gone to the deceased’s funeral.”

And later at page 4:

“the evidence before me reveals a long bitteationship between the deceased and her sisters which culminulminated in her death.”

In view of the affidavit evidence it was clearly necessary that a trial ld to determine the validity of the will.

On 11 December I heard evidence from Mr. E. Veretawatini and his law clerk Ms. Maureen Gounder.

Both witnesses told me that on the mornin25 September 2000 the deceased who was well known to them and liked by them arrived at Mr. Mr. Veretawatini’s law offices at Nausori. She asked them to prepare a will for her according to her instructions which were then given. About 40 minutes later when the will had been drawn up it was read over and explained to her by Mr. Veretawatini and Ms. Gounder. The deceased then signed the will which was witnessed by Mr. Veretawatini and Ms. Goundar. The deceased then went away taking the original of the will with her.

Both Mr. Veretawatin Ms. Gounder were cross examined by Mr. Howard.

After Mr. Singh closed his case Mr. Howard indicated that he would not be calling any witnesses. He expd that as he saw it the pure purpose of the trial and his questioning had been to investigate whether the will had been properly and duly prepared. He conceded that on the evidence placed before the Court it appeared that it had.

I agree. Having heard Mr. Veretawatini, a highly respemember of the Bar and his transparently honest law clerk Msrk Ms. Gounder I have no hesitation in accepting their account of what occurred on the morning of 25 September . I reject the affidavit evidence of the Caveators as worthless, misleading and false. The inconsistency between the evidence presented by the Caveators to this Court in their affidavit and that presented to the High Court during the criminal trial is so clear as to leave no doubt that lying on oath gives rise to no compunction on their part.

ass=MsoNormal stal style="margin-top: 1; margin-bottom: 1"> Caveat 6/2001 is to be re forthwith.

I will hear counsel on the question of costs and in particular whether this is a proper case for an award on an indemnity basis.

M.ott

Judge

21 December 2001

PJ38626D.01S


PacLII: Copyright Policy | Disclaimers | Privacy Policy | Feedback
URL: http://www.paclii.org/fj/cases/FJHC/2001/99.html