Ronald Neal

Ronald Neal joined de VRIES LITIGATION LLP for his articles in January 2018 and was called to the Ontario bar in June 2018. Ronald obtained his law degree from Osgoode Hall Law School and his bachelor’s degree from the University of Guelph in criminal justice and public policy. Ronald’s background in the law has been wide ranging, from working with Bay street insurance defence firms to assisting legal clinics advancing human rights in Central America. Ronald brings those experiences with him, along with his love of litigation, to the practice of estates, trusts, and capacity law at de VRIES LITIGATION LLP.

But Everything’s Depending on the Way the Wind May Blow [1]

Can an estate trustee move to strike a beneficiary’s Notice of Objection to Accounts in the face of their Application to Pass Accounts, based on any of the Limitations Act, 2002, and/or laches and acquiescence? This was the discreet, though important, issue considered by the Ontario Superior Court of Justice in Wall Estate, 2018 ONSC […]

Contested Passing of Accounts, Estate Administration, Estate Litigation, Limitation Period, Passing of Accounts

The Claim Not Taken.

The Ontario Court of Appeal’s reasoning in Bennett v. Bennett Estate[1] is illustrative of the fact that if one is faced with two means of advancing a claim (whether they diverge in a yellow wood or not is not important here), one must be careful when deciding which claim to make. Moreover, the claim must

Forms of Relief

I Hate to be a Suspicious Aloysius on You – but Did the Deceased Have Testamentary Capacity?

A recent Ontario Court of Appeal decision (Stekar v. Wilcox[1]) reinforces what is required to prove well-established grounds for challenging a will: suspicious circumstance and testamentary capacity. Background Jerald P. McNamara (the “Deceased”) died on June 18, 2012. His friend of over 40 years, Thomas, stood to inherit his entire estate under the terms of

Capacity, Will Challenges
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