Executors Lose Estate Indemnity After Hostile Removal Litigation

Where executors resist removal in proceedings characterised as hostile litigation, they risk losing their estate indemnity entirely — particularly where the court finds they litigated on their own behalf rather than for the estate’s benefit.

Executor estate indemnity lost after hostile removal litigation in Chancery Division
In Dorothy House v Helme [2026] EWHC 75 (Ch), HHJ Paul Matthews determined costs issues following the defendants’ concession that they should be removed as executors. The claimants, residuary beneficiary charities, sought their costs on the indemnity basis. Applying Excelsior Commercial & Industrial Holdings Ltd v Salisbury Hammer Aspden and Johnson [2002] EWCA Civ 879, the court found the defendants’ litigation conduct “out of the norm”, including accelerating a property exchange (inferring this was to pre-empt an injunction), serving evidence late and without permission, and refusing reasonable offers to retire. Costs were awarded on the indemnity basis. On the defendants’ claim for an indemnity from the estate under the Trustee Act 2000 s.31 and CPR PD46 para 1, the judge held they were not entitled. The litigation was hostile, conducted on the defendants’ own behalf, not the estate’s. Alternatively, any indemnity was lost as costs were not “properly incurred” due to administration misconduct including delay, self-dealing, and conflict of interest.

In my judgment, the circumstances of this case clearly demonstrate that the claim and application made by the claimants on 12 December 2025 were hostile litigation. This litigation was at the outset resisted vigorously by the defendants, who challenged all the claimants’ various complaints about their behaviour, saw no reason for their being removed, and refused to consent to such an order. The fact that they later changed their mind does not take away from that fact. In my judgment, the defendants were never entitled to an indemnity in respect of the costs of this litigation, because they entered into it and conducted it on their own behalf, and not on that of the estate.

Citations

Fernandez v Fernandez [2025] EWHC 2373 (Ch) The case confirmed that the welfare of the beneficiaries is the paramount consideration when determining whether to remove personal representatives under section 50 of the Administration of Justice Act 1985. Letterstedt v Broers (1884) 9 App Cas 371 The Privy Council held that trustees may be removed if their continuance would prevent the proper execution of the trusts, even absent established misconduct. The Thomas and Agnes Carvel Foundation v Carvel [2008] Ch 395 The High Court confirmed that the principles for removing trustees apply equally to personal representatives; the welfare of the beneficiaries is the guiding standard. Harris v Earwicker [2015] EWHC 1915 (Ch) The court summarised relevant principles under section 50, emphasising that personal representatives may be replaced where their continuing in office impedes proper estate administration. Long v Rodman [2019] EWHC 753 (Ch) The Chief Master held that breakdown in relations and conflicts of interest justified removal, and clarified that factual disputes rarely necessitate trial in section 50 applications. Schumacher v Clarke [2019] EWHC 1031 (Ch) The court reaffirmed that showing a good arguable case of misconduct may suffice to engage section 50 jurisdiction and lead to changes in personal representatives. Cancer Research Campaign v Ernest Brown & Co [1998] PNLR 592 The High Court held that an executor owes no legal duty to notify residuary beneficiaries of their entitlement under a will. Re Lewis [1904] 2 Ch 656 The Court of Appeal affirmed that, in the absence of a specific provision, an executor is under no duty to give notice of a legacy to beneficiaries. Brown v Executors of the Estate of HM Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother [2008] 1 WLR 2327 The Court of Appeal referenced with apparent approval but without detailed analysis the rule that executors are not obliged to inform legatees of gifts under a will. Smith v Michelmores Trust Corporation [2021] EWHC 1521 (Ch) The court held that fiduciaries are entitled to indemnity for costs properly incurred when acting on behalf of the estate, but may lose that right through misconduct or acting unreasonably. Price v Saundry [2019] EWCA Civ 2261 The Court of Appeal clarified that indemnity arises for properly incurred costs, which means not improperly incurred, and that unreasonable conduct may justify disallowing indemnity. Shufflebotham v Shuff-Wentzel [2025] EWHC 3321 (Ch) The High Court confirmed that fiduciaries defending removal claims may be indemnified for their costs unless litigation is hostile or their conduct unreasonable or in breach of duty. Hanson v Coleman [2025] EWHC 116 (Ch) The court held that whether fiduciaries are entitled to indemnity for litigation costs depends on whether they acted reasonably and in the interests of the estate or trust. Excelsior Commercial & Industrial Holdings Ltd v Salisbury Hammer Aspden and Johnson [2002] EWCA Civ 879 The Court of Appeal explained that indemnity costs may be awarded where conduct is outside the norm, and outlined the distinctions from standard costs orders.

Key Points

  • A fiduciary’s right to indemnity from the trust fund for litigation costs is contingent on the costs being incurred when acting on behalf of the trust or estate. Where litigation is hostile and the fiduciary is defending their own position or conduct, the costs are not incurred on behalf of the estate and the indemnity is not engaged. [74, 76]
  • A fiduciary’s right to indemnity for costs can be lost if the costs were not ‘properly incurred’. This means ‘not improperly incurred’, and costs may be improperly incurred due to misconduct, which includes not only dishonesty but also unreasonable conduct in the administration of the estate. [50, 74, 77]
  • In determining whether to award costs on the indemnity basis, the court considers whether there is conduct or a circumstance which takes the case out of the norm. Conduct in the litigation that is designed to pre-empt the court’s process, such as accelerating a transaction after being put on notice of an injunction application, can justify such an award. [54, 72-73]
  • The character of proceedings for the removal of a personal representative must be assessed to determine costs consequences. An opposed removal application will frequently constitute hostile ‘beneficiaries’ dispute’ litigation, in which the general rule that costs follow the event applies, rather than costs coming from the estate. [52, 76]
  • Where a fiduciary is ordered to pay the costs of another party, they are not automatically entitled to recoup those costs from the estate under their indemnity. The court must first be satisfied that the costs of defending the litigation were themselves properly incurred on behalf of the estate. [52, 74]

"My conclusion is that the defendants’ conduct of the proceedings has indeed been out of the norm. Not only was there the acceleration of the exchange of contracts to avoid the possibility of an injunction to prevent that happening, without any notice that it would take place, but the defendants did not serve their evidence in complete form on the claimants by the date to which their counsel had agreed, and they then served further evidence for which they had no permission. The defendants also refused more than one offer from the claimants to be removed without paying their costs. It may perhaps be that their solicitors do not have much experience of this kind of High Court litigation. But that is a matter between the defendants and their solicitors, and is not an answer to the claimants’ submission. In my judgment, the defendants must pay the claimants’ costs on the indemnity basis."

Key Findings In The Case

  • The court found that the defendants conducted the litigation on their own behalf and not on behalf of the estate, particularly because they opposed the claimants’ application to be removed until shortly before the hearing, meaning the costs of their defence did not attract an indemnity from the estate fund [74, 75, 76].
  • The court held that, even if the defendants’ litigation costs had initially been incurred on behalf of the estate, their misconduct—specifically unreasonable delay in administering the estate and failures relating to the sale of the Farm—meant those costs were not “properly incurred” and therefore not indemnifiable from the estate [74, 77].
  • The defendants were ordered to pay the claimants’ costs of the removal proceedings, including the injunction application, on the indemnity basis, as their conduct in the litigation—such as accelerating exchange of contracts after being put on notice of an injunction—was “out of the norm” and sought to pre-empt the court’s supervisory jurisdiction [72–73].
  • The court determined that the removal application constituted hostile, adversarial litigation, rather than a non-contentious trust dispute, and that the general rule on costs (that they follow the event) applied, displacing any presumption in favour of estate-funded costs for either party [52, 76].
  • The defendants’ refusal to accept offers from the claimants allowing them to step down from office without liability for costs, together with their failure to comply with directions and submission of unauthorised evidence, further supported the finding that they should bear the costs personally and not be indemnified from the estate [73].

"If I were wrong in holding that the defendants incurred the costs of this litigation on their own behalf, I would nonetheless have held that they should be deprived of that indemnity. In my judgment, the lengthy delays in the administration of this estate, and in particular in the sale of the Farm, amount to misconduct by the defendants, as seriously unreasonable behaviour, so that the costs of the litigation were not properly incurred."

The High Court’s decision in Dorothy House v Helme [2026] EWHC 75 (Ch) confirms that executors who defend removal applications on their own behalf, rather than for the estate’s benefit, have no right to an indemnity from the estate for their litigation costs.

Background

The claim concerned the administration of the estate of Mary Organ, who died in December 2017. Her will appointed the first defendant, a solicitor employed by Richard T Bate & Co, and the second defendant, her first cousin once removed, as her executors and trustees [§7-9]. The estate was substantial, valued for probate at £4,717,302 net [§8]. The claimants, two charities, were the sole residuary beneficiaries.

The administration was characterised by significant delay. The defendants did not notify the claimants of their interest under the will; although this was not a breach of legal duty, it undermined the claimants’ confidence in the administration [§11, §14, §45, §56]. Instead, the claimants learned of their entitlement from a third party, Mr Outlaw, in August 2020, over two and a half years after the death [§11]. A grant of probate was not extracted until April 2022 [§11]. The defendants attributed the delays to complexities within the estate, including investigating lifetime gifts and dealing with the conduct of Mr Outlaw [§12-13].

A central issue arose concerning the sale of the main estate asset, Church Farm. In June 2024, an offer of £2.2 million was received from Simon Evans and his wife [§19]. Mr Evans was a first cousin once removed of the deceased, making him the second defendant’s second cousin [§7, §19]. Critically, Mr and Mrs Evans were also clients of the first defendant’s law firm, and the firm proposed to act for both the estate and the purchasers in the transaction [§19-21]. Despite repeated requests from the claimants from August 2024 onwards to re-market the property when the purchasers could not demonstrate available funds, the defendants persisted with the sale for approximately 18 months without putting the property back on the open market [§22-27, §65-67].

Frustrated by the lack of progress and concerned about conflicts of interest, the claimants’ solicitors wrote to the defendants on 13 August 2025, enclosing a draft consent order inviting them to step down without having to pay the claimants’ costs [§26]. This offer was refused. Following further correspondence, on 10 December 2025, the claimants threatened to apply for an injunction if undertakings to preserve estate assets were not provided by 11 December [§30]. No undertakings were given.

On 12 December 2025, the claimants issued proceedings seeking the removal of the defendants as personal representatives and the appointment of Stone King Trust Corporation Limited in their place [§1]. They simultaneously applied for an interim injunction to preserve the estate’s assets. Notably, on the morning of the same day, the defendants exchanged contracts for the sale of Church Farm without prior notice to the claimants [§32]. The defendants’ solicitors had stated in correspondence on 8 December that exchange would take place “at the beginning of next week” [§29, §68]. The court drew the inference that the sale was accelerated to avoid the possibility that an injunction would be granted on 15 December [§69].

The injunction application was heard on 15 December 2025. The defendants consented to an injunction preventing them from disposing of or diminishing estate assets, and directions were given for a disposal hearing [§34]. By the time of the disposal hearing on 7 January 2026, the defendants conceded that they should be removed and replaced [§4]. The contested issues before the court were therefore limited to costs.

Costs Issues Before the Court

Following the defendants’ concession on their removal, the court was required to determine three specific costs issues [§5]:

      1. Whether the defendants should be ordered to pay the claimants’ costs of the claim and the injunction application.
      2. If so, whether those costs should be assessed on the indemnity basis rather than the standard basis.
      3. Whether the defendants were entitled to an indemnity from the estate for their own legal costs and for any costs they were ordered to pay to the claimants.

These issues required the court to consider the defendants’ conduct both in the administration of the estate and in the litigation itself. The judge distinguished between these two categories of conduct in his analysis [§72].

The Parties’ Positions

The Claimants’ Position: The claimants argued that they were the successful parties and that the defendants should pay their costs [§72]. They contended that an award of indemnity costs was justified due to the defendants’ conduct in the litigation, which was “out of the norm” [§72]. This conduct included accelerating the exchange of contracts for the Farm after being put on notice of the injunction application, failing to serve evidence in a complete and timely manner, and unreasonably refusing earlier offers to step down without a costs order [§73].

Regarding the indemnity, the claimants submitted that the defendants were not entitled to an indemnity from the estate for any costs [§75]. They argued that the litigation was hostile, and the defendants had incurred costs in defending their own positions, not in acting for the benefit of the estate [§75].

The Defendants’ Position: The defendants did not dispute that the claimants were the successful party, but resisted an order for indemnity costs [§72-73]. Critically, they argued that they were entitled to a full indemnity from the estate for both their own costs and any costs payable to the claimants [§75]. They submitted that their opposition to removal was undertaken in what they believed to be the best interests of the estate, specifically to facilitate the sale of the Farm. They relied on the principle, acknowledged in Shufflebotham v Shuff-Wentzel [2025] EWHC 3321 (Ch), that any doubt should be resolved in favour of the fiduciary [§53].

The Court’s Decision

The court ordered the defendants to pay the claimants’ costs and made determinations on the specific issues as follows.

1. Liability for Costs and the Indemnity Basis: Applying CPR rule 44.2, the judge held that the claimants were the successful party and there was no good reason to depart from the general rule [§72]. The judge then considered whether to award costs on the indemnity basis, guided by Excelsior Commercial & Industrial Holdings Ltd v Salisbury Hammer Aspden and Johnson [2002] EWCA Civ 879, which requires conduct or circumstances “out of the norm” [§54, §72].

The judge made clear that for this purpose he was not concerned with the defendants’ conduct of the administration as such; instead, he was looking simply at the claim and application made by the claimants, and the defendants’ conduct of their side of it [§72].

The judge found such conduct present [§73]. They had accelerated the exchange of contracts on the very morning they were served with the injunction application, having previously indicated exchange would occur “at the beginning of next week” [§68-69]. This was done without any plausible explanation and the court drew the inference that it was to avoid the possibility of an injunction [§69]. Furthermore, they had failed to serve their evidence completely by the agreed deadline and had served further evidence without permission [§35, §73]. Their refusal of more than one offer to retire without paying costs also contributed to this finding [§73]. The judge also noted that it may perhaps be that their solicitors did not have much experience of this kind of High Court litigation, but that was a matter between the defendants and their solicitors, and was not an answer to the claimants’ submission [§73]. Consequently, the defendants were ordered to pay the claimants’ costs on the indemnity basis [§73].

2. The Defendants’ Indemnity from the Estate: The judge analysed this issue by reference to the framework in Price v Saundry [2019] EWCA Civ 2261, the Trustee Act 2000, s.31(1), and CPR PD46, paragraph 1 [§50-53, §74].

There are two elements to the indemnity: first, that the expense was “properly incurred”; second, that it was incurred “when acting on behalf of the estate” [§74].

On the second element, the judge concluded that the defendants never incurred the costs of this litigation when acting on behalf of the estate [§76]. The character of the proceedings was hostile litigation from the outset. The defendants initially resisted removal vigorously, challenging all the claimants’ complaints about their behaviour and seeing no reason for their being removed [§76]. The fact that by 22 December 2025 they had offered to consent to removal (on terms including an indemnity) confirmed that they did not consider the estate’s best interests required their continuation in office [§75]. By the disposal hearing, they no longer opposed removal and were simply concerned to argue about costs and their indemnity [§75]. In these circumstances, the defendants were never entitled to an indemnity because they entered into and conducted the litigation on their own behalf, not on that of the estate [§76].

In the alternative, the judge held that even if the defendants had incurred the litigation costs on behalf of the estate, they would have been deprived of the indemnity because the costs were not “properly incurred” [§77]. Following Price v Saundry, “properly incurred” means “not improperly incurred”, and the right can be lost due to misconduct, which includes not only breach of duty but also unreasonable conduct [§50, §74].

The judge found the following misconduct in the defendants’ administration that was directly relevant to the litigation [§77]:

      • Inordinate and unjustified delay in selling the Farm, including taking an unjustified risk in waiting approximately 18 months for purchasers who did not have available funds [§58, §66-67];
      • Unauthorised self-dealing through the sale of estate machinery to the second defendant without seeking the claimants’ consent [§60];
      • Charging the estate at a professional solicitor rate for non-legal work, namely attending the Farm to water cattle [§61];
      • Placing themselves in a position of acute conflict of interest by allowing their solicitors to act for both sides in the Farm sale, without obtaining the claimants’ fully informed consent until over 15 months after the offer was made [§62-64].

This conduct amounted to breaches of duty and seriously unreasonable behaviour, more than mere mistake [§77]. Consequently, the defendants lost any right to an indemnity from the estate for their own costs or for the costs payable to the claimants [§77-78].

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DOROTHY HOUSE V HELME [2026] EWHC 75 (CH) | HHJ PAUL MATTHEWS | CPR 44.2 | CPR 44.4(2) | INDEMNITY COSTS | STANDARD BASIS COSTS | CPR 46.3 | PD46 PARAGRAPH 1.1 | COSTS OUT OF THE ESTATE | LOSS OF INDEMNITY | SECTION 50 ADMINISTRATION OF JUSTICE ACT 1985 | LETTERSTEDT V BROERS (1884) 9 APP CAS 371 | FERNANDEZ V FERNANDEZ [2025] EWHC 2373 (CH) | HARRIS V EARWICKER [2015] EWHC 1915 (CH) | LONG V RODMAN [2019] EWHC 753 (CH) | SCHUMACHER V CLARKE [2019] EWHC 1031 (CH) | CANCER RESEARCH CAMPAIGN V ERNEST BROWN & CO [1998] PNLR 592 | RE LEWIS [1904] 2 CH 656 | SMITH V MICHELMORES TRUST CORPORATION [2021] EWHC 1521 (CH) | PRICE V SAUNDRY [2019] EWCA CIV 2261 | EXCELSIOR COMMERCIAL & INDUSTRIAL HOLDINGS LTD V SALISBURY HAMMER ASPDEN AND JOHNSON [2002] EWCA CIV 879 | SHUFFLEBOTHAM V SHUFF-WENTZEL [2025] EWHC 3321 (CH) | HANSON V COLEMAN [2025] EWHC 116 (CH) | HOSTILE LITIGATION | BENEFICIARIES’ DISPUTE | EXECUTOR’S INDEMNITY | PROPERLY INCURRED COSTS | IMPROPERLY INCURRED COSTS | MISCARRIAGE OF ADMINISTRATION | CONFLICT OF INTEREST | LOSS OF CONFIDENCE IN EXECUTORS | UNREASONABLE CONDUCT | DEPRIVATION OF INDEMNITY | LEGACY NOTIFICATION | SELF-DEALING | STEP STANDARD PROVISIONS 2ND EDITION | DUTY TO NOTIFY BENEFICIARIES | REMOVAL OF EXECUTORS | DELAY IN ADMINISTRATION | LEGAL COSTS INCURRED BY EXECUTORS | INDEPENDENT PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE | PROFESSIONAL EXECUTORS | APPLICATION FOR REMOVAL OF EXECUTORS