- Track your orders
- Save your details for express checkout
Use this window to add all the registrants you wish to register on behalf of. If you want to attend the course also, ensure you add yourself as one of the registrants. Make sure you press "Save" after adding each new registrant.
On Demand Module | Electronic booklet | PowerPoint Presentation
Note: Access to the online files is via your "My CPD" page. If you would like to purchase multiple packages, please contact us here.
Drafting complex wills requires precision, foresight, and a good understanding of each client’s unique circumstances. This module will be a discussion on how to identify issues, discuss them with your clients, and then draft clear and effective wills. We will be using a case study to identify potentially tricky situations and discuss practical tips for handling those situations to ensure the will accurately reflects your client’s needs.
By completing this module you will:
Authors: Vicki Ammundsen, Theresa Donnelly
Published: 28 November 2024
Pages: 33
The paper titled “Effective Will Drafting – Fitness for Purpose?”, prepared for NZLS CLE Ltd in November 2024 by Vicki Ammundsen and Theresa Donnelly, is reprinted in support of Fleur McDonald’s session at the 2025 Legal Executives Conference.
Effective will drafting is not simply taking and acting on instructions. This is highlighted in the recent decision in Kingford v Mathers in the context of what was described as a “plug and play” approach where the drafter’s role is limited to [filling] the gaps. As noted in that case at [79]:
There was no suggestion that Ms Robb or Ms Turley had any information about Mr Mathers’ prior wills or contracting out agreement, nor does it appear that they asked any questions about that. I am satisfied that Ms Robb might have explained the basics of the 2020 Will (to the extent she understood it) and Mr Mathers had the appearance of understanding the content and being willing to sign it, but they took no effort to examine these issues carefully. The circumstances of the failed cognitive impairment tests in August 2020 required more.
In this paper, Vicki Ammundsen and Theresa Donnelly review recent cases that demonstrate the outcome of wills that have been drafted in a vacuum; without proper enquiry; and without the level of advice that is necessary for a will-maker to give proper instructions.
The preparation of good, fit for purpose wills is a crucial part of asset planning. However, wills have historically been seen as a “loss leader” with “free” or very low cost wills rolled up with other legal services. This has had the effect of de valuing the advisory aspect of drafting wills. The drafting of a will is not an ordering-up exercise. Your job as a will drafter is to provide the client with the fit for purpose will that they need, not necessarily what they say they want. It also needs to be administrable.
It is really important that wills are not drafted in isolation. You need to understand the will-maker’s circumstances, who is who in the zoo in terms of their family, and what the will-maker is wanting to achieve.
These are the slides included in the presentation.
![]() |
||
| Fleur McDonald Fleur Mcdonald Legal, a division of KT Law Limited, Christchurch |