Their
parents died six weeks apart. Six years on,
it was brothers pitted against sisters in a dispute over sale of their parents’
Bay of Plenty orchard. In what boiled
down to a dispute over price, estate lawyers resigned over the siblings failure
to take a common-sense approach; getting an independent valuation and selling
to the one brother living on the property.
The High
Court was told Tony and Jutta Firmin purchased bare land at Awakeri, near
Whakatane, in the 1970s, establishing a feijoa and berry orchard.
Jutta
predeceased Tony by a matter of weeks.
He was the sole beneficiary of her estate. On Tony’s death, his will divided his estate
equally between their six children: sons Tim and Tom; daughters Cornelia,
Abigail, Gisele and Petra.
Evidence
was given of son Tim returning from Australia in 2015 to help his parents on
the orchard. He lived in a shed on site,
described as being in poor condition and not rentable.
A below
market wage was paid. For a period, no
wages were paid at all; ‘down payment’ on his deposit to buy the orchard, Tim
was to later tell the High Court.
The extent
of orchard work undertaken by Tim was later disputed by his sisters, claiming
work was intermittent with Tim primarily focussed on breeding schnauzer dogs.
On death of
their surviving parent, Tim offered to buy the orchard for $800,000. Two sisters, acting as estate executors,
declined the offer. His purchase was
conditional on finance, with Tim’s ability to obtain finance or service
mortgage debt both in question. The GST
status of any deal also required clarification.
Daughter
Petra subsequently offered to buy at $935,000.
In the late 1990s, she had a ‘lease-to-buy’ deal with her parents,
planning to assume ownership of the orchard.
The High Court was told no sale eventuated, with the collapsed deal
eventually costing Petra $40,000.
Tim was
given an opportunity to put a deal together at Petra’s now offer price of
$935,000.
Meanwhile,
he was asked to leave their family home, finding somewhere else to live.
Tim’s
response was to file a Law Reform (Testamentary Promises) Act claim stating
their father had earlier agreed that he would have first option to buy. Brother Tom supported this claim. They said their father’s discussions with his
lawyer in the weeks prior to death indicated he wanted to change his will, recording
Tim’s right of first refusal.
Tim claimed
he was entitled to buy at $800,000; a valuation obtained years previously.
Justice
McHerron ruled there had never been any agreement or understanding that Tim’s
work on the orchard would lead to him having a right of first refusal. No ‘testamentary promise’ existed.
Their
father’s discussions with his lawyer merely canvassed the need to ensure he
could remain living on the property, if he sold to Tim before he died. Discussions did not extend to any possible
change to his will, giving Tim a right of first refusal.
The lawyer
said in evidence that their father’s discussions had focussed on the size of
any specific bequest to Tim as compensation for unpaid wages, with $10,000
settled on as an appropriate figure.
This figure
was an underestimation, Justice McHerron said.
He awarded Tim just under $25,000 for unpaid wages. This is a debt owed by his late father’s
estate.
Justice
McHerron left estate lawyers to decide whether Tim should be charged for his
rent free accommodation, living in their parents’ home since their deaths.
His sisters
want the orchard sold, and their father’s estate finalised.
Firmin v.
Porter – High Court (28.11.25)
26.029