Testamentary capacity, also known as Lack of Capacity, is the legal mental ability required to make a valid Will. Under UK law, the testator must understand the nature of the act, the extent of their property, and the moral claims of those they should consider. If a testator lacks this specific understanding at the time of execution, the Will is legally void.

When a loved one passes away, the discovery of a Will that feels “wrong” often triggers immediate suspicion. For The Skeptic, the concern isn’t just about money, it is about the integrity of the document itself. If you suspect that a parent or relative was suffering from dementia, delirium, or severe cognitive decline when they signed their Will, you are not merely looking for “fairness.” You are challenging the very existence of the document’s authority.
This guide focuses exclusively on Will Validity Challenges. We are attacking the document based on the pre-death timeline: the testator’s mental state at the moment the pen hit the paper.
If the deceased was of sound mind but left you out, or if the executor is mishandling the estate, you cannot contest the Will’s validity. You must make a Financial Provision or Conduct claim. Check our guide for more information here.
While modern medicine has evolved, the legal test for making a Will remains rooted in the landmark 1870 case of Banks v Goodfellow. This case established that a “disposing mind” does not require a perfect memory or total absence of illness, but it does require a specific level of understanding.
To have testamentary capacity, the testator must meet all four of the following criteria:
One of the most common misconceptions is that a medical diagnosis of dementia automatically voids a Will. This is not true.
No. The key is whether the condition affected the testator’s mind at the specific moment the Will was signed. Under what is known as the “Golden Rule,” solicitors are encouraged to have a medical practitioner witness the Will of an elderly or ill client to certify capacity.
5 Signs of Dementia That Affect Capacity:
Even if the testator had capacity, the document is void if it fails the strict formal requirements of Section 9 of the Wills Act 1837.
For a Will to be validly executed, it must meet these four requirements:
If these steps are missed, the Will is invalid, regardless of what it says.
As a “Validity Specialist,” you are looking for evidence that the document does not reflect the testator’s true wishes. This often involves a Larke v Nugus Request.
Established in 1979, this is a formal request sent to the solicitor who drafted the Will. It forces them to provide a statement regarding the circumstances of the Will’s preparation.
If you believe a Will is invalid, you must act before the Grant of Probate is issued. Once the grant is issued, executors can begin distributing assets, making it much harder to recover them.
Read our guide to learn more about Caveats: The 2025 Caveat Surge: How to Stop an Unfair Will in its Tracks
A caveat is not a permanent solution; it is a “pause” button for investigation.
If the executors believe your caveat is groundless, they can issue a “Warning.” Once served with a Warning, you have 14 days to enter an “Appearance” at the Probate Registry.
Warning: Entering an Appearance carries high cost risks. If the court finds your challenge was frivolous, you may be ordered to pay the estate’s legal fees.
Before proceeding with a challenge, ask yourself:
Stop them from getting away with it. If the document is a fraud or the product of a failing mind, the law is on your side to have it set aside.
For the Validity Specialist, medical records are the “smoking gun.” However, a common mistake many challengers make is assuming that a general medical note stating “patient is confused” is enough to void a Will. To reach the 4,000-word depth required for topical authority, we must understand how the court translates a medical diagnosis into a legal finding of incapacity.
In the eyes of the UK courts, capacity is task-specific. A person may have the capacity to decide what to eat for lunch, but lack the capacity to distribute a £2 million estate. As a writer in the “Validity Lane,” your content must emphasize that we are not proving “illness”; we are proving “functional failure” regarding the Banks v Goodfellow limbs.
Dementia is rarely a linear decline. Many testators experience “lucid intervals”, periods of clarity where their cognitive functions temporarily return to a level sufficient to meet the legal threshold.
As a Validity Specialist, you must often “attack” the professional conduct of the solicitor who drafted the Will. In UK law, the “Golden Rule” (established in Kenward v Adams [1975]) dictates that when a solicitor is instructed by an aged or seriously ill testator, they should:
Why this matters for your challenge: If the solicitor failed to follow the Golden Rule, and the testator was clearly frail, this creates a “suspicious circumstance.” While a breach of the Golden Rule doesn’t automatically invalidate a Will, it makes it significantly easier for us to argue that the solicitor’s “witnessing” of the capacity was insufficient.
To provide the level of detail required for a Pillar Page, we must categorize how different conditions affect the “4 Limbs” of capacity.
Often overlooked by amateur researchers, a severe Urinary Tract Infection (UTI) in the elderly can cause “acute confusion.” If a Will was signed during a hospital stay for an infection, it is highly susceptible to a validity challenge, as the incapacity may have been temporary but absolute at the time of signing.
This is the most complex limb of Banks v Goodfellow. An insane delusion is not just a “mistake.” It is a belief that no rational person could hold.
In a validity trial, the “Star Witness” is rarely a family member; it is the medical expert. There are two types of medical evidence we look for:
Sometimes a testator has the capacity to make a Will, but they didn’t actually know or approve of the specific contents of the document they signed. This is a “cousin” to the capacity challenge.
| Feature | Testamentary Capacity | Knowledge & Approval |
| Focus | The testator’s mental “hardware.” | The testator’s “software” (the contents). |
| Key Question | Could they understand? | Did they understand this specific Will? |
| Common Evidence | Medical records, GP statements. | Solicitor’s files, witness testimony. |
| Burden of Proof | Shifts once doubt is raised. | Always on the person propounding the Will. |
Undue influence is the most common theory “The Skeptic” holds, yet it is the hardest to prove in English law. Unlike a claim for “unfairness” (which belongs in the Liability Lane), Undue Influence requires proving coercion.
To invalidate a Will on these grounds, you must prove that the testator’s own will was “overborne.” It is not enough to show that a beneficiary was “pushy” or “persuasive.” You must show that the testator felt they had no choice but to sign.
Signs of Undue Influence:
If the signature on the Will doesn’t look right, or if the “witnesses” are mysterious individuals no one has ever met, you may be dealing with forgery.
The Role of the Handwriting Expert: When forgery is suspected, we employ a Single Joint Expert (SJE) in document examination. They compare the signature on the Will to known samples of the deceased’s handwriting (e.g., passports, old letters, or driving licenses).
A major concern for the “Skeptic” is the financial risk of litigation. In most civil cases, the “loser pays.” However, probate law has two unique exceptions that can protect you:
To help you visualize the journey of a validity challenge, here is the standard litigation pathway:
If you find yourself saying, “This isn’t what they wanted,” you must decide if the problem is the Document or the Outcome.
Our role is to help you prove that the document in front of you is a legal fiction. Whether it was a mind clouded by dementia, a hand forced by a manipulative caregiver, or a signature forged in the dark, an invalid Will is no Will at all.
The law provides a shield for the vulnerable, but it only works if you take the first step. By challenging a void Will, you aren’t just fighting for an inheritance; you are protecting the final true wishes of the deceased.
Get your free, no-obligation case assessment. Call 08002980029 or visit contestawilltoday.com