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What clinicians and families need to know about will-making capacity
Table of Contents
ToggleTestamentary capacity is a legal term for a person’s ability to make a valid will. It is not about intelligence, general memory, or even a formal diagnosis. Instead, it is about whether someone understood enough about what they were doing — at the time they made the will — to make that specific legal decision.
Key point: Capacity is always assessed in relation to a specific decision at a specific point in time. A person with dementia or another cognitive condition may still have had sufficient capacity to make a will. |
To have testamentary capacity under Banks v Goodfellow, a person making a will must have been able to demonstrate all four of the following at the time the will was made:
The person must have appreciated that they were creating a legal document that would determine what happens to their possessions after their death. This does not require legal training — just a basic grasp of the nature and effect of a will.
The person does not need to recall the precise value of every asset. What matters is that they had a broad understanding of the nature and approximate extent of their estate — their property, savings, possessions, and any significant financial interests.
The person must have been able to identify who might have a reasonable expectation of being included in the will — typically close family members or dependants. Importantly, they are entitled to exclude such individuals from their will, but they must have been aware of them and their potential claim.
If a person had a false, fixed belief (a delusion) arising from mental illness, that belief must not have influenced the decisions made in the will. Mental illness alone does not invalidate a will. What matters is whether the illness distorted the testamentary decisions.
Example: A person with paranoid delusions who believed, falsely, that a family member had stolen from them might make decisions in their will based on that false belief. Even if other aspects of their cognition were intact, the will could be challenged on this ground. |
Banks v Goodfellow has endured because it was designed specifically for will-making. It reflects the personal and relational nature of testamentary decisions — decisions that are often shaped by family history, values, and individual judgment, not just the ability to process information.
From a clinical perspective, the test maps well onto the cognitive and psychiatric factors most relevant to will-making: episodic memory (recalling beneficiaries and assets), abstract reasoning, insight, and the potential influence of psychiatric symptoms such as depression, psychosis, or delirium.
Crucially, the test sets a functional threshold rather than a diagnostic one. People with mild cognitive decline or early-stage dementia may still meet the criteria, provided their understanding of the relevant matters is sufficiently intact.
The Mental Capacity Act 2005 (MCA) introduced a statutory framework that applies to a wide range of decisions — including financial affairs, healthcare, and decisions authorised by the Court of Protection. Under the MCA, a person lacks capacity if, because of an impairment or disturbance in the functioning of the mind or brain, they are unable to:
The MCA applies when courts consider statutory wills — wills made on behalf of someone who lacks capacity — but Banks v Goodfellow governs capacity to make a will personally. This means the law currently uses two different tests depending on the context.
Feature | Banks v Goodfellow (1870) | Mental Capacity Act 2005 |
Legal basis | Common law (judge-made law) | Statute (Act of Parliament) |
Main focus | Reasoning about the will itself | Functional information processing |
Scope | Will-making only | Wide range of decisions |
Key questions | Understanding, appreciation, absence of delusion | Understand / retain / use-or-weigh / communicate |
Typical use | Validity of wills | Financial, health, Court of Protection decisions |
The Law Commission’s review, Modernising Wills Law, has proposed replacing Banks v Goodfellow with a single statutory test based on the Mental Capacity Act framework. The aim is to create greater consistency and legal clarity across different types of capacity decisions.
However, this proposal is not without clinical complexity. The MCA’s functional model — particularly the requirement to ‘use or weigh’ information — may impose a more demanding standard than Banks v Goodfellow in some cases. Testamentary decisions often involve emotional and relational reasoning that does not map neatly onto structured functional tests.
For clinicians, any reform would likely affect how assessments are structured, documented, and challenged in court.
Whatever legal test applies, thorough and well-documented assessments share the same core qualities. A high-quality assessment should:
Where there is cognitive impairment, fluctuating cognition, psychiatric history, or a significant risk of dispute, a contemporaneous written assessment becomes especially important. Given how frequently these assessments are reviewed retrospectively — sometimes years after the will was made — precision and clarity are critical.
Retrospective assessments — where a clinician is asked to give an opinion on a person’s capacity at the time they made a will, based on historical records — are common in contested will disputes. Clear contemporaneous documentation is invaluable in these situations. |
Banks v Goodfellow remains the governing legal test for testamentary capacity in England and Wales. It is a focused, decision-specific standard that accommodates varying degrees of cognitive impairment while protecting against the influence of delusion and serious psychiatric disturbance.
The Mental Capacity Act 2005 provides a different but related framework, currently applied in the context of statutory wills and Court of Protection proceedings. Proposed legal reforms may eventually align these two standards.
For clinicians involved in medico-legal work, understanding the distinction between these frameworks — and keeping abreast of potential changes — is an essential part of practice. Testamentary capacity assessments carry significant personal, legal, and financial consequences. The goal of every assessment is to replace uncertainty with defensible, well-reasoned clarity.
The following sources are recommended for clinicians, legal professionals, and others seeking a deeper understanding of testamentary capacity, the Mental Capacity Act, and current reform proposals.
Halcyon Doctors specialises in mental capacity assessments, including testamentary capacity, retrospective capacity opinions, and expert medico-legal reports. Our consultants are experienced in cognitive impairment and capacity law across a range of clinical and legal contexts.
Location: Unit 1, Cam Centre, Wilbury Way, Hitchin, SG4 0TW
Date: 5 May 2022
+44 (0)203 7000 163
[email protected]
Halcyon Doctors
Unit 1 The Cam Centre
Wilbury Way
Hitchin
SG4 0TW
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