Monday 6 January 2014

Widow, 87, changed her will just NINE DAYS before committing suicide to cut her sisters out and leave £250,000 house to her doctor’s daughter.


A row has broken out between the family of a pensioner who killed herself days after she changed her will to leave her £250,000 bungalow to her GP's daughter.
Lucie Rose, 87, was found dead at her home on November 27, 2010, 11 days after her husband John, died of cancer aged 86.
She originally left her entire estate to her two surviving sisters living in Germany. But solicitors acting on behalf of Mrs Rose's estate discovered she cut her siblings out of her will shortly before she died.
Lucie Rose, pictured with her late husband, John, killed herself nine days after changing her will

Lucie Rose, pictured with her late husband, John, killed herself nine days after changing her will,
Mrs Rose named 23-year-old Sharnika Pillai - the daughter of her doctor Dr Chittaranjan Pillai - as one of two beneficiaries.

Dr Pillai, a Doctor at the Plains View Surgery in Mapperley, Nottinghamshire, treated Mrs Rose and her husband for many years before her death. A financial advisor was also named in the will.
Mrs Rose's family are understood to have reached an agreement with the financial advisor but her sister Elke Schmaing, 69, is demanding an investigation into the new will because she believes her sister was not of sound mind when she signed it.
She said: 'I just want justice, I can't believe what has happened. I've known my sister for a lifetime and this wasn't like her.'
File notes from the solicitors who drew up the new will reveal Mrs Rose wanted to leave her bungalow in Mapperley, to Dr Pillai, 63.
The notes say she wanted to leave her home - worth around £250,000 - 'to her doctor' but the final will left it to his daughter.
The change in the will meant that her doctor's daughter received Mrs Rose's £250,000 estate
The notes state: 'She [Mrs Rose] has decided to leave the property and all its contents and her late husband's car to her doctor at Plains View Surgery.'
The file notes also say that Mrs Rose was of 'sound mind', yet they begin with Mrs Rose making reference to her sisters in Germany, and by the end of the notes she is quoted as saying she had 'no living relatives'.
An inquest into Mrs Rose's death also raised concerns over the handling of the case. 
Nottinghamshire Coroner Mairin Casey criticised police for losing Mrs Rose's suicide note. A verdict of suicide was recorded but Mrs Casey blasted Nottinghamshire Police for 'shoddiness'.
In her summary at that inquest Ms Casey said: 'There may well have been a suggestion that she and perhaps her husband were vulnerable to influence from an outside third party.'
But she stated that she made 'no finding on this issue' and agreed with the professionals - including Dr Pillai - that Mrs Rose was of sound mind when she made the new will.
Plain Views Surgery is currently under investigation by NHS England over 'medicine management' in relation to Mrs Rose.

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