• insights-banner

    In the Press

The Telegraph quotes Tamasin Perkins on dementia cases and incapacity sparking jump in family legal battles

Legal battles over incapacity are becoming an increasingly lucrative source of work for City lawyers as dementia cases rise.

Solicitors have reported witnessing a jump in work from children warring over inheritance and who will care for parents struggling with a decline in cognitive abilities.

It comes as the number of people with dementia in England and Wales is projected to double to 1.7 million by 2040 as the population ages.

Tamasin Perkins, Partner in our Private Wealth Disputes team, explained to The Telegraph that the increasing number of disputes over incapacity is among the most pronounced trends she has seen in recent years. She says:

"Something that is becoming more common – but might not be noticeable because court proceedings are almost always held in private – is that there is a lot of litigation about people who have lost capacity and are no longer able to make decisions on their own behalf."

"Behind the scenes that leads to a lot of litigation about how they should be represented and how to make sure they are okay. When you have those big families where there is a patriarch or matriarch at the centre who has built up a business, it is a big deal."


Read the full article on The Telegraph, here.

Our thinking

  • Seminar: National Association of Independent Administrators

    Events

  • Women in Chancery: Speak with Effect and Influence Webinar

    Events

  • Panglossian or Painful: Tax after the US and UK elections

    Jeffrey Lee

    Events

  • Julia Cox, Harriet Betteridge and Alexandra Clarke write for Tax Journal on who might be considered the ‘winners’ and ‘losers’ from an IHT perspective following the UK Autumn Budget

    Julia Cox

    In the Press

  • City AM quotes Charlotte Duly on the long-awaited SkyKick v Sky Supreme Court decision

    Charlotte Duly

    In the Press

  • Document Production in French Set-aside Proceedings: limited powers despite an increasingly extensive scrutiny of the set aside judge

    Simon Le Wita

    Insights

  • Charlotte Duly writes for World Intellectual Property Review on the Bluebird trademark dispute

    Charlotte Duly

    In the Press

  • Law.com International interviews Robert Reymond on the growth of our Latin America desk

    Robert Reymond

    In the Press

  • Autumn Budget 2024 – Charities – points you might have missed

    Liz Gifford

    Insights

  • Internationally competitive? The post-April 2025 tax rules for non-doms

    Dominic Lawrance

    Insights

  • Navigating the Legal Landscape of Non-Performing Loan Acquisitions in the UAE

    William Reichert

    Quick Reads

  • Autumn Budget 2024: Share incentives

    Tessa Newman

    Quick Reads

  • Navigating the Lion City: A guide to Singapore's business etiquette and superstitions

    Shamma Ahmed

    Quick Reads

  • Global Investigations Review quotes Rhys Novak on the UK government’s new guidance on complying with its forthcoming failure to prevent fraud offence

    Rhys Novak

    In the Press

  • Under my umbr-ETA, ESTA, eh eh… FAO: international visitors to UK from 8 January 2025 – avoid rain and flight anxiety

    Paul McCarthy

    Quick Reads

  • The abolition of perpetuity periods: Time to sound a note of caution?

    Robert Avis

    Insights

  • National Infrastructure Commission’s Report on Cost Drivers of Major Infrastructure Projects in the UK

    Charlotte Marsh

    Insights

  • Global Legal Post quotes James Walton on the CJC's interim report into litigation funding

    James Walton

    In the Press

  • Family Court Reporting Week - supporting journalists to report family court cases

    Dhara Shah

    Quick Reads

  • Passing on family wealth – the Family Law impact of the new inheritance tax changes

    Sarah Jane Boon

    Insights

Back to top