What is the SQE?
Who is the SQE for?
Costs and fees
Case studies
Dates and locations
Assessment information
The assessment day
Results and resits
Due to inactivity, and for security reasons, you will be automatically logged out of your SQE account in 1 minute.
Press ’continue’ to stay logged in.
The monitoring and maximising diversity survey has been updated. Please return to the survey to reconfirm your answers and complete the new section at the end.
You must do this to remain eligible for the SQE. You will not be able to book your next assessment until you have updated your answers.
A man, aged 75, who is in the early stages of dementia has an appointment with a solicitor to make a new will. The man’s current will gives everything to his wife with a substitutional gift to his daughter if his wife predeceases him.
The man tells the solicitor that he has had a serious disagreement with his daughter and no longer wants her to benefit from his will. He would rather the money went to “a good cause” and wants a charity which is researching cures for dementia to be the substitutional beneficiary if his wife does not survive him.
The man gives the solicitor a schedule of his assets which he was able to prepare with his wife’s help.
The solicitor asks for information about the man’s medical diagnosis. The man hands her a medical report which was prepared six months ago which states that he has dementia. It indicates that, although the man exhibits signs of being forgetful, impairment in cognitive function will be gradual. The solicitor talks to the man about the medical examination and she concludes that the medical report is comprehensive.
What action, if any, should be taken by the solicitor to establish that the man has testamentary capacity?
A. She should obtain the man’s consent to consult a medical practitioner to establish whether he is able to make a new will.
B. She need not take any action as she is satisfied that the medical report is comprehensive.
C. She should place a copy of the medical report with the man’s new will to confirm that he had testamentary capacity when he made his new will.
D. She should obtain the man’s consent to consult his wife to verify the accuracy of his instructions.
E. She should obtain the man’s consent to consult his medical practitioner to establish that the medical report is the most recent that has been prepared for him.
A - She should obtain the man’s consent to consult a medical practitioner to establish whether he is able to make a new will.
Create your personal SQE account and book your assessments.
Find out what happens after passing the SQE and admission to the roll of solicitors.