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'The claimants' case failed due to deficiencies in their own evidence, not because I wrongly assessed the evidence of the defendant. Further cross-examination would have gone round in circles and I was not prepared to conclude that she was lying to the court,' he added. Lawyers for the daughters 'put to her several times that she had altered her will and she denied it. That's what she said.'Ī judge dismissed the sisters' application to allow an appeal against the original judgement 'The claimants were not put in a position where they were able to challenge the question of testamentary provision to Juliet and her children within (Pamela's) will,' Mr Coulter said.īut throwing out the daughters' challenge, Sir Julian told him: 'Pamela gave evidence that she had not altered her will and that she would respect Tony's wishes. Lawyers for the daughters should have been allowed to continue cross examination when in fact Sir Julian cut them short, it was submitted.
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Pamela in evidence refused to give the 'private' details of her will, but told the judge she had 'not revoked' any provision which Tony may have made for his extended family.īarry Coulter, for the daughters, asking for permission to appeal, said the judge should have drawn an 'adverse inference' in relation to Pamela's honesty from her refusal to specify the contents of her will. Part of the daughters' claim was based on a suspicion that their stepmother had altered her 'mirror' will after Tony's death, contrary to his wishes, to totally exclude them or their children from any future inheritance after her own death. The court heard Mr Shearer (left) had excluded his daughters from his will because he found their constant requests for money 'distasteful' according to his wife Pamela Shearer (right) Their case failed after Sir Julian heard Ms Shearer, 68, a marketing executive who married Mr Shearer in 2007, insist the girls were due nothing and say they were 'entitled' and 'interested in their father only for his money'. 'Gifted financier' Mr Shearer, the former head of merchant bank Singer and Friedlanderl, died aged 68 in October 2017 from a brain tumour and almost all of his fortune was left in the hands of Pamela.Įarlier this year, the sisters lost a High Court fight against their stepmother after demanding 'maintenance' from their dead father's estate to replace the 'generous financial provision' they expected from him whilst alive. Lawyers for Juliet Miles, 40, and Lauretta Shearer, 38, told the High Court that senior judge Sir Julian Flaux was 'perverse' to throw out their case against their stepmother Pamela Shearer, who was left in almost total control of the millions left behind by their father Tony Shearer when he died. The 'entitled' daughters of a top banker who referred to their father as 'the Chequebook' have lost a second court fight with their stepmother over his £7million fortune.