Following on from my previous thread:
After answering all their spurious queries and providing much more detail than technically they were entitled to, the opposing side's solicitors have now gone radio silent.
I finalised the estate accounts four months ago and all the other beneficiaries agreed with the accounts and have been paid but despite several follow-ups this one beneficiary (or rather their solicitor) has still not responded at all. The last follow-up was three weeks ago and still nothing; I just want this last £10k paid out so I can close the executor account, archive all the paperwork and draw a line under the whole matter.
The SRA site seems to suggest that solicitor delays are not normally a valid complaint but it seems wrong that a professional firm can ignore you for over four months with no repercussions. Can anyone suggest any leverage that might compel them to reply?
Would it be feasible to warn them that if still no reply within another four weeks then I'll hand everything over to a solicitor who they can deal with moving forward and they will be liable for all those legal costs as all the other beneficiaries have already agreed the accounts and been paid?
Or do I warn them that if no reply in four weeks then I'll just send a £10k cheque regardless and consider the matter closed that way?
Or any other suggestions?
Originally posted by HariSeldon
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I finalised the estate accounts four months ago and all the other beneficiaries agreed with the accounts and have been paid but despite several follow-ups this one beneficiary (or rather their solicitor) has still not responded at all. The last follow-up was three weeks ago and still nothing; I just want this last £10k paid out so I can close the executor account, archive all the paperwork and draw a line under the whole matter.
The SRA site seems to suggest that solicitor delays are not normally a valid complaint but it seems wrong that a professional firm can ignore you for over four months with no repercussions. Can anyone suggest any leverage that might compel them to reply?
Would it be feasible to warn them that if still no reply within another four weeks then I'll hand everything over to a solicitor who they can deal with moving forward and they will be liable for all those legal costs as all the other beneficiaries have already agreed the accounts and been paid?
Or do I warn them that if no reply in four weeks then I'll just send a £10k cheque regardless and consider the matter closed that way?
Or any other suggestions?




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