In a nutshell:
Four beneficiaries receive four equal amounts (over £60K each) end of last year.
In February solicitor writes with a new set of figures wanting repayment of £4250 from each of the four beneficiaries.
All beneficiaries complain, and the "care partner" of the firm admit they have made a mistake due to "human error" and reduce amount to £4000 from each beneficiary and waive some of their fees. They say the error occurred because care home fees amounting to £36K are still unpaid - however they provide no proof of this - and they want £16K back from the beneficiaries (£4K each) and will make up the rest from shares which are still to be sold from the estate of the deceased.
The two sets of figures they present are a mess and do not make sense at all as to where the shortfall really lies - the care home fees are shown as a liability in both sets of figures , but we have no proof whether they were paid or not.
I understand the law does make provision for firms to reclaim overpaid inheritance, but their incompetence has caused a lot of distress and we are going to defend this.
My question is: is it best to get the Legal Ombudsman to investigate this issue (they have said we qualify for an investigation because as beneficiaries we are recipients of legal services) or should we employ the services of a solicitor?
Four beneficiaries receive four equal amounts (over £60K each) end of last year.
In February solicitor writes with a new set of figures wanting repayment of £4250 from each of the four beneficiaries.
All beneficiaries complain, and the "care partner" of the firm admit they have made a mistake due to "human error" and reduce amount to £4000 from each beneficiary and waive some of their fees. They say the error occurred because care home fees amounting to £36K are still unpaid - however they provide no proof of this - and they want £16K back from the beneficiaries (£4K each) and will make up the rest from shares which are still to be sold from the estate of the deceased.
The two sets of figures they present are a mess and do not make sense at all as to where the shortfall really lies - the care home fees are shown as a liability in both sets of figures , but we have no proof whether they were paid or not.
I understand the law does make provision for firms to reclaim overpaid inheritance, but their incompetence has caused a lot of distress and we are going to defend this.
My question is: is it best to get the Legal Ombudsman to investigate this issue (they have said we qualify for an investigation because as beneficiaries we are recipients of legal services) or should we employ the services of a solicitor?
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