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MALTATODAY 24 February 2019

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12 maltatoday | SUNDAY • 24 FEBRUARY 2019 NEWS MATTHEW VELLA THE Court of Appeal has overturned an earlier decision by the courts on the refusal by the Strickland Foundation to release documents of the late Mabel Strickland to her heir, Robert Hornyold-Strickland. The court, presided by Chief Justice Joseph Azzopardi, Judge Joseph Micallef and Judge Tonio Mallia, said all files passed on to the Founda- tion must now be disclosed to the courts and to the heir. Hornyold-Strickland, the second largest shareholder in Allied Newspapers, insists his late aunt was persuaded to change her will in 1979 by her testamentary executors – the late Prof. Guido de Mar- co and Prof. Joseph Ganado – while he was living in Eng- land. He has been engaged in a court battle with their sons – the Nationalist MP Mario de Marco and Ganado Advocates partner Max Ganado – to re- lease Strickland's legal files, which he says will prove that his aunt had intended him to be the rightful owner of the Foundation's 78% sharehold- ing in Allied Newspapers. Hornyold-Strickland seeks to have the irregular 78% ma- jority shareholding returned to the estate, claiming that Strickland's key assets were improperly diverted into the control of De Marco and Ga- nado. Hornyold-Strickland also insists that files relating to the improper transfer in 2010 of the majority shareholding in Allied Newspapers to the Strickland Foundation, are also being withheld. These would include a valid instrument of transfer, and de- tails of dividend payments on those shares since Strickland's death. "Essential files, that would help to shed light on Miss Strickland's actual succession planning process and her in- tentions for her Strickland legacy, have been persistently withheld by the original exec- utors, and now, even by their sons and the Strickland Foun- dation," Hornyold-Strickland said. "In deliberately withholding these files, these people are in- terfering with the Court's abil- ity to deliver justice in rela- tion to the legitimate disputes concerning Miss Strickland's estate together with the prop- er ownership of the major- ity shareholding of the Allied Newspapers." The defendants argued that the files could not be handed over to the heir because of legal privilege the advocates owed to the deceased client. But the Court of Appeal ruled that "contrary to a com- mon misconception, the rela- tionship of professional con- fidentiality is intended not to protect lawyers but to protect their clients only." The Court of Appeal said that client privilege could not be invoked in matters of in- heritance and that the sole heir effectively stepped into the shoes of Mabel Strickland upon her death – making the heir 'the client', and therefore within his rights to request full disclosure of all the family doc- uments withheld by the de- fendants. "I am encouraged that the judges upheld our appeal and stated that the Strickland Foundation's submissions were incorrect. The Court stated that the 'rules of proce- dure must be enforced to assist the case in question' to move forward in its search for the truth and that the Court's un- derstanding helps to achieve the necessary aims and that nothing should be concealed that is needed to achieve those objectives," Hornyold-Strick- land said. The defendants – the Strick- land Foundation, Allied News- papers Ltd and the MFSA, which was subsequently joined into the case – were ordered to adhere to the judgement and that Hornyold-Strickland's claim for the files and docu- ments be met. "Perhaps, finally, we will see whether a valid instrument of transfer actually exists to support the 2010 transfer of the majority shareholding in Allied Newspapers to the Strickland Foundation and how Allied Newspapers can justify having previously paid many millions of euros in so- called dividends directly to the Strickland Foundation when it was not even a regis- tered shareholder," Hornyold- Strickland said. "I sincerely hope that the de- fendants will now stop playing any more legal games and will abide by the Court of Appeal's very clear judgement." Court victory for Strickland heir Robert Hornyold-Strickland

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