No.
The executor represents the estate.
What is the difference?
The difference is that the estate is a form of trust. A trust has a legal identity in its own right. The executor represents that trust, or legal entity, as a whole.
Some estates have only one beneficiary, other estates have more than one beneficiary, but the fact is that the executor doesn’t directly represent any of those particular beneficiaries.
The executor’s role is to represent the estate as a whole. The practical flow on effect of this is that often, as part of discharging their duties on behalf of the whole estate, the executor will be considering what is the best interests of the beneficiaries as a whole in respect of some particular issue. This is why it often gets said colloquially that ‘the executor represents the beneficiaries of the estate’ although this is not technically the correct language to use or the correct concept, and these types of statements can create a lot of confusion in the minds of beneficiaries.
As a general rule, none of the beneficiaries of the estate can dictate to the executor what the executor is to do, and none of the beneficiaries can ‘give instructions’ to the executor’s solicitor or dictate to the executor’s solicitor what they want to happen.
It is often the case that an executor, or their solicitor, might contact beneficiaries to seek their views about something, or to see if they are agreeable to a particular proposal or course of action, and they may even request input or information from the beneficiaries about something. This however does not mean that the executor’s solicitor acts for those beneficiaries or that the executor has to do what they say.
If you are a beneficiary and you feel that you would like to achieve a particular goal or raise a particular issue of concern then you will need to get your own solicitor, you cannot expect the executor’s solicitor to do what you ask or to take any steps on your personal behalf.
If there are disputes between beneficiaries or differences in views between beneficiaries, then each of the beneficiaries might have to get their own solicitor.
If someone is suing the estate, for instance if someone is ‘contesting the will,’ an individual beneficiary may need to consider getting their own solicitor to represent them if they want to have a particularly active and personal role in the proceedings.
The executor cannot personally, or via their solicitor, directly represent any of the beneficiaries and they cannot act in a way that prefers the interests of one beneficiary over the interests of another beneficiary unless there is something in the will or the trust deed or some other circumstances which would make that appropriate.
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