Deceased File Reviews in Estate Litigation: The Role of Independent Medical Expertise

 

Estate litigation occupies a unique space in the intersection of law and medicine.

Unlike most medical-legal files, the person at the centre of a deceased file review is no longer available to be assessed.


The questions remain - sometimes urgent, sometimes deeply contested - but the answers have to be found another way.

 

This is where independent medical expertise plays a critical, and often underappreciated, role.

 

 

What Is a Deceased File Review?

A deceased file review is an independent medical analysis conducted after the death of an individual, typically for the purpose of informing legal proceedings related to their estate.

 

Using available documentation - medical records, clinical notes, hospital admissions, specialist correspondence, medication history, and collateral information - an independent medical expert provides an opinion on questions that couldn't be resolved with a direct assessment.

 

These reviews are not speculative. They are grounded in evidence, guided by clinical expertise, and scoped to the specific legal questions that need answering.

 

 

When Are Deceased File Reviews Used?

Estate-related independent medical reviews appear most often in cases involving:

 

  • Testamentary capacity - whether the deceased had the cognitive and legal capacity to execute a valid will
  • Undue influence claims - where a party alleges that the deceased was manipulated or coerced
  • Capacity to contract - challenges to financial or legal transactions made near the end of life
  • Disputed insurance claims - where health status or cognitive function at the time of a policy decision is in question
  • Causation and health history questions arising in estate or dependant's relief claims

 

In each of these situations, medical history is not just relevant - it can be central to the outcome of the proceeding.

 

The Challenge of Working Retroactively

What makes deceased file reviews both technically demanding and professionally significant is the retrospective nature of the work.

 

An independent medical expert reviewing these files must:

  • Reconstruct a clinical picture from records that were not created for legal purposes
  • Apply current understanding of conditions like dementia, delirium, or psychiatric illness to past presentations
  • Distinguish between what the records confirm, what they suggest, and what remains uncertain
  • Provide an opinion that is defensible and clearly bounded - acknowledging the limits of retrospective analysis 

 

The integrity of a deceased file review depends on the expert being both rigorous and honest about what the evidence can and cannot support. A strong review doesn't overreach. It clarifies what is reasonably inferable and is transparent about where uncertainty remains.

 

 

What Legal Professionals Should Look for in a Deceased File Review

Not every medical expert is suited for this work. The right assessor brings:

 

  • Relevant specialty expertise - geriatric medicine, neurology, or psychiatry are common depending on the file
  • Experience with medical-legal reporting and the standards required in litigation contexts
  • The ability to communicate complex medical reasoning in language accessible to legal teams and courts
  • Independence - credibility is paramount in contested proceedings

 

Equally important is scoping the review correctly from the outset. The legal questions should be clearly defined before the file goes to an expert, so the opinion is targeted, relevant, and practically useful.

 

A Human Context That Requires Professional Care

Estate litigation is rarely straightforward. These are disputes that arise in the aftermath of loss, often within families, and they carry emotional weight that sits alongside the legal and financial stakes.

 

Independent medical experts who work in this space understand that. The goal isn't to produce a document that wins an argument - it's to provide the clearest, most honest medical analysis possible, so that legal processes can proceed on the basis of evidence rather than assumption.

 

In a field where conclusions can affect inheritances, family relationships, and the perceived legacy of the deceased, that standard of care matters.

 

Navigating a complex estate or capacity matter?

NYRC supports legal professionals with independent medical expertise in estate litigation, capacity assessments, and deceased file reviews. Connect with our team to discuss your file.

 

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