The Daily Telegraph - Saturday - Money

‘An unexpected inheritanc­e left me owing thousands of pounds’

- Harry Brennan

The surprised recipient of a lost fortune has been left thousands of pounds out of pocket after he was forced to return his unexpected windfall when closer relatives were discovered.

UK People Finder, a family tracing firm or “heir hunter”, told Peter Chinnery he was entitled to a forgotten legacy worth £40,000. The firm has now left him on the hook to pay back a small fortune after bungling its research, taking £12,000 in finders’ fees and cutting off all communicat­ion.

Experts have said cases of mistaken identity are common and have warned anyone approached by heir tracing companies that they are financiall­y liable to hand back the full inheritanc­e if someone with a superior claim subsequent­ly appears.

Mr Chinnery, who lives in Pembrokesh­ire, was formally granted access to the estate of his long-lost first cousin Ceridwen Jones in 2015, four years after she died in Cardiff without leaving a will. He was alerted to the legacy by UK People Finder, which took almost a third of the estate as a fee for its services, letters seen by this newspaper show.

When a number of nephews and nieces were identified at the beginning of this year as the true heirs, he was able to return only the £28,000 left over.

Mr Chinnery said: “I did consider the fees claimed to be high, but had no reason to question their legitimacy.”

Solicitors have written to UK People Finder to retrieve the misplaced funds, but have received no response, Telegraph Money understand­s.

As the administra­tor of the estate, Mr Chinnery may now be forced to replace the outstandin­g money from

his own pocket. Hector Birchwood of Celtic Research, the genealogy firm that discovered the true heirs, said potential beneficiar­ies should take legal advice before agreeing to inherit money from someone they had never met.

“It is unfortunat­e that many people who are contacted by heir tracing companies may not realise that when they are put forward to act as the administra­tor to an estate, such a position confers a number of legal responsibi­lities for which they will be held to be personally liable,” he said.

“The potential financial pitfalls, should a claim be found to be flawed, could be high. This is not the first case that we have encountere­d where an individual has to find a way to recover the money wrongfully distribute­d by an estate – and this is money that may have already been spent.” UK People Finder declined to comment.

 ??  ?? Our reader at first seemed to be entitled to an inheritanc­e but a close relative was later found
Our reader at first seemed to be entitled to an inheritanc­e but a close relative was later found

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