Billionaire Nina Wang 'not clear' on intention in will, appeal court hears
A court should not rule that late billionaire Nina Wang Kung Yu-sum's fortune should be managed by a charitable trust given that she specified no such thing in her will, the Court of Appeal heard yesterday.
Barrister Frank Hinks QC, for the Chinachem Charitable Foundation, made the remark as the foundation challenged a Court of First Instance ruling that it would hold Wang's HK$82 billion estate as a trustee, rather than as an absolute beneficiary.
Hinks said that when Wang drafted her will in 2002, she stated that she wanted the money to be used for both charitable and non-charitable purposes. But she was not clear on how she wanted the money distributed.
Hinks said the will was "homemade" and not drafted by a lawyer.
"She could have hired one but she elected not to do so," he said. Because of this, he added, "the court should not do what she chose not to do".
Hinks said Wang only stipulated that she wanted to use her fortune to set up a prize similar to the Nobel Prize, and to continue the foundation's charitable work.