Summary:
Evaluation of the validity of a testament is one of the most difficult expert activities as it is not
possible to examine clinically the deceased and because of inadequate or completely lacking
medical documentation. The competence to write a testament is doubtful in the case of a serious
mental disorder such as psychotic disease, obvious dementia or psychopathological symptoms
associated with prolonged exhausting somatic disease with the development of pathologically
enhanced suggestibility. The latter is demonstrated by the authors on the example of an elderly
man who as a result of serious somatic affection succumbed to the intense psychic pressure of his
attending assistant and bequeathed to her under the influence of her untruthful information his
extensive property. The second case-record draws attention to the importance of psychiatric
documentation. In the described case its non-existence made the court accept the validity of the
testament written by the deceased who, beyond doubt, suffered from a psychotic disorder.
Key words:
legal competence to write a testament, pathologically enhanced suggestibility, dementia,
exhausting somatic disease, importance of medical documentation.
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