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Tenacious Stoeckert heads to Privy Council
published: Tuesday | July 22, 2003

HELGA STOECKERT, co-owner of the Four Seasons Hotel, Ruthven Road, St. Andrew, is asking the United Kingdom Privy Council to determine who is entitled to the £200,000 (J$14 million) in a joint account in her name and that of her former lover, the late Paul H. Geddes, co-founder of Desnoes and Geddes (now Red Stripe) Ltd.

Miss Stoeckert, 69, who was the claimant in Jamaica's first palimony suit, got leave yesterday from the Court of Appeal to challenge in the UK Privy Council, a court ruling last year that she was not entitled to the money which is in the Royal Bank of Canada Europe Ltd., London, England.

The Supreme Court had ruled in August 2002 that the money belonged to the Geddes estate and the Court of Appeal upheld the ruling. Miss Stoeckert will be asking the Privy Council to interpret the mandate in relation to the joint account at the bank.

Mr. Geddes and Miss Stoeckert were lovers for 32 years, when he ended the relationship in April 1991 and later that year, married Margie Piper, an American who was 36 years old then.

In 1992, Miss Stoeckert filed a palimony suit against Mr. Geddes, contending that there was an agreement, arrangement, understanding or common intention between her and Mr. Geddes that she should have a beneficial interest in his assets. Mr. Geddes denied that there was any such intention.

The Supreme Court awarded Miss Stoeckert one-sixth of Mr. Geddes' assets. Mr. Geddes appealed and won. Miss Stoeckert took the matter to the UK Privy Council, which ruled that she was not entitled to any of the assets. The Privy Council did not make any ruling in relation to the money in the bank account in London.

Margie Geddes, executrix of Geddes' estate, applied to the Supreme Court for an order that the money in the London bank should go to the estate.

Mrs. Justice Norma McIntosh ruled in August last year that the money belonged to the estate.

Miss Stoeckert contended on appeal that the judge erred in ruling that the question of the legal and beneficial ownership of the joint account was decided by the Court of Appeal.

Stoeckert and Geddes's estate had made claims for the money in the bank, but the bank is saying that it needs a court order to decide who should get it.

Mr. Geddes, one of the creators of the world famous Red Stripe beer, died in June 1999 at age 89, leaving his widow, Margie, as the executrix of his $600-million estate.

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