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Tories lose £8.3m bequest battle Tories lose £8.3m bequest battle
(10 minutes later)
The Conservatives have lost a battle to keep an £8.3m bequest by a man whose son described him as delusional. The Conservatives have lost a battle to keep an £8.3m bequest in 2005 by a man whose son described him as delusional.
Pharmaceutical mogul Branislav Kostic left the cash in his will in the 1980s. Pharmaceutical mogul Branislav Kostic wrote his will in the 1980s.
But his only son Zoran, 50, contested the bequest, saying his father was "deluded and insane" and he was entitled to the entire estate. But his only son Zoran, 50, contested the bequest at the high court, saying his father was "deluded and insane" and he was entitled to the entire estate.
A High Court judge, who ruled that the Tories could not keep the money, said Mr Kostic would not have left the money to them if he had been "of sound mind". A judge said Mr Kostic would not have left the money to the Tories if he had been "of sound mind". The Tories say they have not touched the money.
Mr Justice Henderson said the decision to leave the whole of the estate to the Conservative Party was "in part the product of the state of his mind".
Margaret Thatcher
However, the Tories argued that there were rational reasons why Mr Kostic left his son out of his will.
The court heard that Mr Kostic had rejected his family, believing they were conspiring against him.
He made the will after saying Margaret Thatcher was "the greatest leader of the free world in history" and that she would save the world from the "satanic monsters and freaks".
Mr Kostic, who was born in Belgrade, died in October 2005 at the age of 80.
His son says his father lacked "testamentary capacity" because of his delusional and paranoid mental illness.
'Erratic' behaviour
Zoran told the court he grew apart from his father in the mid-1980s.
He said he had worked part-time for his father in 1984 and 1985 at his Transtrade business in London where the two shared a partitioned office.
"During the last months [at his father's office] my father stopped speaking to me completely and would ignore me when he came in the morning," he told the court.
He said he last saw his father in 1985 and could not contact him because he did not know where he was. He said at that time his father was "living like a nomad".
Zoran said that before 1984 his father had been "perfectly normal" but he than began behaving erratically.
Affection
He said: "He also began to have paranoid delusions about the female members of his family at this time and slandered my aunt and grandmother, who were both living in Zurich.
"My father was paranoid that the female members of my family were trying to poison him."
Lawyers for the Conservative Party Association earlier told Mr Justice Henderson that Mr Kostic and his son had become estranged and that he was unhappy with his son's career choices.
The party's barrister Andrew Simmonds QC said there was also Mr Kostic's "great and long-standing affection for the Conservative Party and his admiration for Mrs Thatcher".
Mr Kostic set up pharmaceutical and precious metals firm Transtrade UK after being sent to work in London, and became a British national in 1975.
Clare Montgomery QC, representing Mr Kostic's son, said the Conservatives "only benefited because the testator became mentally ill".
Mr Simmonds said that while it was accepted that Mr Kostic had a delusional disorder it was not accepted that this made him incapable of making a proper will.