Ex-head girl who forged headmistress’ will in bid to claim £4.2m estate with 7-bed home loses court battle with family

A DISGRACED ex-head girl who forged her headmistress’ will to pocket her £4.2m fortune has been slapped with a £200,000 fine.

Leigh Voysey, 45, has also been left with a criminal record after being convicted of fraud and forgery at the High Court.

Leigh Voysey was allegedly favoured by headmistress Maureen Renny
Leigh Voysey was allegedly favoured by headmistress Maureen RennyCredit: Champion News
Hill House, in Much Hadham, Hertfordshire was left to Voysey in Maureen's will
Hill House, in Much Hadham, Hertfordshire was left to Voysey in Maureen’s willCredit: Google Earth

Voysey alleged that Maureen Renny, the ex-principal of the private Barn School, decided to leave her entire estate worth £4.2 million, which included her £2.25 million seven-bedroom detached house and the land next to it, to Voysey instead of her relatives. This decision was made to prevent the property from being sold to developers.

Mrs Renny’s sprawling home, Hill House, in Much Hadham, Herts, was until 1998 site of The Barn School, which Ms Voysey attended as a girl, starting as an eight-year-old.

Voysey, now a mum-of-one, claimed Mrs Renny had “always favoured her,” giving her the best parts in class plays, appointing her head girl and prefect and that she “reconnected” with her old mentor by chance during the last three years of her life.

She said the elderly former head asked her to write out a will and organise a friend to sign it on Mrs Renny’s behalf in September 2019, as she feared that her beloved former school building would be sold to developers if she left it to her blood relatives.

But Mrs Renny’s family were suspicious and claimed a previous will from 2016 – benefiting cousins Gillian Ayre, Angela Eastwood and Susan Vickers, and the children of her stepson, Thomas and Katherine Renny – was her last true will.

The case was reported to police and, after Voysey was in October convicted of fraud and forgery, it returned to the High Court yesterday, where Master Karen Shuman gave judgment for the family, pronouncing in favour of the 2016 will.

Giving judgment, Master Shuman described Voysey’s “elaborate story” of reconnecting with her former mentor as “false” and ordered that she pay the lawyers’ bills for the case, which are estimated at around £200,000, with £100,000 up front.

In her claim, Ms Voysey had said she bonded with her former headteacher after visiting her as a carer and then a friend from 2016 and that she wrote her “distant blood relatives” out of her will because she feared they would sell the old schoolhouse to developers.

In papers lodged with the court, Ms Voysey told how she was delighted to find that her former teacher still remembered her when she visited as a carer.

“Mrs Renny remembered exactly who I was, even though it was 25 years since I’d left her school,” she said.

I was scammed by fake ‘lord’ who left me £30K in debt

“Mrs Renny told me that she’d been asking about me during the years since I had left her school.

“The whole experience that day was very touching.

“I worked one more shift as a carer for Mrs Renny, then visited her as a friend after that.

“After reconnecting in February 2016, I visited Mrs Renny when I could…approximately three to four times a year.

“When I visited Mrs Renny, I would make us both a cup of tea and we would talk about my time when I was at The Barn. We both enjoyed that immensely.

“During one of my visits, she asked me what I thought about The Barn, i.e. Hill House, and I said I loved it.

“Mrs Renny said to me ‘I hope it never gets built on’.”

She said Mrs Renny had mentioned leaving her estate to her in a new will, but that she did not want to accept that her former mentor was going to die.

But eventually, in September 2019, the former teacher arranged for two of Ms Voysey’s friends to witness a new will as she did not want anyone to know she was making it.

“Mrs Renny asked me to complete the 2019 will and dictated to me what she wanted to be written on it,” she said.

However, members of Mrs Renny’s family were suspicious of the claims about the 2019 will and contested the case, as well as reporting it to police.

“It is denied that the claimant had any ongoing acquaintance with the deceased after leaving The Barn School,” said their barrister Kate Selway KC.

“It is averred that the only other material time that the deceased and the claimant met was on 19th February 2016 when the claimant was working as a carer…and worked a lunchtime shift looking after the deceased that day.

“The claimant cared for the deceased only once for a few hours over lunchtime on 19th February 2016.

“The claimant undertook no more shifts as a carer for the deceased and never visited the deceased again.”

She said the 2019 will was in Ms Voysey’s handwriting and witnessed by two of her friends, who were not known to Mrs Renny.

Mr Shuman giving summary judgment for Mrs Renny’s family on their claim that the 2016 will was her last true will, said Voysey’s claim over the 2019 will had been struck out following her criminal conviction.

She said Voysey had put forward an “elaborate story of reconnecting with her former headmistress and that led to a change in the will.”

“She indicated that the witnesses attended her home and she drove them to the deceased,” she continued.

“They met the deceased in the lounge and that’s where the 2019 will was executed.

“What that has proved to be is false.

“The significant change in the backdrop to this case is that the claimant was convicted on 15 October 2024 for forgery and fraud in respect of the 2019 will.

“The conviction for forging the will is admissible in the civil proceedings as evidence of the forgery.

“As a result of that, I struck out the claim because it was based on a false premise that the 2019 will was a valid will, when it wasn’t.”

She then went on to grant probate in “solemn form” of the 2016 will benefiting Mrs Renny’s family.

She said the 2016 will was valid and that there were no concerns about Mrs Renny’s capacity to make it or her understanding of its contents.

“The 2019 will couldn’t be more different from that,” she added.

“It appears to be something taken from the internet or bought from a shop.”

Ordering that Voysey pay the family’s claimed £197,000 lawyers’ bills on the tough “indemnity” basis, the judge told her over a videolink: “You have put up a forged will as being a true will.

“Something is out of the norm when a forged will is used to mount a claim in court.”

The exact costs figure will be assessed at a later date.

Voysey is awaiting sentence over her criminal convictions.

Hill House was bought by developers Hill Residential in March 2021 for £2.25m.

The house itself was subsequently separated from adjoining land and sold for £975,000 in January 2022.

Hill House state on their website that they now plan to build 30 news homes plus a “large public park” on the land they acquired.

Angela Eastwood, cousin of the late Maureen Renny, was in her original will
Angela Eastwood, cousin of the late Maureen Renny, was in her original will
Susan Vickers, another of Maureen's cousins, reported Voysey to the police
Susan Vickers, another of Maureen’s cousins, reported Voysey to the policeCredit: Champion News
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