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Home » Emma McDaniel, abandoned by millionaire father Mark Talbot as baby, wins £123k in court fight over his will – UK Times
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Emma McDaniel, abandoned by millionaire father Mark Talbot as baby, wins £123k in court fight over his will – UK Times

By uk-times.com23 April 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
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Emma McDaniel, abandoned by millionaire father Mark Talbot as baby, wins £123k in court fight over his will – UK Times
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A mother-of-two, abandoned as a baby and explicitly excluded from her millionaire father’s will, has successfully secured a £123,000 payout from his estate following a High Court battle with her stepmother.

Emma McDaniel’s father, Mark Talbot, left her life when she was just eight months old. He subsequently amassed a significant fortune through property investments and successful businesses, becoming a millionaire.

Despite this, his final will, drafted in 2014, specifically disinherited Emma, saying that he had not seen her for two decades and leaving his entire estate to his wife, Rosemary Talbot, Emma’s stepmother.

However, a significant turn of events saw Mark and Emma reconcile five years later in 2019, developing what was described as a “close” relationship.

But Mark died suddenly in October 2022, aged 63, without updating his will, leaving behind an estate valued at £1.75m.

Struggling financially, relying on state benefits, and facing the challenges of raising two disabled children while managing her own health issues, 40-year-old Emma launched a legal challenge at the High Court last November, seeking a share of her father’s wealth.

Judge Caroline Shea KC has now delivered her judgment, ruling that Emma should receive £123,418 from the estate.

The judge highlighted Emma’s financial need and determined that her contributions to caring for Mark and his mother – her grandmother – established a “moral” claim for “provision” from the estate.

The case was heard at the High Court in London
The case was heard at the High Court in London (PA Archive)

London’s High Court heard that Mark had separated from Emma’s mother in 1985. He never met Emma’s brother, Rhys, who was born after his departure. Mark went on to have a 36-year relationship with Rosemary Talbot, now 68, whom he married and with whom he had two more children.

His financial success stemmed from selling a courier business in 1997, followed by a series of property investments and part-ownership of Berkshire estate agents Cricketts. At the time of his death, his assets included a portfolio of rental properties and a £450,000 villa in Portugal.

The court was told that although Emma and her father spoke on the phone when she was 16, they did not physically reunite until 2019 when he initiated contact. This belated reunion blossomed into a “close” relationship, with the pair even holidaying together at his villa.

Mark’s will, made in May 2014, explicitly stated: “I DECLARE that I have NOT made any provision in my Will for my son Rhys Winstone whom I have never met nor my daughter Emma Winstone who I last saw about twenty years ago. I do not have contact with either of them.”

This document remained unchanged despite the renewed bond between father and daughter, prompting Emma’s claim for “reasonable financial provision” from the estate.

Emma’s barrister, Aiden O’Brien, told the court: “Emma is married with two children, both of whom have a constellation of disabilities. The claimant’s husband also suffers from heart and spinal problems.”

He added: “Unfortunately, the claimant also has her own health issues, including spinal problems, autism, ADHD, fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue and burn-out.”

Emma McDaniel suffers from an array of health problems
Emma McDaniel suffers from an array of health problems (Champion News)

The court heard that Emma and her family live in a three-bedroom housing association property, relying on a “complicated cocktail of state support, including Universal Credit, PIP, Child Benefit and Disability Living Allowance”, supplemented by her modest business income.

Rosemary Talbot contested the claim, saying that Mark had been unequivocal in his desire for his children not to inherit from his estate.

She also argued that the estate represented their “joint efforts”, as his business focus had “stopped Rosemary’s earning ability” and effectively served as her “pension”.

In her judgment, Judge Shea acknowledged the profound impact of Mark’s death on both women, noting that Rosemary’s “very low mood” was exacerbated by Emma’s legal action. However, she dismissed Rosemary’s suggestion that the reconciled relationship between Mark and Emma was merely a friendship rather than a genuine father-daughter bond.

“It is true that the relationship was short, but both Mark and Emma were conducting themselves in accordance with an expectation that it would continue into the future,” the judge said.

She concluded that it was “unreasonable that the effective provisions governing Mark’s estate did not make provision for Emma’s maintenance”.

Judge Shea described Emma as a “necessitous claimant”, whose financial circumstances were “severely restricted to providing little – if any – more than subsistence for herself and her family”.

Rosemary Talbot contested her stepdaughter's claim
Rosemary Talbot contested her stepdaughter’s claim (Champion News)

She added that Emma was “just able to make ends meet, but only by dint of either depriving herself and her family of any small luxuries or going into debt to afford them, and with no possibility beyond further debt of meeting any unexpected expenses.”

The judge identified a “special circumstance” that tipped the balance in Emma’s favour: her “caring contributions, extending not only to her own children but to Mark and – both before and after the reunion, and since Mark’s death – his mother, Barbara”.

She praised Emma’s “generous attitude” and the “open hearted and generous connection that quickly led to Emma becoming a significant part of Mark’s life”.

Judge Shea said that the “strength of the bond that grew so quickly, and which showed every sign of continuing, gives the case a quite different flavour from other so-called estrangement cases”. She concluded that Emma’s qualities and their close father-daughter relationship elevated the situation “to the moral dimension, in which matters of love, duty, affection, care and respect operate”.

The judge also considered Rosemary’s financial position, noting she was “both well provided for by Mark’s estate and a woman of considerable wealth in her own right”. She concluded that an award to Emma would not compromise Rosemary’s standard of living or deprive her of the bulk of her inheritance.

The court subsequently awarded Emma a payout of £123,418 from her father’s estate.

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