Comedian Sean Hughes’ £4m fortune is given to homelessness charity after ten-year authorized saga over his selfmade will

Sean Hughes’ £4million fortune has been given to a homelessness charity nearly ten years after his death, following a High Court delay over his homemade will. 

The British-born Irish comedian, who died aged 51 in 2017, has seen his portfolio of property assets passed to the organisation Shelter. 

He was a keen supporter of the foundation’s work and left it his £1.8million north London home, as well as two other houses worth a total of £2.15million in his will. 

But the handmade document was rendered unclear by some imprecise wording – and sent to the High Court to decide how his wealth should be divided. 

Nearly a decade on, a judge has finally concluded the comic, who never married but has two brothers, Alan and Martin, intended to bequeath the properties to Shelter.

They include Mr Hughes’ former home on Glasslyn Road, Crouch End, and two more in nearby Edison Avenue and Elder Avenue, worth £1.5million and £650,000 each.

His will ended up before the High Court because he drafted it using an online platform, without legal assistance, which left it worded vaguely.

The central problem was a section which saw him bequeath ‘my three houses to Shelter’. 

Sean Hughes (pictured in 2013), who died aged 51 in 2017, has seen his £4million portfolio of property assets passed to the homelessness charity Shelter

The comedian left the foundation his £1.8million north London home, and two other houses nearby, worth a total of £2.15million in his will. (Pictured: Hughes’ property on Edison Avenue)

This became an issue because he in fact only owned one home, while two others were in the name of a company of which he was the only shareholder. 

Although his family agreed the shares in the company – and therefore the properties – should go to the charity, the case had to be referred to a judge to decide. 

After a short hearing conducted via videolink, Master Iain Pester concluded the ‘correct construction of the will’ was that the shares be passed to Shelter. 

Had the judge declared otherwise, the two properties would have gone into Mr Hughes’ residuary estate to be held on trust for his wider family. 

Barrister Aidan Briggs, for the executor of the will, and Alexander Learmonth KC, for Shelter, said his family and the charity agreed Shelter was the correct beneficiary. 

Speaking afterwards, Andy Harris, the charity’s director of income generation, said: ‘Sean Hughes was a passionate supporter of Shelter’s work, and we are enormously grateful for the generous gift left in his will. 

‘We have worked closely with Sean’s family to ensure his wishes are honoured. 

‘Gifts left in wills are a vital source of income for Shelter. 

‘This donation will enable us to continue to deliver expert support and advice to people impacted by the housing emergency and to campaign for everyone’s right to a safe and secure home.’ 

Mr Hughes was born in Archway, north London, to Irish parents, but spent most of his youth living at his paternal grandmother’s house in Dublin. 

The legendary comic got his start in the alternative stand-up scene of the eighties, first appearing at the Comedy Store venue in 1987. 

He went on to win the prestigious Perrier Comedy Award in 1990 at just 24 years old for his groundbreaking show, A One-Night Stand with Sean Hughes. 

Mr Hughes (left, with presenter Mark Lamarr, centre) was well known as a long-standing team captain on BBC music quiz Never Mind the Buzzcocks in 1996, serving opposite Phill Jupitus (right) until 2002

His former promoter Richard Bucknall has previously called him ‘a pioneering, groundbreaking comedian who changed comedy with that live show’. 

Unlike others of his time, it featured a narrative arc, rather than simple jokes, and made him stand out in the often highly saturated landscape of British comedy. 

From there, he moved into television, fronting his own award-winning Channel 4 series, Sean’s Show, from 1992, which became a cult hit. 

Mr Hughes then became a team captain on BBC music quiz Never Mind the Buzzcocks in 1996, serving opposite Phill Jupitus until 2002. 

He was soon a fixture of the beloved programme, appearing in 91 episodes across ten series. 

On top of his TV and stand-up work, he also had a stellar writing career, publishing several novels and collections of poetry. 

And from 2002, he made a foray into radio too, presenting the Sunday morning programme on the then-newly founded BBC 6 Music. 

Mr Hughes had confessed to drinking heavily throughout his career. 

Although he quit in 2012, he had begun drinking again before he died, saying: ‘Apparently I’m tedious when sober.’ 

He tragically died after suffering a cardiac arrest in October 2017 – and it was later discovered he had been suffering from late-stage liver disease.