Pink Floyd star, Roger Waters performing on the OVO Hydro stage on June 2, 2023 in Glasgow, Scotland

Pink Floyd legend Roger Waters has comfortably won his late brother’s estate – which includes the million-pound childhood home they grew up in – after a lodger claimed he was a beneficiary in a mystery will.

The 81-year-old singer launched a civil case after his brother John died in 2022 and long-term tenant Lokuliyanage Cabral produced a letter from the retired cab driver which he claimed ‘evidences a will made by the deceased to his benefit’.

The house was the main asset in John’s estate, located in a quiet and leafy street in Cambridge – the city where the band’s members met – which regularly attracts Pink Floyd fans.

As bassist in Pink Floyd, Waters played a key part in the band’s hits including Another Brick in the Wall, Comfortably Numb and their iconic 1973 album The Dark Side of the Moon.

But searches by lawyers for Waters – who has been dogged by claims of antisemitism in the past, which he denies, and has an ongoing feud with former Pink Floyd bandmate David Gilmour – unearthed no trace of a will.

Following a trial at Central London County Court, a judge ruled that John died intestate – meaning his younger brother inherits everything.

Ordering Mr Cabral to pay the singer’s near £60,000 lawyers’ bills, Judge Nigel Gerald said the purported letter was a ‘false claim…simply intended to assert something which did not exist’.

Criticising Mr Cabral for not ‘taking part in the proceedings’, he added: ‘The only proper conclusion I can draw is that the suggestion that there was a will in existence and the so-called covering letter from 2021 were simply intended to assert something which did not exist.

Pink Floyd star, Roger Waters performing on the OVO Hydro stage on June 2, 2023 in Glasgow, Scotland

Pink Floyd star, Roger Waters performing on the OVO Hydro stage on June 2, 2023 in Glasgow, Scotland

The singer launched a civil case after his brother John died in 2022 and long-term tenant Lokuliyanage Cabral  (pictured) produced a letter claiming he was a beneficiary in his will

The singer launched a civil case after his brother John died in 2022 and long-term tenant Lokuliyanage Cabral  (pictured) produced a letter claiming he was a beneficiary in his will

Pictured: The £1million childhood home of Pink Floyd singer, Roger Waters

Pictured: The £1million childhood home of Pink Floyd singer, Roger Waters

‘Therefore, this litigation was caused by improper conduct and improper assertions by the defendant which had no foundation at all.’

Despite the ruling, Mr Cabral insists John wanted him to remain in the house as long as he wanted after his death – a claim backed up by a neighbour, who added he had acted as the pensioner’s carer and was a ‘lovely man’.

There were also corroborated claims that John had asked Mr Cabral to be executor of his will a few years before he died.

Devastated Sri Lankan-born Mr Cabral told the Mail: ‘John said he’d give me the house on the condition it would go to charity after me… all the money goes to a couple of charities. One was Cancer Research.’

Referring to the disputed cover letter to the ‘will’, he added: ‘It was given a long time ago to me. I asked him for that as I didn’t know what the probate rules for these things are as I’m not from this country originally.

‘He told me he was writing a will as he was having an operation and he might go “poof”.’

Mr Cabral, 47, who moved into the property in 2002 and pays a below-market rent of around £400 per month, said representatives for Waters ‘came soon after John died and they took all the paperwork and computers’ from the house.

He added: ‘John’s mum [Mary] treated me like family. Then John took over… It’s been my home.’

Roger Waters on the knee of his mother, Mary - with his father, Eric sitting with his brother John

Roger Waters on the knee of his mother, Mary – with his father, Eric sitting with his brother John

The house was the main asset in John¿s estate, located in a quiet and leafy street in Cambridge ¿ the city where the band¿s members met

The house was the main asset in John’s estate, located in a quiet and leafy street in Cambridge – the city where the band’s members met

Mr Cabral, who arrived in the UK in 2000 to study biomedical sciences at the University of East Anglia, revealed he can’t pay the legal fees as he lost his job as a sales rep for tobacco firm Philip Morris International earlier this month.

‘I just want this to be finished,’ he said, adding he was resigned to moving out.

But a neighbour, who asked not to be named, told the Mail John had asked her to be his executor ‘years ago’ before she later learned ‘he’d got the two tenants to do it’.

She said: ‘He’d always said he’d let them live there as long as possible because they [Mr Cabral and his former partner, who moved out two years ago] were so lovely and looked after him really well.’

The neighbour added: ‘He’s [Cabral] a lovely chap.

‘I asked him if anyone had tried to find the will and he said he didn’t know. I got the feeling he didn’t think it was his place to check into it.

‘If I’d known about it [the court case] I’d have spoken up for him.’

The members of Pink Floyd, Roger Waters, Nick Mason, Syd Barrett and Rick Wright in 1967

The members of Pink Floyd, Roger Waters, Nick Mason, Syd Barrett and Rick Wright in 1967

Mr Waters's childhood home in Cambridge, which regularly attracts Pink Floyd fans

Mr Waters’s childhood home in Cambridge, which regularly attracts Pink Floyd fans

John was the elder of the two sons of teacher Mary Waters and her husband Eric, who died during the Second World War.

The family moved from Surrey to Cambridge, not far from the homes of guitarist David Gilmour and singer Syd Barrett, who together with Roger, then as bassist, formed Pink Floyd in 1965.

They went on to massive international success, recording 45 million-selling album The Dark Side of the Moon and The Wall, which sold over 30 million copies and was adapted into a 1982 movie starring Bob Geldof.

John stayed out of the limelight, however, and died aged 80 in June 2022 without a partner or children.

The legal case began after Mr Cabral lodged a legal ‘caveat’ on the estate.

But Waters’s barrister, James McKean, told the court: ‘The letter is a curious document which the court will rightly treat with caution.

‘Its author and provenance are entirely unknown. On the face, it purports – and fails – to appoint Mr Cabral as executor.’

Mr Cabral told the Mail: ¿John said he¿d give me the house on the condition it would go to charity after me¿ all the money goes to a couple of charities. One was Cancer Research.¿

Mr Cabral told the Mail: ‘John said he’d give me the house on the condition it would go to charity after me… all the money goes to a couple of charities. One was Cancer Research.’

The legal case began after Mr Cabral lodged a legal ¿caveat¿ on the estate after John died aged 80 in June 2022 without a partner or children.

The legal case began after Mr Cabral lodged a legal ‘caveat’ on the estate after John died aged 80 in June 2022 without a partner or children.

There was also ‘overwhelming’ evidence that John never made a will, Mr McKean added, highlighting the lack of any electronic or paper traces of such a document.

Judge Gerald ordered that the caveat be removed and said Mr Cabral deserved to be punished by paying higher rate ‘indemnity’ costs for his ‘false’ claims – leaving him with a bill of £57,820.

‘Where a party raises false allegations they do so at their own peril,’ he said.

Waters is now legally entitled to inherit all of his brother’s estate – although he has donated all assets apart from the property to charity, the court heard.

A spokesman for him said: ‘For more than three years, Roger Waters has been prevented from administering his late brother’s estate due to Mr Cabral’s claim that John left a will.

‘Despite extensive searches, no will was ever found. The court has now ruled that John died intestate, so Roger can finally start to administer his brother’s estate.’

Earlier this month, it emerged Waters could face prosecution after sharing a video declaring support for now-banned pressure group Palestine Action.

And a 2023 documentary by former BBC Panorama reporter John Ware addressed claims Waters was antisemitic, citing remarks he allegedly made including ‘dirty k***s’ and plans to use giant floating pigs emblazoned with the Star of David at concerts.

The musician denounced the claims as ‘wildly inaccurate’ and ‘incendiary’.

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