A recent development in the guardianship of Ann Walton James presented in court documents filed last week.
The order calls for a change in the attorney ad litem and an increase in the bond of the guardian.
The order states that the order
appointing Lance Hinson as attorney ad litem should be vacated and that
Lori Chism should be appointed to serve as the attorney ad litem to
represent Ann Walton James in this cause.
“The Court also
finds,” the order reads, “that the current bond of the guardian is
insufficient and should be increased to $115,000.”
The court order calls
for the current serving guardian of Anna Walton James, which is stated
in the order as James Taylor, to increase his bond to the sum of
$115,000 within 20 days of the order and file the bond for approval by
Stone, the judge presiding over the case.
On June 25 a motion to remove guardian
was filed in Titus County by Barbara Ann Reynolds, presenting herself
in the order as the ward’s great-niece, to remove James as guardian; and
Reynolds has also filed an application to be appointed guardian.
Family and Court
Services, Inc. operated by James Taylor was appointed as the guardian of
the person and estate of Ann Walton James in December of 2013,
according to court documents.
Reynolds’ motion
states that in the order appointing Taylor as guardian, the court
required that Taylor post a bond in the sum of $5,000 and that he retain
the remaining assets in safekeeping.
“Taylor later filed
an Inventory with the Court showing personal property assets in excess
of $300,000, but he never increased his bond,” Reynolds’ motion states.
The court records do not indicate the
existence of any safekeeping agreement executed with the guardian,
according to the June motion Reynolds’ filed.
Reynolds’ motion made
a number of accusations against Taylor including him not giving the
wards’ family notice as to his filing for guardianship appointment,
never executing through the courts a safekeeping agreement on the
estate, not filing annual accounts and required reports, attempting to
alienate the ward from her family; and acts that “support a belief that
the guardian has misapplied, embezzled or removed from the (estate), or
is about to misapply, embezzle or remove from the (estate), all or part
of the property entrusted to the guardian’s care.”
On July 20, a motion was filed by Taylor to set aside the order appointing permanent guardianship to Reynolds.
Both that order and another order he
filed, also on July 20, to answer Reynolds’ order to be appointed as
successor guardian called for Reynolds to prove her claims. Taylor’s
July 20 order detailed the process he said he followed to seek out the
ward’s son before asking for guardian appointment.
On July 10, Taylor filed a general
denial of the allegations set out in Reynold’s motion to remove him as
guardian. That motion called for Reynolds to prove her claims, charges
and allegations.
Taylor’s motion set out the specific
denial the guardian’s bond was insufficient, attesting that he had
brought the value of the ward’s assets to the court’s attention in his
inventory that was filed, and that the amount of the bond was set at the
discretion of the court.
His answer also denies that a safekeeping agreement was required.
Taylor’s motion denies he restricted
family members from visiting her and details that in early June of this
year, he (as guardian) had learned that unknown persons had entered the
ward’s room at the nursing home in late May and video recorded the ward,
then posted the video on Facebook, without his (as guardian)
permission.
Taylor also denied the charge that he
had not filed an annual account or an annual report of the person, or
had failed to properly account; the mismanagement of the estate and the
implications that he “has misapplied, embezzled or misused assets
belonging to the Ward.”
Additionally, Taylor’s filed answer
states that Reynolds is not entitled to be appointed guardian of the
ward, because she is related by marriage and not a blood relative.
Full Article & Source:
Judge orders bond increase in guardianship
This is the first I've heard of this case. Thank you NASGA and I hope there's continuing media.
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