If you become incapacitated and can no longer manage your financial
affairs, you should have a power of attorney, or POA, so that some other
person you trust has the authority to act on your behalf for the many
financial transactions necessary to maintain your assets and financial
good standing.
However, you should not wait until you
become incapacitated to execute a POA, because it may be too late. If
you become mentally incapacitated and do not have a POA, the court may
appoint a guardian over your affairs.
Your court-appointed
guardian may not be the person you would have chosen, especially if
there is a dispute among your family members. A guardian has whatever
powers the court gives them. This may be very different than the powers
you would want them to have.
A POA gives you, the
"principal," better control over your future, where you decide who will
be your "agent," or the person authorized to act for you in the event of
an accident or illness. You define the powers and authority your agent
will have. Many of these powers are practical and are concerned with
routine financial activities. POAs permit your agent to manage your
money and property. The agent can pay bills, make investments and even
sell your property if necessary.
A skillfully prepared POA with asset protection authority can protect
your family's financial security in the event of your incapacity. It is
an extremely important and relatively inexpensive document. However,
great consideration needs to be given to who will be granted the powers
and under what terms, because it can be the vehicle for inappropriate
use of assets by an unlawful agent. Nevertheless, every responsible
adult should have a POA.
In January 2015, Pennsylvania
updated the POA law (Act 95) which has several significant changes. Act
95 tries to strike a balance, which gives you the ability to give your
agent the powers you desire him or her to have but which also helps
prevent, detect and prosecute abuse by the agent.
For
instance, Act 95 imposes duties to keep the agent's and principal's
funds separate, to keep a record of all receipts, disbursements and
transactions made on behalf of the principal and to attempt to preserve
the principal's estate plan. However, if you do not want these duties
imposed on your agent, they may be waived or released by the principal
in the POA document.
The principal signs a notice form that
contains state-mandated information about the significance of the POA.
The updated language in the notice warns the principal that a grant of
broad authority may allow the agent to give away the principal's
property while the principal is alive or change how the principal's
property is distributed at death.
The agent signs an
acknowledgment form accepting the duties that go with acting as an agent
and agreeing to act in conformity with the principal's expectations, in
good faith and only within the scope of the authority granted in the
document. The agent acknowledgement must be in conformity with Act 95's
new language. An agent has no authority to act until he or she has
signed this acknowledgment and it is affixed to the POA document.
Before
Act 95, there was no requirement that a POA be notarized or even
witnessed. Beginning with documents signed on or after Jan. 1, 2015, a
POA must be notarized and have two qualified witnesses, which means that
they are above the age of 18 and cannot be the notary or the agent.
This permits the POA to be recorded if desired.
The law
also attempts to reduce the potential for financial abuse by prohibiting
your agent from taking certain actions unless they are specially
authorized in your POA. These "hot powers" include actions that have the
potential to dissipate your property or change your estate plan, such
as making a gift on your behalf or changing a beneficiary designation on
an insurance policy or IRA. If you want your agent to have any of these
powers, the authority must be set out in your POA document. Many of
these powers are practical to have as we age and are concerned about
sheltering our assets from long-term care costs.
A POA is
useful only if it will be accepted by the financial institution or other
third party to whom it is delivered. So the law includes provisions
that can penalize a third party for refusing to accept your POA as well
as to protect you from abuse by permitting those third parties to
question a POA when they have a suspicion that something is amiss or
your agent is acting beyond the granted powers.
If the
agent has fully complied with the requirements of the law, a third party
that refuses to comply with the proper instructions of the agent is
subject to liability for financial harm caused to the principal by the
refusal and to a court-order a mandated acceptance of the POA.
Act
95 does not require that you get a new POA, but it makes sense to have
your current document reviewed by a lawyer who is familiar with the new
law. Legally, pre-2015 POAs remain valid.
Practically, your
old POA may not be the best document for you or your agent. You may
want to update your POA so that it will more likely accepted by your
bank and other financial institutions without questions.
POAs
can vary in terms of scope and complexity. Some financial powers of
attorney are very simple and may not contain the necessary powers to
achieve desired results. If you have not recently updated your power of
attorney, now may be a good time to visit your elder law attorney for a
review.
Sean D. Curran, Curran Estate Law, focuses his
practice, 222 N. Kenhorst Blvd., exclusively on estate and elder law, at
www.curraneelaw.com.
Full Article & Source:
Aging Well: Why do you need a power of attorney?
2 comments:
Thank you for always raising awareness NASGA.
Thank you for thi great advice
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