how to secure power of attorney daughter

by Andres Reichert 10 min read

Can a power of attorney be challenged?

In fact, a power of attorney can be challenged. Banks, investment firms, and medical providers frequently do this. After all, third parties don't want to be held liable for honoring powers of attorney that might be forged, invalid, revoked, expired, or the product of coercion.

What is financial power of attorney?

Having financial power of attorney means having the authority to access and manage another person's monetary and/or property assets. As an agent with financial POA, you have the right to make certain kinds of financial decisions on behalf of the principal (as long as they are in his or her best interests). For example, your parent might give you the authority to pay bills, file taxes, make and manage investments, transfer money between different bank accounts, handle insurance claims, collect outstanding debts, sell or rent out property, or deal with retirement pensions and government benefit programs.

Can you have more than one power of attorney?

However, there can be more than one person with power of attorney because your parent may decide that various responsibilities should be divided up among two or more people. (Frequently, for instance, one agent will handle financial matters, whereas another will handle healthcare issues.)

Is it too late to get a power of attorney?

After all, by the time your parent becomes legally incapacitated, it's too late to get power of attorney. At that point, you have to pursue the more costly and time-consuming option of adult guardianship. That's why the issue of "capacity" is so important.

What is POA in law?

A POA document is generally a written agreement between two people: (1) the principal (sometimes called the grantor) and (2) the agent (sometimes called the attorney-in-fact). The agent is the person appointed to act on behalf of the principal. So your parent (the principal) can grant you (the agent) certain powers of attorney.

What is a POA?

Also known as special power of attorney, this type of POA grants an agent the authority to handle a very specific situation on the principal's behalf. For example, your parent may grant you limited POA to represent him or her in the sale of a particular property or to manage his or her transition to a nursing home or assisted living facility. Your authority as the agent ends as soon as you've successfully completed the defined activity or reached the agreement's specified expiration date. And your powers do not extend to anything other than what is specified in the document.

What happens to a POA when a parent is incapacitated?

So your parent may use it to grant you a comprehensive set of powers to help out while he or she is away from home for extended periods of time or needs your assistance due to other reasons, such as physical illness or disability.

Steven M Zelinger

You cannot obtain power of attorney for someone who is deceased. You would need to be named Administrator of her estate (or executor if she died with a will).

Lloyd A. Pont

I am very sorry about the death of daughter. My sincere condolences. At this point you cannot obtain a POA. Your recourse would be via the probate courts in my opinion so I have moved your question to that section for better review.

Rosemary Jane Meagher-Leonard

I understand your frustration in trying to deal with the hospital and otherwise advocate on behalf of your daughter. I do agree with the previous two attorneys. It does appear that the best avenue to assist your daughter is to establish a Conservatorship...

Stewart R. Albertson

I agree with the previous answer. This sounds like a "conservatorship" matter. You need to seek the advice of an experienced attorney who understands conservatorships in California. More than likely the attorney can file a petition for conservatorship and have you appointed as conservator of your daughter.

Michael John Harrington

You can look at a Health Care Power of Attorney but it has limitation and what you describe sounds more in the realm of possible conservatorship.

What is a power of attorney?

A power of attorney is a document. The person to whom it is issued is the agent or attorney-in-fact of the person who issued it. If it is a general power of attorney then the named person has the power to act in legal, financial, medical, etc. concerning the issuer.

What is a power of attorney contract?

When you hire an attorney that contract you sign is essentially a power of attorney that allows your attorney to act on your behalf in the matter specified; ie a divorce attorney in regards to your divorce. You can have an attorney prepare one for you. I would assume at least some legal clinics can prepare one for you.

Is a power of attorney the same as a will?

In the United States, a power of attorney and a will are completely different things. The power of attorney expired when the husband died. The will has to be probated before the property’s ownership is finally determined. The wife’s separate ownership of marital property is usually an immediate 50% of everything.

Can a power of attorney be cancelled?

Power of attorney is granted by the person, not by a court or other process. However, the court can cancel the power of attorney, and grant a conservatorship in its stead to a more fitting party, if there is evidence of malfeasance or negligence.

What is a power of attorney?

A power of attorney is a document that creates a legally binding agreement between two parties — a principal and an attorney-in-fact. A power of attorney form grants an attorney-in-fact the right to: access the principal’s financial accounts. sign legal documents on the principal’s behalf. manage the principal’s legal and business affairs.

How to act as an attorney in fact?

access the principal’s financial accounts. sign legal documents on the principal’s behalf. manage the principal’s legal and business affairs. As an attorney-in-fact, you must act in the principal’s best interest, and adhere to their wishes when signing documents for them. This means doing what the principal would want you to do, no matter what.

Who is Mollie Moric?

Mollie Moric is a staff writer at Legal Templates. She translates complex legal concepts into easy to understand articles that empower readers in their legal pursuits. Her legal advice and analysis...

image