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Power of Attorney Reform Aims to Stop Banks from Upending Estate Planning

Submitted by Amaris Elliott-Engel on Thu, 10/20/2016 - 18:05

Here's a recent piece I wrote for the Connecticut Law Tribune about reforms to that state's power of attorney law:

Sweeping changes have been made to Connecticut's power-of-attorney law, including making it harder for banks to upend the wishes of people who do estate planning by rejecting power-of-attorney forms.

Reforms to the law came into effect Oct. 1. Leaders in the Connecticut field say this is the first time the law has been updated for decades.

Paul Knierim, probate court administrator for Connecticut, said it has been commonplace for banks to frustrate the purpose of estate planning by rejecting power-of-attorney forms (POAs) at a stage when a senior citizen or a person with disabilities no longer has the competency to execute a form that would meet the bank's liking.

"The whole purpose of a durable power of attorney is to plan ahead … but [when] a bank won't accept the power of attorney the very purpose of the power of attorney gets frustrated," Knierim said.

The law will ensure that people will not have their "long-term estate planning upended by the whim of a bank teller," said Deborah Tedford, an estate attorney with the Tedford Law Firm in Mystic who was involved in drafting the new POA forms.

With the law change, family members can now go to probate court to enforce POAs and be awarded attorney fees and other costs if a bank or another third party is not following the law, Knierim said. The probate courts have been granted new authority to compel financial institutions to accept POAs.

On the other hand, bank personnel can also ask the court to review the actions of a person who has a POA if they have concerns that the person who granted the POA is being exploited, Knierim said.

The law also provides safe harbors to financial institutions who accept POAs, Tedford said.

There is now a POA long form and a POA short form that have been put into the law, said Tedford and Suzanne Brown Walsh, a partner at Murtha Cullina who focuses on trusts and estates and also helped shape the statutory forms.

Connecticut adopted a model law promulgated by the Uniform Law Commission, but further tweaks were made this year because the 2015 law was enacted in a hurry by Connecticut legislators, Tedford and Walsh said. The 2015 law envisioned one long form, but the revisions have resulted in a short form and a long form, they said.

The short form can be used to grant a power of attorney for real estate transactions and is signed at the end, Tedford and Walsh said.

The long form allows the person doing estate planning to initial certain types of powers they want to grant on the POA to their agent, including things such as making gifts, changing beneficiary designations and creating and terminating trusts. There is a third option under the law for attorneys to draft their own forms, Tedford and Walsh said.

The new law also is important because Connecticut is joining 20 other states that have enacted the model law, Walsh said. This means that it should be easier for elderly people, who relocate to be closer to their caregivers in other states, to have their POAs recognized, she said.

Another big change in the law is the expansion of the authority of Connecticut's probate courts to deal with people who are abusing the POA they have been granted, Knierim said.

"Powers of attorney are a double-edged sword," Knierim said. "They are an excellent tool for planning for incapacity. On the other hand, they are a very powerful instrument that a person who wants to do mischief can exploit. In the probate courts, we see, unfortunately, instances where agents under powers of attorney have abused the trust" placed in them.

As a result of those type of abuses, the category of people who can raise concerns about POA abuses has been expanded. For example, the law now states that a caregiver or a person who "demonstrates sufficient interest in the principal's welfare" can petition the court to review the actions of a POA agent.

Agents who abuse the POAs they have been granted also now can be ordered to reimburse for financial losses.

Connecticut's new POA law also has changed it so that POAs are assumed to be durable.

Attorneys should be aware that the new law does not address whether agents should be granted control in a POA over someone's email, social media accounts and other digital assets, Walsh said. Attorneys will have to add that authority in their own POA forms, she said.

The new law also is attempting to synthesize POAs with when courts authorize a conservatorship and appoint a guardian to manage the financial affairs of an elderly person or a person with disabilities, Knierim said. It used to be that the appointment of a conservator automatically terminated a POA.

Now, if someone has appointed a POA, the court has to determine if the POA can work in tandem with the conservator, Knierim said. This honors the first choice of people on who they wanted to have manage their affairs, Knierim said.

Sixth Circuit: Ohio Can't Deny Medicaid Benefits By Excluding Spouses

Ohio can't deny Medicaid benefits to a senior citizen by defining family to exclude his spouse, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit has ruled.

Courthouse News' Lorraine Bailey reports that Medicare beneficiaries Leslie Wheaton, George Hart and Joe Turner did not also qualify for Medicaid benefits under a Ohio Department of Medicaid rule. That rule says that a spouse doesn't count as a member of a beneficiary's family.

Judge Raymond Kethledge opined, '"The term 'planet' might be ambiguous as applied to Pluto, but is clear as applied to Jupiter. And though there might be some ambiguity in 2015 as to whether Ukraine's borders encompass the Crimean Peninsula, there is no doubt that Kiev lies within them. So too here: whatever ambiguity the 'persons living under one roof' or 'basic unit of society' definitions might have at the margins, there is no doubt that, under either definition, a person's family includes her resident spouse."'

Many Med Mal Cases Lapse For Lack of Attorneys Who Will Take Them

ProPublica reports on a little-covered problem: some people harmed by medical malpractice can't find any attorneys to take their cases.

This is a phenomenon that many plaintiffs lawyers told me about when I was regularly reporting on medical-malpractice litigation for The Legal Intelligencer. Med mal cases are very expensive to work up because they require expert witnesses and scientific-oriented discovery, and many firms will not take cases in which the injury is less catastrophic or their are low economic damages because the return on investing in the case is so low.

ProPublica reports on the "problem faced by many who are harmed in a medical setting: Attorneys refuse their cases, not because the harm didn’t happen but because the potential economic damages are too low." This includes the elderly who have low incomes because they are retired, because their medical bills are picked up by Medicare and they typically have no dependents, ProPublica further reports.

Unregulated Assisted Living Leaving the Elderly At Risk

ProPublica reports on the lack of regulation for assisted living and how this puts the elderly at risk.

Nursing homes for elder Americans (who tend to need much more skilled nursing care than the elderly living in assisted living facilities) face much stricter regulation. Not so with "assisted living facilities, [which] at least initially, were meant to provide housing, meals and help to elderly people who could no longer live on their own," ProPublica reports.

Assisted living facilities tend to be free to decide how much staff their facilities should have and don't have to be inspected by outsiders very frequently.

 

Elder Abuse Rarely Results in Prosecutions

The Associated Press has this primer on everything you need to know about elder abuse, including that the abuse rarely results in criminal proseuctions because of the stereotype that their abuse is tough to prove and that older people make poor witnesses.

A couple highlights:

* By 2050, there will be more old people on earth than children for the first time in history;

* the most common abusers of the elderly are family members or friends;

* and "even in the few countries where elder abuse is a crime, cases are seldom prosecuted. One reason is that stereotypes cast elders as lousy witnesses and their abuse as tough to prove."

Reuters: One in Three Older Adults Reports Discrimination

A British study found 1/3 of "British people in their 50s and above said they had experienced age discrimination, researchers reported in the journal Age and Ageing. That included being treated with less courtesy or getting poorer service at restaurants and hospitals," Reuters Health reported. The impact? One researcher said "frequent perceived discrimination may be a chronic source of stress and build up over time, leading to social withdrawal and reluctance to go to the doctor," Reuters Health also reported.

Same-Sex Marriage and Social Security Benefits

A retirement professional has this overview on same-sex spouses getting Social Security benefits in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling striking down the federal Defense of Marriage Act. One highlight is that the Social Security Administration is paying spouse benefits "if the couple wedded in a state that performs same-sex marriages, and reside at the time of claiming Social Security in a state that recognizes same-sex marriage."

Investigative Report: Elder Abuse Allegations In California Summarily Dismissed

After a backlog in elder abuse cases grew too staggering, the California Department of Health managed the backlog by dismissing complaints, not seeking increased resources. Now almost all complaints are investigated over the phone, and prosecutors report a dramatic decline in the cases referred to them for investigation.

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