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GENERAL
DURABLE POWERS OF ATTORNEY:
Powers of Attorney for Managing Your Finances, Your Property and Your
Affairs
Important Terms
A
Power of Attorney is a document by which one can delegate power to another
person or persons. The person giving a Power of Attorney is the
Principal. The person acting for the Principal under the Power of
Attorney is called the Agent or the "Attorney in Fact."
(Do not be confused by the use of the word "attorney." Neither you nor your
Agent needs to be a lawyer.)
If
you give a durable Power of Attorney, your Agent can continue to make
decisions for you even if you become incapacitated and are no longer able to
make responsible decisions for yourself. In order to be durable, Maine law
requires language specifying that fact.
When you give a Power of Attorney for finances, you do not lose the power to
make your own decisions and to act for yourself as long as you remain
competent to do so. You are simply authorizing your Agent to act and make
decisions for you. You are sharing power over your finances, your property
and your affairs with someone else.
It
is also important to note that a Durable Power of Attorney is revocable.
As long as you remain competent to do so, you can revoke (or "undo") the
powers you gave to another person.
Authority and Duties of an Agent
An
Agent is charged with doing what is in the Principal's
best interest and using the Principal's
money and property only for the Principal's
benefit.
A
Power of Attorney can grant broad authority to the Agent; that is usually
called a general Power of Attorney. A Principal might also give a
limited Power of Attorney that typically authorizes a single transaction
while not conveying any authority over other property of the Principal.
The
powers delegated can include the power to deal with your money and property.
Such powers might include the power to pay bills,
receive income, deposit and withdraw
from your bank accounts and brokerage accounts, buy and sell investments,
buy and sell your real estate, borrow money, give mortgages,
sign tax returns, open and close your
accounts, and other steps to invest and manage your wealth.
A Power of
Attorney may include the power to establish your place of residence and to
arrange for a home or home care services for you. Powers of Attorney also
might include the power to make your health care decisions, but this is best
done in an Advance Health Care Directive.
One thing your
Agent cannot do for you is to write your Last Will and Testament. And the
authority of your Agent ends when you die. (At that point, a Personal
Representative is usually appointed by the Probate Court to take control of
your assets and administer your estate.)
Gifting
Authority and Using Power of Attorney for Asset Preservation Planning
Although a
Principal may intend to give a general Power of Attorney, there are still
some things an Agent may be unable to accomplish. In Maine, if the Principal
wants to permit his or her Agent to make gifts of the Principal's assets to
the Agent or to others, that power must be explicit in the Power of
Attorney. This makes sense. Since the Agent has a general duty to preserve
the Principal's estate and to use it only for the Principal's benefit and
objectives, gifts are not permitted unless clearly authorized.
A durable
Power of Attorney with gifting powers can be an invaluable tool to provide
for your financial management and asset preservation in the event of
incapacity. In fact, the creation of a thorough Power of Attorney is often
recommended by elder law attorneys whose clients ask what opportunities
there are for planning for long-term care needs before they arise.
On the other
hand, as the name implies. Powers of Attorney are "powerful" documents. This
is especially true when the Power of Attorney including authority for the
agent to make gifts, and that power should be included only after your
careful consideration.
Choosing
the Agent
When deciding
whether to name a particular individual to serve as your Agent, consider
that person's ability to responsibly handle your finances, his or her
willingness to serve, and, most important, that person's trustworthiness.
Geographic proximity is also helpful but not essential.
You may
appoint more than one Agent or, instead, choose a primary Agent and one or
more alternates. Multiple Agents may act independently of one another or be
required to act together.
Allowing
Co-Agents or concurrent Agents to act independently should be considered
carefully in the event that the Agents have different agendas or fail to
communicate with one another. However, if you trust the individuals your
chosen Agents enough to appoint them as your Agents, they should be trusted
to work together for your best interests.
Effective Date of Power of Attorney
Powers of Attorney usually become effective in
either of two ways. A Power of Attorney may be effective immediately when it
is signed. Or the document may be "springing" and,
by its language, only become effective upon the happening of a future event,
like the disability or incapacity of the Principal, often as shown by a
letter from the treating physician of the Principal.
Requirements for a Valid Power of Attorney
in Maine
Maine's
Power of Attorney statute requires that every durable financial Power of
Attorney created on or after September 19,1997,
include specific language clearly explaining the rights of both the
Principal and the Agent. The notice to the Principal reminds you that the
powers being given to an Agent are broad. The notice to the Agent warns that
the Agent is under a legal duty to use the Principal's money and property
only on the Principal's behalf. If the
exact statutory wording is not used, the document is not legally effective.
Maine law requires that a Power of Attorney
for finances be signed by the Principal in front of a notary public or an
attorney at law. Maine law does not require that a Power of Attorney for
finances be witnessed. However, we recommend that the Power of Attorney be
executed in front of two witnesses and a notary public in the event that the
Agent ever needs to use the document in a state that has these execution
requirements. |