Summary: A complete estate plan includes financial and healthcare powers of attorney in the vast majority of situations. However, one should be aware that financial powers of attorney are not without their limitations and difficulties. One way to escape some of these challenges is by using a revocable living trust, as financial institutions are, in many cases, less likely to refuse to recognize a successor trustee acting under the authority of a trust agreement that an agent acting under a power of attorney.
Powers
of attorney are important parts of almost every estate plan. A financial power
of attorney is a document where you, as the document's creator (known as the
"principal"), name someone else (your "agent") to make
certain decisions about your assets on your behalf. This document can give your
agent these powers from the moment you sign it or only after you have become
mentally incapacitated and cannot make those decisions for yourself.
While
these powers of attorney are vital pieces to the estate planning puzzle, they
are not, however, without their challenges, as the New York Times
recently reported. In an Aug. 22 article entitled "Power of Attorney Is
Not Always a Solution", the Times explained that, with a power of
attorney, "when it fails, the consequences can be nothing short of
disastrous."
One
of the problems with powers of attorney is that many financial institutions
refuse to recognize them, meaning that, even when presented with a properly
executed power of attorney document, the institution still refuses to give the
agent access to, and control over, the principal's accounts. When this happens,
the agent often has limited choices to break through this impasse except filing
a legal challenge, which can be expensive and time consuming.
One
estate planning technique that may help avoid some of these dilemmas and serve
you better is using a revocable living trust. With a living trust, you put your
assets into the trust while you are alive and competent. From a legal
perspective, your trust owns those assets, so transitioning their control and
management from you to the person you've designated requires only documentation
that the person seeking that power is the properly appointed successor trustee
and proof that they are entitled to begin acting on behalf of the trust (such
as a death certificate in the event of your passing or doctors' notes stating
that you've become mentally incapacitated.)
As
the article correctly points out, using a trust reduces the risk of having a
problem with the bank. One attorney explained it to the Times this way,
"Banks are more comfortable with this ... What you’re doing is getting a
jump on the legal system designed to handle these things." In order for
this plan to work, though, you must make sure you fill out the necessary
paperwork to place the asset into the trust. Each financial institution may
have its own transfer documents it may require to complete the transaction.
This article written and published by:
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