Power of Attorney Federal HIPAA law now recommends new Power of
Attorney-
The Power of Attorney can be effective immediately upon signing or only upon disability. A Will does not need to be updated if your beneficiaries and executor remain the same. We do recommend a new Power of Attorney be signed every five years because banks and financial institutions give persons a difficult time if the document is more than 5 years old.
Special Report By Kenneth A. Vercammen A federal regulation known as the Health
Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) was recently adopted
regarding disclosure of individually identifiable health information. This
necessitated the addition of a special release and consent authority to all
healthcare providers before medical information will be released to agents and
interested persons of the patients.
The effects of
HIPAA are far reaching, and can render certain previously executed estate
planning documents useless, without properly executed amendments, specifically
addressing these issues. As HIPAA affects not only new documents, any
previously executed documents are affected as well. Any previously executed
Powers of Attorney, Living Wills, Revocable Living Trusts, and certainly all
Medical Directives now require HIPAA amendments.
As average
Americans, we work 80,000 hours in a lifetime, or 45 to 55 years. In spite of
all the resources and assets we earn, the vast majority do not take the time to
create a Power of Attorney. National
statistics indicate that 80% of Americans die without leaving a Will. Even more
do not have a Power of Attorney. There are several reasons for this: fear of
death or disability; procrastination; and misinformation (people presume that
only the rich or married with children need to have Wills or Power of
Attorney). Whatever the excuse, it is clear that people would benefit from having
a Power of Attorney.
In the absence
of a Power of Attorney or other legal arrangement to distribute property if you
become disabled, your family or partner cannot pay your bills or handle your
assets. The result can be lengthy delays.
Reasons to have a Power of Attorney in NJ What are these powers of attorney? A Power of Attorney is a written document in
which a competent adult individual (the "principal") appoints another
competent adult individual (the "attorney-in-fact") to act on the
principal's behalf. In general, an attorney-in-fact may perform any legal
function or task which the principal has a legal right to do for him/herself.
You may wish to sign a Power of Attorney giving a spouse, Family member or a
close friend, the power to handle your affairs if you become ill or
disabled.
The term
"durable" in reference to a power of attorney means that the power
remains in force for the lifetime of the principal, even if he/she becomes
mentally incapacitated. A principal may cancel a power of attorney at any time
for any reason. Powers granted on a power of attorney document can be very
broad or very narrow in accordance with the needs of the principal.
Why is Power
of Attorney so important? Every adult
has day-to-day affairs to manage, such as paying the bills. Many people are
under the impression that, in the event of catastrophic illness or injury, a
spouse, partner, or child can automatically act for them. Unfortunately, this
is often wrong, even when joint ownership situations exist.
A Power of
Attorney allows your spouse or another person to administer your assets during
your lifetime, either upon disability or now.
The lack of a properly prepared and executed Power of Attorney can cause
extreme difficulties when an individual is stricken with severe illness or
injury rendering him/her unable to make decisions or manage financial and
medical affairs.
New Jersey has
a detailed, expensive legal procedures, called Guardianships or
conservatorships, to provide for appointment of a Guardian. These normally
require lengthy, formal proceedings and are expensive in court. This means
involvement of lawyers to prepare and file the necessary papers and doctors to
provide medical testimony regarding the mental incapacity of the subject of the
action.
The procedures
also require the involvement of a temporary guardian to investigate, even
intercede, in surrogate proceedings. This can be slow, costly, and very
frustrating. Advance preparation of the
Power of Attorney could avoid the inconvenience and expense of guardianship
proceedings. This needs to be done while the principal is competent, alert and
aware of the consequences of his / her decision. Once a serious problem occurs,
it is usually too late.
Some examples
of legal powers contained in the Power of Attorney are the following:
1. REAL
ESTATE: To execute all contracts, deeds, bonds, mortgages, notes, checks,
drafts, money orders, and to lease, collect rents, grant, bargain, sell, or
borrow and mortgage, and to manage, compromise, settle, and adjust all matters
pertaining to any real estate or lands in which I have an interest. This
includes the power to sell all land I own, including any interest I have in my
address above.
2. ENDORSEMENT
AND PAYMENT OF NOTES, ETC.: To make, execute, endorse, accept, and deliver any
and all bills of exchange, checks, drafts, notes and trade acceptances. To pay
all sums of money, at any time, or times, that may hereafter be owing by me
upon any bill of exchange, check, draft, note, or trade acceptance, made,
executed, endorsed, accepted, and delivered by me, or for me, and in my name,
by my Agent.
3. MEDICAL
RECORDS ACCESS: To be able to access my medical and hospital records under
Federal Law HIPAA. Healthcare providers shall release medical information to my
Agent. This authorization expires upon my death or upon my written
revocation.
4. STOCKS,
BONDS, AND SECURITIES: To sell any and all shares of stocks, bonds, or other
securities now or hereafter, belonging to me, that may be issued by an
association, trust, or corporation whether private or public, and to make,
execute, and deliver any assignment, or assignments, of any such shares of
stock, bonds, or other securities.
5. CONTRACTS,
AGREEMENTS, ETC.: To enter into safe deposit boxes, and to make, sign, execute,
and deliver, acknowledge, and perform any contract, agreement, writing, or
thing that may, in the opinion of my Agent, be necessary or proper to be entered
into, made or signed, sealed, executed, delivered, acknowledged or
performed.
6. BANK
ACCOUNTS, CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT, MONEY MARKET ACCOUNTS, ETC.: To add to or
withdraw any amounts from any of my bank accounts, Certificates of Deposit,
Money Market Accounts, etc. on my behalf or for my benefit. To make, execute,
endorse, accept and deliver any and all checks and drafts, deposit and withdraw
funds, acquire and redeem certificates of deposit, in banks, savings and loan
associations and other institutions, execute or release such deeds of trust or
other security agreements as may be necessary or proper in the exercise of the
rights and powers herein granted; Without in any way being limited by or
limiting the foregoing, to conduct banking transactions as set forth in section
2 of P.L. 1991, c. 95 (c. 46:2B-11).
7. TAX
RETURNS, INSURANCE AND OTHER DOCUMENTS: To sign all Federal, State, and
municipal tax returns, insurance forms and any other documents and to represent
me in all matters concerning the foregoing.
8. GIFT GIVING
POWERS: To make gifts in amounts which my Agent in his sole, absolute and
unfettered discretion shall deem appropriate in any given year on my
behalf. You should contact your attorney
to have a Power of Attorney Prepared, together with a Will, Living Will and
other vital Estate Planning documents. . A
Power of Attorney is an appointment of another person as one's agent. A Power
of Attorney creates a principal-agent relationship. You, the grantor of the
Power of Attorney, are the principal. The person to whom you grant the Power of
Attorney is your agent.
The agent is
normally called an "attorney-in-fact." The attorney-in-fact does not
become the owner of your property, but is merely permitted to deal with it
within the terms set out in the Power of Attorney. Since an attorney-in-fact
has the power to deal with your property, you, naturally, must be careful to
give such a power only to a trustworthy person.
You have
entrusted to your attorney-in-fact those powers which are stated in your Power
of Attorney. The Power of Attorney if
effective upon signing is a "durable power." This means that if you
should become incompetent and be unable physically or mentally to handle your
own affairs, the Power of Attorney, nevertheless, will continue to be as good
as it was on the day that you signed it.
If you become
incompetent, the Power of Attorney will terminate only upon 1) a Court's
declaring you to be incompetent or 2) upon your death. The attorney-in-fact may
continue to use the Power of Attorney and acts performed under the Power of
Attorney will be valid until either of those two events occurs, after which
time acts performed by the attorney-in-fact will no longer be valid.
Consequently, even if you become incompetent but no Court declares you to be so
the Power of Attorney will still be effective.
Most people
who give a Power of Attorney to someone else do it with the thought that if
they should become ill or incapacitated or if they should travel, the Power of
Attorney will permit the holder of it to pay their bills and to handle all of
their affairs for them as limited in the Power of Attorney.
This is what
your attorney-in-fact may do for you under the Power of Attorney which I have
prepared for you. The granting of a Power
of Attorney is not like the creation of a joint tenancy in property. Under a
joint tenancy, each of the joint tenants has a property interest in the
property so held, whereas, a person holding a Power of Attorney, while having
the power to deal with the property, does not own any part of it nor can that
person become the owner of it under the Power of Attorney by virtue of the
Power of Attorney itself.
This, however,
does not prevent the holder of the Power of Attorney from transferring the
property to himself or herself. This is another reason for giving such a power
only to one whom you can trust. Whenever
your attorney-in-fact exercises any of the powers granted under the Power of
Attorney, your attorney-in-fact must be prepared to show the Power of Attorney
to anyone who questions the right to use it.
If your
attorney-in-fact deals with the title to real estate, it will be necessary for
the Power of Attorney to be recorded. I see no reason to record the Power of
Attorney until such time as property may be conveyed unless there is fear that
the document might be lost. Occasionally
when real estate is dealt with by an attorney-in-fact, an abstractor or a title
insurance company will raise a question regarding the use of the Power of
Attorney.
Unfortunately,
there is no way that we can control this. This is indeed unfortunate, but you
have no other inexpensive recourse when you use a Power of Attorney.
Kenneth A.
Vercammen is a Middlesex County, NJ trial attorney who has published 125
articles in national and New Jersey publications on Probate and litigation
topics. He often lectures to trial lawyers of the American Bar Association, New
Jersey State Bar Association and Middlesex County Bar Association. He is Chair
of the American Bar Association Estate Planning & Probate Committee. He is
also Editor of the ABA Elder Law Committee Newsletter He is a highly regarded lecturer on
litigation issues for the American Bar Association, ICLE, New Jersey State Bar
Association and Middlesex County Bar Association. His articles have been
published by New Jersey Law Journal, ABA Law Practice Management Magazine, and
New Jersey Lawyer. He is the Editor in Chief of the New Jersey Municipal Court
Law Review. Mr. Vercammen is a recipient of the NJSBA- YLD Service to the Bar
Award. In his private practice, he has
devoted a substantial portion of his professional time to the preparation and
trial of litigated matters. He has appeared in Courts throughout New Jersey
several times each week on many personal injury matters, Municipal Court
trials, and contested Probate hearings.
Call our office to schedule a "confidential" appointment
732-572-0500 Kenneth Vercammen &
Associates. 2053 Woodbridge Avenue Edison, NJ 08817 732-572-0500
www.centraljerseyelderlaw.com
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