Sign A Durable Power of Attorney Before It’s Too Late
I got a message recently from a woman with questions about getting a power of attorney to handle her ailing father’s financial affairs.
Her father was in a nursing home. He was suffering from dementia and was no longer capable of handling his finances. Because of his cognitive impairment, it was too late for him to sign a durable power of attorney.
A person must be competent to sign a power of attorney. This requires he understand that he is authorizing another person to handle his financial affairs without court supervision or approval. If he doesn’t have the requisite mental capacity, he will be unable to sign the document.
It’s heartbreaking to see a situation that could have been so easily avoided if he had signed a simple and inexpensive document when he still had the mental capacity to do so.
Comments
Christy Morgan
May 29, 2017 at 7:32pm
My sister is power of attorney for my parents. My mother has had alzheimer’s for several years and my father was just diagnosed but is still able to function on his own. Can he redo his poa and make it a dual poa at this time?
Rania Combs
May 30, 2017 at 3:45pm
A person can sign a power of attorney if he is able to understand that he is authorizing another person to handle his financial affairs without court supervision or approval. If he doesn’t have the requisite mental capacity, he will be unable to sign the document.