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Duties of the Conservator

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Duties of the Conservator Conservator of the Person Conservator of the Estate General information Conservator person(s) appointed by the court to be ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Duties of the Conservator


1
Duties of the Conservator
  • Conservator of the Person
  • Conservator of the Estate

2
General information
  • Conservator person(s) appointed by the court
    to be responsible for the personal care and/or
    finances of the
  • Conservatee person the court has found to be
    unable to manage their personal care and/or
    finances
  • Probate court the department of the countys
    superior court overseeing the conservatorship

3
General information (cont.)
  • Conservatorship takes away fundamental rights of
    an individual
  • Conservatorships apply to people over 18
  • Conservatorships last until terminated by the
    court or statutory occurrence

4
Is Conservatorship Appropriate?
  • Rebuttable presumption of capacity (California
    Probate Code 810)
  • Is the person able to provide for his/her own
    needs?
  • Is the person able to consent to medical
    procedures?
  • Is the person able to make decisions?

5
Who can be a conservator?
  • Must be an adult
  • May have joint conservators
  • Private professional conservators must file
    background statement annually
  • Order of preference
  • Nominee of conservatee
  • Spouse of conservatee
  • Adult child of conservatee
  • Parents of conservatee
  • Sibling of conservatee

6
Basic Process
  • A petition is filed with the court
  • Copies of the petition are sent to certain
    relatives and agencies
  • Court investigator interviews the proposed
    conservatee
  • Hearing takes place
  • Judge may appoint you conservator of the person
    and/or estate

7
Qualifying To Serve
  • a.GC-348 form acknowledgement of receipt of
    statement describing duties liabilities,
    received cship handbook (a must)
  • b.Bond (required in most cases as ctor of
    estate)
  • c.Oath (that you will perform duties, per law)
  • d.Filing a.,b., c. with clerk of superior
    court

8
Rights of the Conservatee
  • To control his/her own salary
  • To make or change a will
  • To marry, unless revoked by court
  • To receive personal mail
  • To vote, unless revoked by court
  • To be represented by an attorney
  • To ask for a new conservator
  • To ask for the conservatorship to end

9
Powers Not Available to Conservator
  • Sterilization
  • Involuntary commitment
  • Electro-convulsive shock therapy
  • Psychotherapy

10
Duties Conservator of the Person
  • Assess the needs and how to meet them.
  • Arrange for care protection (keep them safe)
    food, shelter, meds, care
  • Choose where they will live (least restrictive)
    whats available?
  • Ensure appropriate level of health care is
    provided
  • Respond to crises as they arise

11
Duties of Conservator of the Person (cont.)
  • Health care
  • Meals
  • Clothing
  • Personal care
  • Housekeeping
  • Transportation
  • Recreation
  • Expect to report to the Court on current status

12
Duties of Conservator of the Estate
  • Overall manage the finances in the best
    interests of the ctee
  • Locate take control of assets (detective work)
    protect the assets
  • Collect income (rep payee?)
  • Budget what can be afforded?
  • Pay bills
  • Invest
  • Account to the Court and to the ctee

13
Terminating a Conservatorship
  • Death of the conservatee
  • Order of the court
  • Removal from office by the court for failing to
    perform duties of conservator

14
Alternatives to Conservatorship
  • Social services agencies
  • Joint bank accounts
  • General or Limited Power of Attorney
  • Durable Power of Attorney
  • Representative Payeeship
  • Advance Health Care Directive
  • Guardian ad litem
  • Living Trust

15
Misc.
  • Get legal counsel involved, especially when
    considering
  • moving ctee (to new/different home, care
    facility)
  • selling ctees home/other real estate
  • a major medical decision for ctee
  • Making gifts of property, changing will or estate
    plan
  • Investing property/change investments before
    being appointed
  • Borrow money on behalf of ctee
  • Becoming involved in a lawsuit on behalf of ctee
  • Many actions require Court approval
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