by Richard E. Boston
For
any number of people, estate planning consists solely of executing
a will and making sure that they have adequate life insurance
to provide for their burial. Granted, these are important and
critical steps in anyone’s planning. But with a will and
life insurance, you have dealt only with what happens at the time
of your death.
What
plans have you made to provide for those unexpected events that
occur during one’s life, particularly as health issues become
more of a probability than just a possibility? Instead of thinking
only about providing for your spouse and family at your death,
you should also consider doing what you can, while you can, to
ease the emotional and financial burdens of those you care most
about should your health fail, leaving you incompetent to execute
legal documents.
In
counseling new clients and when reviewing and updating the estate
plans of existing clients, I strongly encourage the use of four
documents as an essential beginning point for any estate plan,
irregardless of the size of the estate. Those documents consist
of a will, a durable power of attorney, a health care representative
appointment, and a living will. The last three provide for the
client’s needs while living.
DURABLE
POWER OF ATTORNEY – this document provides
for the ongoing conduct of the client’s financial and business
affairs should he or she either not be able or not be available
to carry out these functions. Most people name their spouse as
the person to act on their behalf when they cannot. If the spouse
should no longer be available, a successor is named in the document.
Generally, this is one or more family members or a close friend.
The power of attorney can either be made effective immediately
upon its execution or it can be drafted so that it becomes effective
only upon the client’s physician’s certifying that
the patient is incompetent to manage his or her financial affairs.
This document is customarily very broad in the powers that it
bestows on the person appointed to act, but such powers can be
limited to a person’s specific needs. Some examples of what
a power of attorney can provide for are the following: banking
functions, including check writing; the execution of deeds, notes,
mortgages and other documents dealing with real estate; the filing
of income tax returns; estate planning functions; the operation
of a business; or the handling of all types of insurance matters.
You
may ask why this is important. In many instances it prevents the
spouse or children from having to go to court to have a person
declared incapacitated and to then have a guardian appointed to
handle that person’s business and financial affairs as well
as their day-to-day care. When the court becomes involved, an
inventory of assets must be filed. This is a matter of public
record. The family loses its financial privacy. A formal accounting
must be filed with the court at least every two years by the guardian.
This means accounting for all income and all monies spent. Too,
any extraordinary expenditures may require court approval. With
proper planning, all of this can usually be avoided, leaving such
decisions to the family and not to the court’s discretion.
Another
common scenario is where a house is owned jointly between a husband
and wife. One spouse becomes incapacitated and at some point the
house needs to be sold, whether that be because it’s too
large, or money is needed for long-term nursing care, or for any
number of reasons. The sale and transfer would require the signature
of both husband and wife. With a power of attorney, this problem
would be solved. Without a power of attorney, a court-appointed
guardian would most likely be necessary in order to have someone
with the legal right to sign the incapacitated spouse’s
name to the deed.
HEALTH
CARE REPRESENT-ATIVE APPOINTMENT – This
document functions much like a power of attorney, but relates
to a person’s health care needs rather than to business
and financial affairs. Again, the spouse is usually named as the
first choice with a family member or close friend being named
as a successor.
The
named health care representative is authorized to make health
care decisions for you when you cannot do so. This power may need
to be exercised only for a short period. Once you are again able
to make your own health care decisions, you do so.
With this document, the attending medical personnel have someone
with the legal authority that can make critical health care decisions
as necessary. This could be as a result of an accident, or a general
health-related problem such as an incapacitating stroke.
LIVING
WILL – Most clients have strong feelings
as to whether or not they wish to be kept alive if they have no
chance of recovering and living a quality life. Should this circumstance
arise, it is important that you leave a directive as to whether
or not you wish to be placed on, or kept on, a life support system
and if you are taken off of life support, whether or not you wish
to continue to receive nutrition and hydration.
A
living will provides a written statement of your wishes in this
regard. This does two things. It provides the medical personnel
with information they need. More importantly, it relieves your
spouse or family from being left with the responsibility of trying
to decide what you might want in this situation, yet being reluctant
to make a decision that will end your life. This is an onerous
decision to leave to your spouse and family. However, this is
a decision that you can make by using a living will and thereby
avoid placing those you care most about through this trauma and
possibly having a decision made that you yourself would never
have made.
Begin
your estate plan with an appropriate will that carries out your
wishes while meeting the needs of your survivors. But do not stop
there. Make plans for your living as well as for your dying by
incorporating the above planning tools into your basic estate
plan. Should the need ever arise for their use, I can assure you
that your family members’ lives will have been made abundantly
easier as a result of your forethought.
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