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#The Moneyist: My father, 92, suddenly appointed his lawyer as healthcare proxy and executor — ceding control of his bank accounts

#The Moneyist: My father, 92, suddenly appointed his lawyer as healthcare proxy and executor — ceding control of his bank accounts

‘Without waging a relationship-destroying and unaffordable legal battle, what are our options?’

Dear Quentin,

On the sudden advice of his attorney, our widowed 92-year-old father recently shocked us by abandoning a partial college tuition gift he had promised his grandchildren.

At the same time, he eliminated us from formerly assigned executor, healthcare proxy, and last-wishes roles, which he turned over to that same lawyer. He also permitted his money managers — who earn a percentage of assets under management and who have consistently dissuaded him from liquidating and enjoying any of his several million dollars in savings — to share his account information with that attorney.

We feel that he is being abusively manipulated by the attorney and managers who, we fear, are motivated to somehow profit by controlling all details of his money and end of life. Without waging a relationship-destroying and unaffordable legal battle, what are our options to challenge both his soundness of mind and external manipulation driving these questionable decisions? We enjoy an active and friendly father-son relationship.

We appreciate your guidance.

On Behalf of Four Siblings Who, Above All, Love & Respect Our Father

You can email The Moneyist with any financial and ethical questions related to coronavirus at [email protected], and follow Quentin Fottrell on Twitter.

Dear Sibling,

Any sudden and dramatic change in your elderly father’s circumstances, especially where all of the clout over his estate is falling into the hands of one lawyer, should absolutely raise alarm bells. Your first stop should be to ask your father questions — while doing your best to avoid a confrontation — about why he has taken these steps. 

Outline your concerns over one person suddenly having so much control over his finances, and why this — the unfettered power to access and invest your father’s money — raises red flags for you. Explain that any change in your father’s health could leave him vulnerable to financial mismanagement. And, yes, he should be enjoying his money.

Under the law, your father must have been of sound mind and not under or subject to duress, restraint, fraud or undue influence to sign a power of attorney document. You can report this lawyer to the state bar association, and send a letter to the financial institution that is managing his funds, reminding them of their responsibility.

The National Center on Elder Abuse, a government agency affiliated with the U.S. Administration on Aging, and the nonprofit National Adult Protective Services Association will also have further steps you can take, in addition to contacting your father’s primary physician and making an appointment for a physical and mental assessment.

Financial institutions have procedures in place for spotting the warning signs of elder abuse — if that is what is happening — and state regulators have in recent years put pressure on advisers to help prevent it. It impacts an estimated five million Americans every year, according to the National Council on Aging, and multiple agencies say the number of cases are increasing and underreported. 

While the role of power of attorney — assuming that is the goal of your father’s lawyer — expires after this death, estate plans often include what’s called a “durable” power of attorney. This permits the trusted individual (in this case, your father’s lawyer) to retain power of attorney if and/or when your father can no longer make decisions for himself. 

Your father should feel empowered and protected, not controlled or cajoled. Offer to go through his bank accounts to make sure there is no suspicious activity. Once the money is gone, it’s much harder to get it back. So acting swiftly and decisively is key. It may also help you avoid thousands of dollars or more in legal fees, should the situation escalate. 

By emailing your questions, you agree to having them published anonymously on MarketWatch. By submitting your story to Dow Jones & Company, the publisher of MarketWatch, you understand and agree that we may use your story, or versions of it, in all media and platforms, including via third parties.

Check out the Moneyist private Facebook group, where we look for answers to life’s thorniest money issues. Readers write in to me with all sorts of dilemmas. Post your questions, tell me what you want to know more about, or weigh in on the latest Moneyist columns.

The Moneyist regrets he cannot reply to questions individually.

More from Quentin Fottrell:

• ‘I just don’t trust my sister’: How do I gift money to my nieces without their mother having access to it?
• We’re getting married and have a baby on the way. My wife has offered to pay off my $10,000 student debt and $7,500 car loan
• I have three children. I quitclaimed my house to my most responsible son. Now he has blocked my calls
• My brother-in-law died, leaving his house in a mess. His landlord wants me to repaint and replace the carpet. What should we do?

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