WHY
YOU NEED A DURABLE POWER OF ATTORNEY
Imagine that
tomorrow you suddenly become severely ill or incapacitated. Who
would take care of your finances? How would they do it? If you
don't have a durable power of attorney, others (even your spouse)
may not be able to conduct all your financial needs on your behalf.
A power of
attorney is a legal document authorizing another person (an agent),
or financial institution, to step in on your behalf to execute
certain financial transactions should you be unable to do so.
The transactions might be as basic as paying bills and handling
insurance claims, or as complex as selling real estate and filing
a tax return. Without a power of attorney, your spouse, children
or friends will probably have to petition the court to step in
on your behalf, a cumbersome, time-consuming and potentially expensive
process at a time of immediate need and emotional stress.
Just about
any adult, young or old, single or married, should have a power
of attorney. Yes, even married. While your spouse can probably
take care of the basic bill paying, many financial transactions,
such as the sale of an investment or home, require both spouses'
signatures. You may have some assets in your name only, so that
your spouse has no access to those assets should they be neede,
such as to pay the medical expenses due to the disability that's
preventing you from handling your own finances.
Some types
of powers of attorney are convenience documents used for a specific
transaction or to manage finances for a limited time while one
is away. There's also a durable power of attorney for medical
care, which appoints someone to make medical decisions on your
behalf should you be incapacitated. This should be a separate
document.
The financial
power of attorney most financial planners recommend is a durable
power of attorney. This goes into effect upon signing and remains
in effect through any incapacity and until your death, unless
your revoke it. This power of attorney typically allows the agent
to perform a broad range of financial transactions on behalf of
the person.
Because a
durable power of attorney allows the agent (or a successor agent,
if needed) to step in immediately, some people try to limit the
power by not allowing the document to "spring" into
effect until they are actually incapacitated. Many estate planning
experts dislike this approach, however, arguing that its implementation
could be delayed unnecessarily because determining incapacity
is often an inexact science. If you don't trust the person in
the first place, they argue, you should find another agent.
Have an attorney
draft the power of attorney. It costs more than buying a standardized
version, but to be fully effective it needs to meet state laws,
which vary from state to state. The document also will likely
require specific language not found in off-the-shelf documents.
Experts commonly
recommend that the document grant powers as broad as possible
so the agent has maximum flexibility. It's difficult to anticipate
what might need to be done financially on your behalf.
Beyond granting
broad powers, the document will need to be specific about certain
rights granted to the agent. For example, the IRS has ruled that
the grantor must explicitly give an agent the right to make gifts
on behalf of the grantor in order for those gifts to qualify as
gifts for estate tax purposes. You must specify the right for
your agent to complete and sign your tax returns, exercise stock
options or sue a third party.
At the same
time, you may want to incorporate certain restrictions in the
document, such as how your retirement plan accounts are drawn
down or under what conditions an asset might be bought or sold.
Perhaps you want to require a second signature on checks above
a certain amount.
As with all
estate planning documents, a power of attorney should be reviewed
and updated periodically so that it reflects your needs and desires.
You'll likely need to revoke and draft a new power of attorney
should you divorce or your financial circumstances change significantly.
Third-party financial institutions also prefer seeing current
powers of attorney, and they like copies in advance (be sure to
get rid of copies of previous versions); otherwise, some institutions
can get sticky about accepting the power if it's abruptly presented
out of the blue.
This article was produced by the Consumer
Affairs Dept. of The Financial Planning Association
and provided to you courtesy of Terry P. Welsh,
CFP, Ketchikan, Alaska. If you have any questions
or concerns regarding this, or any other financial
topic, please call me at 1-907-225-0619, or click
on the "CONTACT US" button to arrange for a free
initial consultation.