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RICHARD V. WELLMAN, University of Georgia, School of Law, Athens, GA 30602,
Co-Chair
CLARKE A. GRAVEL, P.O. Box 369, 76 St. Paul Street, Burlington, VT 05402,
Co-Chair
DAVID M. ENGLISH, Santa Clara University, School of Law, Santa Clara, CA 95053,
Reporter
GENE N. LEBRUN, P.O. Box 8250, Suite 900, 909 St. Joseph Street, Rapid City,
SD 57709
MARTHA T. STARKEY, One Indiana Square, Suite 2100, Indianapolis, IN 46204,
Division Chair
FRED H. MILLER, University of Oklahoma, College of Law, 300 Timberdell Road,
Norman, OK 73019, Executive Director
WILLIAM J. PIERCE, 1505 Roxbury Road, Ann Arbor, MI 48104,
Executive Director Emeritus
SECTION 1-201. GENERAL DEFINITIONS 2
SECTION 3-303. INFORMAL PROBATE; PROOF AND FINDINGS REQUIRED 11
SECTION 3-308. INFORMAL APPOINTMENT PROCEEDINGS; PROOF AND FINDINGS
REQUIRED 13
SECTION 3-915. DISTRIBUTION TO PERSON UNDER DISABILITY 14
SECTION 101 5-101. SHORT
TITLE 16
SECTION 102 5-102.
DEFINITIONS 16
[SECTION 103 5-103.
SUPPLEMENTAL GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF LAW APPLICABLE] 18
SECTION 104 5-104. FACILITY OF
TRANSFER 18
SECTION 105 5-105.
DELEGATION OF POWER BY PARENT OR GUARDIAN 19
SECTION 106 5-106.
SUBJECT-MATTER JURISDICTION 20
SECTION 107 5-107. TRANSFER
OF JURISDICTION 20
SECTION 108 5-108. VENUE
21
[SECTION 109 5-109.
PRACTICE IN COURT] 22
SECTION 110 5-110. LETTERS OF
OFFICE 22
SECTION 111 5-111. EFFECT OF
ACCEPTANCE OF APPOINTMENT 23
SECTION 112 5-112.
TERMINATION OF OR CHANGE IN GUARDIAN'S OR
CONSERVATOR'S APPOINTMENT 23
SECTION 113 5-113. NOTICE
24
SECTION 114 5-114. WAIVER OF
NOTICE 25
SECTION 115 5-115. GUARDIAN
AD LITEM 25
SECTION 116 5-116. REQUEST
FOR NOTICE; INTERESTED PERSONS 25
SECTION 117 5-117. MULTIPLE
APPOINTMENTS OR NOMINATIONS 26
SECTION 201 5-201.
APPOINTMENT AND STATUS OF GUARDIAN 27
SECTION 202 5-202. PARENTAL
APPOINTMENT OF GUARDIAN 27
SECTION 203 5-203. OBJECTION
BY MINOR OR OTHERS TO PARENTAL APPOINTMENT 29
SECTION 204 5-204. JUDICIAL
APPOINTMENT OF GUARDIAN: CONDITIONS FOR
APPOINTMENT 30
SECTION 205 5-205. JUDICIAL
APPOINTMENT OF GUARDIAN: PROCEDURE 32
SECTION 206 5-206. JUDICIAL
APPOINTMENT OF GUARDIAN: PRIORITY OF MINOR'S
NOMINEE; LIMITED GUARDIANSHIP 33
SECTION 207 5-207. DUTIES OF
GUARDIAN 33
SECTION 208 5-208. POWERS OF
GUARDIAN 34
SECTION 209 5-209. RIGHTS AND
IMMUNITIES OF GUARDIAN 35
SECTION 210 5-210.
TERMINATION OF GUARDIANSHIP; OTHER PROCEEDINGS AFTER
APPOINTMENT 36
SECTION 301 5-301.
APPOINTMENT AND STATUS OF GUARDIAN 37
SECTION 302 5-302.
APPOINTMENT OF GUARDIAN BY WILL OR OTHER WRITING 37
SECTION 303 5-303.
APPOINTMENT OF GUARDIAN BY WILL OR OTHER WRITING:
EFFECTIVENESS; ACCEPTANCE; CONFIRMATION 38
SECTION 304 5-304. JUDICIAL
APPOINTMENT OF GUARDIAN: PETITION 40
SECTION 305 5-305. JUDICIAL
APPOINTMENT OF GUARDIAN: PRELIMINARIES TO
HEARING 42
SECTION 306 5-306. JUDICIAL
APPOINTMENT OF GUARDIAN: PROFESSIONAL
EVALUATION 44
SECTION 307 5-307.
CONFIDENTIALITY OF RECORDS 45
SECTION 308 5-308. JUDICIAL
APPOINTMENT OF GUARDIAN: PRESENCE AND RIGHTS
AT HEARING 46
SECTION 309 5-309. NOTICE
46
SECTION 310 5-310. WHO MAY
BE GUARDIAN: PRIORITIES 47
SECTION 311 5-311. FINDINGS;
ORDER OF APPOINTMENT 48
SECTION 312 5-312.
EMERGENCY GUARDIAN 49
SECTION 313 5-313. TEMPORARY
SUBSTITUTE GUARDIAN 50
SECTION 314 5-314. DUTIES OF
GUARDIAN 51
SECTION 315 5-315. POWERS OF
GUARDIAN 52
SECTION 316 5-316. RIGHTS AND
IMMUNITIES OF GUARDIAN; LIMITATIONS 53
SECTION 317 5-317. REPORTS;
MONITORING OF GUARDIANSHIP 54
SECTION 318 5-318.
TERMINATION OR MODIFICATION OF GUARDIANSHIP 55
SECTION 401 5-401. PROTECTIVE
PROCEEDING 57
SECTION 402 5-402.
JURISDICTION OVER BUSINESS AFFAIRS OF PROTECTED PERSON
58
SECTION 403 5-403. ORIGINAL
PETITION FOR APPOINTMENT OR PROTECTIVE ORDER 58
SECTION 404 5-404. NOTICE
61
SECTION 405 5-405. ORIGINAL
PETITION: MINORS; PRELIMINARIES TO HEARING 62
SECTION 406 5-406. ORIGINAL
PETITION: PRELIMINARIES TO HEARING 62
SECTION 407 5-407.
CONFIDENTIALITY OF RECORDS 65
SECTION 408 5-408. ORIGINAL
PETITION: PROCEDURE AT HEARING 65
SECTION 409 5-409. ORIGINAL
PETITION: ORDERS 66
SECTION 410 5-410. POWERS OF
COURT 67
SECTION 411 5-411. REQUIRED
COURT APPROVAL 68
SECTION 412 5-412. PROTECTIVE
ARRANGEMENTS AND SINGLE TRANSACTIONS 69
SECTION 413 5-413. WHO MAY
BE CONSERVATOR: PRIORITIES 71
SECTION 414 5-414. PETITION
FOR ORDER SUBSEQUENT TO APPOINTMENT 72
SECTION 415 5-415. BOND
73
SECTION 416 5-416. TERMS AND
REQUIREMENTS OF BOND 73
SECTION 417 5-417.
COMPENSATION AND EXPENSES 74
SECTION 418 5-418. GENERAL
DUTIES OF CONSERVATOR; PLAN 75
SECTION 419 5-419. INVENTORY;
RECORDS 76
SECTION 420 5-420. REPORTS;
APPOINTMENT OF [VISITOR]; MONITORING 76
SECTION 421 5-421. TITLE BY
APPOINTMENT 77
SECTION 422 5-422. PROTECTED
PERSON'S INTEREST INALIENABLE 78
SECTION 423 5-423. SALE,
ENCUMBRANCE, OR OTHER TRANSACTION INVOLVING
CONFLICT OF INTEREST 79
SECTION 424 5-424.
PROTECTION OF PERSON DEALING WITH CONSERVATOR 79
SECTION 425 5-425. POWERS OF
CONSERVATOR IN ADMINISTRATION 80
SECTION 426 5-426.
DELEGATION 83
SECTION 427 5-427. PRINCIPLES
OF DISTRIBUTION BY CONSERVATOR 84
SECTION 428 5-428. DEATH OF
PROTECTED PERSON 86
SECTION 429 5-429.
PRESENTATION AND ALLOWANCE OF CLAIMS 87
SECTION 430 5-430. PERSONAL
LIABILITY OF CONSERVATOR 89
SECTION 431 5-431.
TERMINATION OF PROCEEDINGS 90
SECTION 432 5-432. PAYMENT
OF DEBT AND DELIVERY OF PROPERTY TO FOREIGN
CONSERVATOR WITHOUT LOCAL PROCEEDING 92
SECTION 433 5-433. FOREIGN
CONSERVATOR: PROOF OF AUTHORITY; BOND; POWERS 92
SECTION 501. UNIFORMITY OF APPLICATION AND
CONSTRUCTION 94
SECTION 502. SEVERABILITY CLAUSE
94
SECTION 503. EFFECTIVE DATE
94
SECTION 504. REPEAL
94
The Uniform Guardianship and Protective Proceedings Act (UGPPA), last revised in 1997, is also codified at Article V, Parts 1-4 of the Uniform Probate Code. Reproduced below are the conforming amendments necessary to incorporate the 1997 UGPPA into the UPC. Amendment 5 is the text of the UGPPA (1997) but as revised for incorporation into the UPC as Article V, Parts 1-4. Amendments 1-4 conform the remainder of the UPC to the new provisions of Article V, Parts 1-4.
Amendment 1 amends UPC Section 1-201 to conform for changes in terminology:
SECTION 1-201. GENERAL DEFINITIONS. Subject to additional definitions contained in the subsequent Articles that are applicable to specific Articles, parts, or sections, and unless the context otherwise requires, in this Code:
(1) "Agent" includes an attorney-in-fact under a durable or nondurable power of attorney, an individual authorized to make decisions concerning another's health care, and an individual authorized to make decisions for another under a natural death act.
(2) "Application" means a written request to the Registrar for an order of informal probate or appointment under Part 3 of Article III.
(3) "Beneficiary," as it relates to a trust beneficiary, includes a person who has any present or future interest, vested or contingent, and also includes the owner of an interest by assignment or other transfer; as it relates to a charitable trust, includes any person entitled to enforce the trust; as it relates to a "beneficiary of a beneficiary designation," refers to a beneficiary of an insurance or annuity policy, of an account with POD designation, of a security registered in beneficiary form (TOD), or of a pension, profit-sharing, retirement, or similar benefit plan, or other nonprobate transfer at death; and, as it relates to a "beneficiary designated in a governing instrument," includes a grantee of a deed, a devisee, a trust beneficiary, a beneficiary of a beneficiary designation, a donee, appointee, or taker in default of a power of appointment, or a person in whose favor a power of attorney or a power held in any individual, fiduciary, or representative capacity is exercised.
(4) "Beneficiary designation" refers to a governing instrument naming a beneficiary of an insurance or annuity policy, of an account with POD designation, of a security registered in beneficiary form (TOD), or of a pension, profit-sharing, retirement, or similar benefit plan, or other nonprobate transfer at death.
(5) "Child" includes an individual entitled to take as a child under this Code by intestate succession from the parent whose relationship is involved and excludes a person who is only a stepchild, a foster child, a grandchild, or any more remote descendant.
(6) "Claims," in respect to estates of decedents and protected persons, includes liabilities of the decedent or protected person, whether arising in contract, in tort, or otherwise, and liabilities of the estate which arise at or after the death of the decedent or after the appointment of a conservator, including funeral expenses and expenses of administration. The term does not include estate or inheritance taxes, or demands or disputes regarding title of a decedent or protected person to specific assets alleged to be included in the estate.
(7) "Court" means the
[. . . . . . . . . . . . .
&
nbsp;. . Court] or branch in this State
having jurisdiction in matters relating to the affairs of decedents.
(8) (7) "Conservator" means a
person who is appointed by a Court to
manage the estate of a protected person is as defined in Section 5-102.
(8) "Court" means the [. . . . . . . . . . . . . & nbsp;. . Court] or branch in this State having jurisdiction in matters relating to the affairs of decedents.
(9) "Descendant" of an individual means all of his [or her] descendants of all generations, with the relationship of parent and child at each generation being determined by the definition of child and parent contained in this Code.
(10) "Devise," when used as a noun, means a testamentary disposition of real or personal property and, when used as a verb, means to dispose of real or personal property by will.
(11) "Devisee" means a person designated in a will to receive a devise. For the purposes of Article II, in the case of a devise to an existing trust or trustee, or to a trustee on trust described by will, the trust or trustee is the devisee and the beneficiaries are not devisees.
(12) "Disability" means cause for a protective order as described in
Section
5-401.
(13) (12) "Distributee" means any person who
has received property of a
decedent from his [or her] personal representative other than as a creditor or
purchaser. A testamentary trustee is a distributee only to the extent of distributed
assets or increment thereto remaining in his [or her] hands. A beneficiary of a
testamentary trust to whom the trustee has distributed property received from a
personal representative is a distributee of the personal representative. For the
purposes of this provision, "testamentary trustee" includes a trustee to whom assets
are transferred by will, to the extent of the devised assets.
(14) (13) "Estate" includes the property of the
decedent, trust, or other
person whose affairs are subject to this Code as originally constituted and as it exists
from time to time during administration.
(15) (14) "Exempt property" means that
property of a decedent's estate
which is described in Section 2-403.
(16) (15) "Fiduciary" includes a personal
representative, guardian,
conservator, and trustee.
(17) (16) "Foreign personal representative"
means a personal representative
appointed by another jurisdiction.
(18) (17) "Formal proceedings" means
proceedings conducted before a
judge with notice to interested persons.
(19) (18) "Governing instrument" means a deed,
will, trust, insurance or
annuity policy, account with POD designation, security registered in beneficiary
form (TOD), pension, profit-sharing, retirement, or similar benefit plan, instrument
creating or exercising a power of appointment or a power of attorney, or a
dispositive, appointive, or nominative instrument of any similar type.
(20) (19) "Guardian" means a
person who has qualified as a guardian of a
minor or incapacitated person pursuant to testamentary or court, but excludes one
who is merely a guardian ad litem is as defined in Section 5-102.
(21) (20) "Heirs," except as controlled by
Section 2-711, means persons,
including the surviving spouse and the state, who are entitled under the statutes of
intestate succession to the property of a decedent.
(22) (21) "Incapacitated person" means an
individual described in Section
5-103 5-102.
(23) (22) "Informal proceedings" means those
conducted without notice to
interested persons by an officer of the Court acting as a registrar for probate of a
will or appointment of a personal representative.
(24) (23) "Interested person" includes heirs,
devisees, children, spouses,
creditors, beneficiaries, and any others having a property right in or claim against a
trust estate or the estate of a decedent, ward, or protected person. It also includes
persons having priority for appointment as personal representative, and other
fiduciaries representing interested persons. The meaning as it relates to particular
persons may vary from time to time and must be determined according to the
particular purposes of, and matter involved in, any proceeding.
(25) (24) "Issue" of a person means descendant
as defined in subsection
paragraph (9).
(26) (25) "Joint tenants with the right of
survivorship" and "community
property with the right of survivorship" includes co-owners of property held under
circumstances that entitle one or more to the whole of the property on the death of
the other or others, but excludes forms of co-ownership registration in which the
underlying ownership of each party is in proportion to that party's contribution.
(27) (26) "Lease" includes an oil, gas, or other
mineral lease.
(28) (27) "Letters" includes letters testamentary,
letters of guardianship,
letters of administration, and letters of conservatorship.
(29) (28) "Minor" means a person
who is under [21] years of age is as
defined in Section 5-102.
(30) (29) "Mortgage" means any conveyance,
agreement, or arrangement in
which property is encumbered or used as security.
(31) (30) "Nonresident decedent" means a
decedent who was domiciled in
another jurisdiction at the time of his [or her] death.
(32) (31) "Organization" means a corporation,
business trust, estate, trust,
partnership, joint venture, association, government or governmental subdivision or
agency, or any other legal or commercial entity.
(33) (32) "Parent" includes any person entitled
to take, or who would be
entitled to take if the child died without a will, as a parent under this Code by
intestate succession from the child whose relationship is in question and excludes
any person who is only a stepparent, foster parent, or grandparent.
(34) (33) "Payor" means a trustee, insurer,
business entity, employer,
government, governmental agency or subdivision, or any other person authorized or
obligated by law or a governing instrument to make payments.
(35) (34) "Person" means an individual or an
organization.
(36) (35) "Personal representative" includes
executor, administrator,
successor personal representative, special administrator, and persons who perform
substantially the same function under the law governing their status. "General
personal representative" excludes special administrator.
(37) (36) "Petition" means a written request to
the Court for an order after
notice.
(38) (37) "Proceeding" includes action at law
and suit in equity.
(39) (38) "Property" includes both real and
personal property or any interest
therein and means anything that may be the subject of ownership.
(40) (39) "Protected person" is as defined in
Section 5-103 5-102.
(41) (40) "Protective proceeding" means a
proceeding described in Section
5-103 under the provisions of Part 4 of Article V.
(42) (41) "Registrar" refers to the official of the
Court designated to
perform the functions of Registrar as provided in Section 1-307.
(43) (42) "Security" includes any note, stock,
treasury stock, bond,
debenture, evidence of indebtedness, certificate of interest or participation in an oil,
gas, or mining title or lease or in payments out of production under such a title or
lease, collateral trust certificate, transferable share, voting trust certificate or, in
general, any interest or instrument commonly known as a security, or any certificate
of interest or participation, any temporary or interim certificate, receipt, or
certificate of deposit for, or any warrant or right to subscribe to or purchase, any of
the foregoing.
(44) (43) "Settlement," in reference to a
decedent's estate, includes the full
process of administration, distribution, and closing.
(45) (44) "Special administrator" means a
personal representative as
described by Sections 3-614 through 3-618.
(46) (45) "State" means a state of the United
States, the District of
Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, or any territory or insular possession
subject to the jurisdiction of the United States.
(47) (46) "Successor personal representative"
means a personal
representative, other than a special administrator, who is appointed to succeed a
previously appointed personal representative.
(48) (47) "Successors" means persons, other
than creditors, who are
entitled to property of a decedent under his [or her] will or this Code.
(49) (48) "Supervised administration" refers to
the proceedings described in
Article III, Part 5.
(50) (49) "Survive" means that an individual has
neither predeceased an
event, including the death of another individual, nor is deemed to have predeceased
an event under Section 2-104 or 2-702. The term includes its derivatives, such as
"survives," "survived," "survivor," "surviving."
(51) (50) "Testacy proceeding" means a
proceeding to establish a will or
determine intestacy.
(52) (51) "Testator" includes an individual of
either sex.
(53) (52) "Trust" includes an express trust,
private or charitable, with
additions thereto, wherever and however created. The term also includes a trust
created or determined by judgment or decree under which the trust is to be
administered in the manner of an express trust. The term excludes other
constructive trusts and excludes resulting trusts, conservatorships, personal
representatives, trust accounts as defined in Article VI, custodial arrangements
pursuant to [each state should list its legislation, including that relating to [gifts]
[transfers] to minors, dealing with special custodial situations], business trusts
providing for certificates to be issued to beneficiaries, common trust funds, voting
trusts, security arrangements, liquidation trusts, and trusts for the primary purpose
of paying debts, dividends, interest, salaries, wages, profits, pensions, or employee
benefits of any kind, and any arrangement under which a person is nominee or
escrowee for another.
(54) (53) "Trustee" includes an original,
additional, or successor trustee,
whether or not appointed or confirmed by court.
(55) (54) "Ward" means an individual described
in Section 5-103 5-102.
(56) (55) "Will" includes codicil and any
testamentary instrument that
merely appoints an executor, revokes or revises another will, nominates a guardian,
or expressly excludes or limits the right of an individual or class to succeed to
property of the decedent passing by intestate succession.
[(57) (56) "Separate property" (if necessary, to
be defined locally in
accordance with existing concept in adopting state).
(58) (57) "Community property" (if necessary,
to be defined locally in
accordance with existing concept in adopting state).]
Definition of "disability" deleted because no longer a defined term in Article V. Definitions of "conservator," "guardian," and "minor" revised to avoid any inference that terms have different meaning here than as defined in Article V. Definition of "protected person" revised to correct for a change in cross-reference. Revision of definition of "protective proceeding" necessary because "protective proceeding" no longer a defined term in Article V. Definitions of "conservator" and "court" switched so that all definitions are in alphabetical order.
Amendment 2 amends UPC Section 3-303 to correct for a change in cross-reference:
SECTION 3-303. INFORMAL PROBATE; PROOF AND FINDINGS REQUIRED.
(a) In an informal proceeding for original probate of a will, the Registrar shall determine whether:
(1) the application is complete;
(2) the applicant has made oath or affirmation that the statements contained in the application are true to the best of his knowledge and belief;
(3) the applicant appears from the application to be an interested person
as defined in Section 1-201(20) 1-201(23);
(4) on the basis of the statements in the application, venue is proper;
(5) an original, duly executed and apparently unrevoked will is in the Registrar's possession;
(6) any notice required by Section 3-204 has been given and that the application is not within Section 3-304; and
(7) it appears from the application that the time limit for original probate has not expired.
(b) The application shall be denied if it indicates that a personal representative has been appointed in another [county] of this state or except as provided in subsection (d) below, if it appears that this or another will of the decedent has been the subject of a previous probate order.
(c) A will which appears to have the required signatures and which contains an attestation clause showing that requirements of execution under Section 2-502, 2-503 or 2-506 have been met shall be probated without further proof. In other cases, the Registrar may assume execution if the will appears to have been properly executed, or he may accept a sworn statement or affidavit of any person having knowledge of the circumstances of execution, whether or not the person was a witness to the will.
(d) Informal probate of a will which has been previously probated elsewhere may be granted at any time upon written application by any interested person, together with deposit of an authenticated copy of the will and of the statement probating it from the office or court where it was first probated.
(e) A will from a place which does not provide for probate of a will after death and which is not eligible for probate under subsection (a) above, may be probated in this state upon receipt by the Registrar of a duly authenticated copy of the will and a duly authenticated certificate of its legal custodian that the copy filed is a true copy and that the will has become operative under the law of the other place.
Amendment 3 amends UPC Section 3-308 to correct for a change in cross-refererence:
SECTION 3-308. INFORMAL APPOINTMENT PROCEEDINGS; PROOF AND FINDINGS REQUIRED.
(a) In informal appointment proceedings, the Registrar must determine whether:
(1) the application for informal appointment of a personal representative is complete;
(2) the applicant has made oath or affirmation that the statements contained in the application are true to the best of his knowledge and belief;
(3) the applicant appears from the application to be an interested person
as defined in Section 1-201(20) 1-201(23);
(4) on the basis of the statements in the application, venue is proper;
(5) any will to which the requested appointment relates has been formally or informally probated; but this requirement does not apply to the appointment of a special administrator;
(6) any notice required by Section 3-204 has been given;
(7) from the statements in the application, the person whose appointment is sought has priority entitling him to the appointment.
(b) Unless Section 3-612 controls, the application must be denied if it indicates that a personal representative who has not filed a written statement of resignation as provided in Section 3-610(c) has been appointed in this or another [county] of this state, that (unless the applicant is the domiciliary personal representative or his nominee) the decedent was not domiciled in this state and that a personal representative whose appointment has not been terminated has been appointed by a Court in the state of domicile, or that other requirements of this section have not been met.
Amendment 4 amends UPC Section 3-915 to correct for a change in cross-reference.
SECTION 3-915. DISTRIBUTION TO PERSON UNDER DISABILITY.
(a) A personal representative may discharge his obligation to distribute to any person under legal disability by distributing in a manner expressly provided in the will.
(b) Unless contrary to an express provision in the will, the personal
representative may discharge his obligation to distribute to a minor or person under
other disability as authorized by Section 5-101 5-104 or any
other statute. If the
personal representative knows that a conservator has been appointed or that a
proceeding for appointment of a conservator is pending, the personal representative
is authorized to distribute only to the conservator.
(c) If the heir or devisee is under disability other than minority, the personal representative is authorized to distribute to:
(1) an attorney in fact who has authority under a power of attorney to receive property for that person; or
(2) the spouse, parent or other close relative with whom the person under disability resides if the distribution is of amounts not exceeding [$10,000] a year, or property not exceeding [$10,000] in value, unless the court authorizes a larger amount or greater value.
Persons receiving money or property for the disabled person are obligated to apply the money or property to the support of that person, but may not pay themselves except by way of reimbursement for out-of-pocket expenses for goods and services necessary for the support of the disabled person. Excess sums must be preserved for future support of the disabled person. The personal representative is not responsible for the proper application of money or property distributed pursuant to this subsection.
Amendment 5 deletes existing UPC Article V, Parts 1 through 4, and substitutes Uniform Guardianship and Protective Proceedings Act (1997), modified as follows:
SECTION 101 5-101. SHORT
TITLE. This [Act] Parts 1-4 of this article
may be cited as the Uniform Guardianship and Protective Proceedings Act.
SECTION 102 5-102.
DEFINITIONS. In this [Act] Parts 1-4 of this
article:
(1) "Claim," with respect to a protected person, includes a claim
against an
individual, whether arising in contract, tort, or otherwise, and a claim against an
estate which arises at or after the appointment of a conservator, including expenses
of administration.
(2) (1) "Conservator" means a person who is
appointed by a court to
manage the estate of a protected person. The term includes a limited conservator.
(3) (2) "Court" means the [designate
appropriate court].
(4) (3) "Guardian" means a person who has
qualified as a guardian of a
minor or incapacitated person pursuant to appointment by a parent or spouse, or by
the court. The term includes a limited, emergency, and temporary substitute
guardian but not a guardian ad litem.
(5) (4) "Incapacitated person" means an
individual who, for reasons other
than being a minor, is unable to receive and evaluate information or make or
communicate decisions to such an extent that the individual lacks the ability to meet
essential requirements for physical health, safety, or self-care, even with appropriate
technological assistance.
(6) (5) "Legal representative" includes a
representative payee, a guardian or
conservator acting for a respondent in this State or elsewhere, a trustee or custodian
of a trust or custodianship of which the respondent is a beneficiary, and an agent
designated under a power of attorney, whether for health care or property, in which
the respondent is identified as the principal.
(7) "Letters" includes letters of guardianship and letters of
conservatorship.
(8) (6) "Minor" means an unemancipated
individual who has not attained
[18] years of age.
(9) (7) "Parent" means a parent whose parental
rights have not been
terminated.
(10) "Person" means an individual, corporation, business trust, estate,
trust,
partnership, limited liability company, association, joint venture, government,
governmental subdivision, agency, or instrumentality, or any other legal or
commercial entity.
(11) (8) "Protected person" means a minor or
other individual for whom a
conservator has been appointed or other protective order has been made.
(12) (9) "Respondent" means an individual for
whom the appointment of a
guardian or conservator or other protective order is sought.
(13) "State" means a State of the United States, the District of
Columbia,
Puerto Rico, the United States Virgin Islands, or any territory or insular possession
subject to the jurisdiction of the United States.
(14) ["Tribe" means an Indian tribe or band, or Alaskan Native village,
which is recognized by federal law or formally acknowledged by a State.
(15) (10)] "Ward"
means an individual for whom a guardian has been
appointed.
Definitions of "claim," "letters," "person," and "State" dropped because already defined in UPC Section 1-201. "Tribe" is not a defined term in Section 1-201 but appropriate place for such a definition would be in Article I, not here. Definition of "court" retained despite separate definition in Article I. In some Statess, jurisdiction over decedent's estates assigned to different court than court with jurisdiction over guardianship and protective proceedings. Also, definition of "parent" retained despite separate definition in Article I because used here in different sense than in remainder of Code.
[SECTION 103 5-103.
SUPPLEMENTAL GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF
LAW APPLICABLE. Unless displaced by the particular provisions of this
[Act
article], the principles of law and equity supplement its provisions.]
This section placed in brackets because duplicative of UPC Section 1-103. This and other duplicative section (Section 5-109) retained in text and not dropped so that remaining sections of this part retain same numbers as comparable article of UGPPA.
SECTION 104 5-104. FACILITY OF
TRANSFER.
(a) Unless a person required to transfer money or personal property to a minor knows that a conservator has been appointed or that a proceeding for appointment of a conservator of the estate of the minor is pending, the person may do so, as to an amount or value not exceeding [$5,000] a year, by transferring it to:
(1) a person who has the care and custody of the minor and with whom the minor resides;
(2) a guardian of the minor;
(3) a custodian under the Uniform Transfers To Minors Act or custodial trustee under the Uniform Custodial Trust Act; or
(4) a financial institution as a deposit in an interest-bearing account or certificate in the sole name of the minor and giving notice of the deposit to the minor.
(b) A person who transfers money or property in compliance with this section is not responsible for its proper application.
(c) A guardian or other person who receives money or property for a minor under subsection (a)(1) or (2) may only apply it to the support, care, education, health, and welfare of the minor, and may not derive a personal financial benefit except for reimbursement for necessary expenses. Any excess must be preserved for the future support, care, education, health, and welfare of the minor, and any balance must be transferred to the minor upon emancipation or attaining majority.
SECTION 105 5-105. DELEGATION OF
POWER BY PARENT OR
GUARDIAN. A parent or guardian of a minor or incapacitated person, by a power
of attorney, may delegate to another person, for a period not exceeding six months,
any power regarding care, custody, or property of the minor or ward, except the
power to consent to marriage or adoption.
SECTION 106 5-106.
SUBJECT-MATTER JURISDICTION. This [Act
article] applies to, and the court has jurisdiction over, guardianship and related
proceedings for individuals domiciled or present in this State, protective proceedings
for individuals domiciled in or having property located in this State, and property
coming into the control of a guardian or conservator who is subject to the laws of
this State.
SECTION 107 5-107. TRANSFER OF
JURISDICTION.
(a) After the appointment of a guardian or conservator or entry of another protective order, the court making the appointment or entering the order may transfer the proceeding to a court in another [county] in this State or to another State if the court is satisfied that a transfer will serve the best interest of the ward or protected person.
(b) If a guardianship or protective proceeding is pending in another state or a foreign country and a petition for guardianship or protective proceeding is filed in a court in this State, the court in this State shall notify the original court and, after consultation with the original court, assume or decline jurisdiction, whichever is in the best interest of the ward or protected person.
(c) A guardian, conservator, or like fiduciary appointed in another State
may petition the court for appointment as a guardian or conservator in this State if
venue in this State is or will be established. The appointment may be made upon
proof of appointment in the other State and presentation of a certified copy of the
portion of the court record in the other State specified by the court in this State.
Notice of hearing on the petition, together with a copy of the petition, must be given
to the ward or protected person, if the ward or protected person has attained 14
years of age, and to the persons who would be entitled to notice if the regular
procedures for appointment of a guardian or conservator under this [Act
article]
were applicable. The court shall make the appointment in this State unless it
concludes that the appointment would not be in the best interest of the ward or
protected person. Upon the filing of an acceptance of office and any required bond,
the court shall issue appropriate letters of guardianship or conservatorship. Within
14 days after an appointment, the guardian or conservator shall send or deliver a
copy of the order of appointment to the ward or protected person, if the ward or
protected person has attained 14 years of age, and to all persons given notice of the
hearing on the petition.
SECTION 108 5-108.
VENUE.
(a) Venue for a guardianship proceeding for a minor is in the [county] of this State in which the minor resides or is present at the time the proceeding is commenced.
(b) Venue for a guardianship proceeding for an incapacitated person is in the [county] of this State in which the respondent resides and, if the respondent has been admitted to an institution by order of a court of competent jurisdiction, in the [county] in which the court is located. Venue for the appointment of an emergency or a temporary substitute guardian of an incapacitated person is also in the [county] in which the respondent is present.
(c) Venue for a protective proceeding is in the [county] of this State in which the respondent resides, whether or not a guardian has been appointed in another place or, if the respondent does not reside in this State, in any [county] of this State in which property of the respondent is located.
(d) If a proceeding under this [Act article] is
brought in more than one
[county] in this State, the court of the [county] in which the proceeding is first
brought has the exclusive right to proceed unless that court determines that venue is
properly in another court or that the interests of justice otherwise require that the
proceeding be transferred.
[SECTION 109 5-109.
PRACTICE IN COURT.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in this [Act
article], the rules of civil
procedure, including the rules concerning appellate review, govern proceedings
under this [Act article].
(b) If guardianship and protective proceedings as to the same individual are commenced or pending in the same court, the proceedings may be consolidated.]
Placed in brackets because duplicative of UPC Section 1-304 but retained in Code to assure consistent numbering between UPC and UGPPA..
SECTION 110 5-110. LETTERS OF
OFFICE. Upon the guardian's filing of
an acceptance of office, the court shall issue appropriate letters of guardianship.
Upon the conservator's filing of an acceptance of office and any required bond, the
court shall issue appropriate letters of conservatorship. Letters of guardianship
must indicate whether the guardian was appointed by the court, a parent, or the
spouse. Any limitation on the powers of a guardian or conservator or of the assets
subject to a conservatorship must be endorsed on the guardian's or conservator's
letters.
SECTION 111 5-111. EFFECT OF
ACCEPTANCE OF APPOINTMENT.
By accepting appointment, a guardian or conservator submits personally to the
jurisdiction of the court in any proceeding relating to the guardianship or
conservatorship. The petitioner shall send or deliver notice of any proceeding to the
guardian or conservator at the guardian's or conservator's address shown in the
court records and at any other address then known to the petitioner.
SECTION 112 5-112. TERMINATION
OF OR CHANGE IN
GUARDIAN'S OR CONSERVATOR'S APPOINTMENT.
(a) The appointment of a guardian or conservator terminates upon the death, resignation, or removal of the guardian or conservator or upon termination of the guardianship or conservatorship. A resignation of a guardian or conservator is effective when approved by the court. [A parental or spousal appointment as guardian under an informally probated will terminates if the will is later denied probate in a formal proceeding.] Termination of the appointment of a guardian or conservator does not affect the liability of either for previous acts or the obligation to account for money and other assets of the ward or protected person.
(b) A ward, protected person, or person interested in the welfare of a ward or protected person may petition for removal of a guardian or conservator on the ground that removal would be in the best interest of the ward or protected person or for other good cause. A guardian or conservator may petition for permission to resign. A petition for removal or permission to resign may include a request for appointment of a successor guardian or conservator.
(c) The court may appoint an additional guardian or conservator at any time, to serve immediately or upon some other designated event, and may appoint a successor guardian or conservator in the event of a vacancy or make the appointment in contemplation of a vacancy, to serve if a vacancy occurs. An additional or successor guardian or conservator may file an acceptance of appointment at any time after the appointment, but not later than 30 days after the occurrence of the vacancy or other designated event. The additional or successor guardian or conservator becomes eligible to act on the occurrence of the vacancy or designated event, or the filing of the acceptance of appointment, whichever last occurs. A successor guardian or conservator succeeds to the predecessor's powers, and a successor conservator succeeds to the predecessor's title to the protected person's assets.
SECTION 113 5-113.
NOTICE.
(a) Except as otherwise ordered by the court for good cause, if notice of a hearing on a petition is required, other than a notice for which specific requirements are otherwise provided, the petitioner shall give notice of the time and place of the hearing to the person to be notified. Notice must be given in compliance with [insert the applicable rule of civil procedure], at least 14 days before the hearing.
(b) Proof of notice must be made before or at the hearing and filed in the proceeding.
(c) A notice under this [Act article] must be
given in plain language.
SECTION 114 5-114. WAIVER OF
NOTICE. A person may waive notice
by a writing signed by the person or the person's attorney and filed in the
proceeding. However, a respondent, ward, or protected person may not waive
notice.
SECTION 115 5-115. GUARDIAN AD
LITEM. At any stage of a
proceeding, a court may appoint a guardian ad litem if the court determines that
representation of the interest otherwise would be inadequate. If not precluded by a
conflict of interest, a guardian ad litem may be appointed to represent several
individuals or interests. The court shall state on the record the duties of the
guardian ad litem and its reasons for the appointment.
SECTION 116 5-116. REQUEST FOR
NOTICE; INTERESTED
PERSONS. An interested person not otherwise entitled to notice who desires to be
notified before any order is made in a guardianship proceeding, including a
proceeding after the appointment of a guardian, or in a protective proceeding, may
file a request for notice with the clerk of the court in which the proceeding is
pending. The clerk shall send or deliver a copy of the request to the guardian and to
the conservator if one has been appointed. A request is not effective unless it
contains a statement showing the interest of the person making it and the address of
that person or a lawyer to whom notice is to be given. The request is effective only
as to proceedings conducted after its filing. A governmental agency paying or
planning to pay benefits to the respondent or protected person is an interested
person in a protective proceeding.
SECTION 117 5-117. MULTIPLE
APPOINTMENTS OR
NOMINATIONS. If a respondent or other person makes more than one written
appointment or nomination of a guardian or a conservator, the most recent controls.
SECTION 201 5-201. APPOINTMENT
AND STATUS OF GUARDIAN.
A person becomes a guardian of a minor by parental appointment or upon
appointment by the court. The guardianship continues until terminated, without
regard to the location of the guardian or minor ward.
SECTION 202 5-202. PARENTAL
APPOINTMENT OF GUARDIAN.
(a) A guardian may be appointed by will or other signed writing by a parent for any minor child the parent has or may have in the future. The appointment may specify the desired limitations on the powers to be given to the guardian. The appointing parent may revoke or amend the appointment before confirmation by the court.
(b) Upon petition of an appointing parent and a finding that the appointing
parent will likely become unable to care for the child within [two] years, and after
notice as provided in Section 205(a) 5-205(a), the court, before
the appointment
becomes effective, may confirm the parent's selection of a guardian and terminate
the rights of others to object.
(c) Subject to Section 203 5-203, the
appointment of a guardian becomes
effective upon the appointing parent's death, an adjudication that the parent is an
incapacitated person, or a written determination by a physician who has examined
the parent that the parent is no longer able to care for the child, whichever first
occurs.
(d) The guardian becomes eligible to act upon the filing of an acceptance of appointment, which must be filed within 30 days after the guardian's appointment becomes effective. The guardian shall:
(1) file the acceptance of appointment and a copy of the will with the court of the [county] in which the will was or could be probated or, in the case of another appointing instrument, file the acceptance of appointment and the appointing instrument with the court of the [county] in which the minor resides or is present; and
(2) give written notice of the acceptance of appointment to the appointing parent, if living, the minor, if the minor has attained 14 years of age, and a person other than the parent having care and custody of the minor.
(e) Unless the appointment was previously confirmed by the court, the
notice given under subsection (d)(2) must include a statement of the right of those
notified to terminate the appointment by filing a written objection in the court as
provided in Section 203 5-203.
(f) Unless the appointment was previously confirmed by the court, within 30
days after filing the notice and the appointing instrument, a guardian shall petition
the court for confirmation of the appointment, giving notice in the manner provided
in Section 205(a) 5-205(a).
(g) The appointment of a guardian by a parent does not supersede the parental rights of either parent. If both parents are dead or have been adjudged incapacitated persons, an appointment by the last parent who died or was adjudged incapacitated has priority. An appointment by a parent which is effected by filing the guardian's acceptance under a will probated in the State of the testator's domicile is effective in this State.
(h) The powers of a guardian who timely complies with the requirements of subsections (d) and (f) relate back to give acts by the guardian which are of benefit to the minor and occurred on or after the date the appointment became effective the same effect as those that occurred after the filing of the acceptance of the appointment.
(i) The authority of a guardian appointed under this section terminates upon
the first to occur of the appointment of a guardian by the court or the giving of
written notice to the guardian of the filing of an objection pursuant to Section
203
5-203.
SECTION 203 5-203. OBJECTION BY
MINOR OR OTHERS TO
PARENTAL APPOINTMENT. Until the court has confirmed an appointee under
Section 202 5-202, a minor who is the subject of an
appointment by a parent and
who has attained 14 years of age, the other parent, or a person other than a parent
or guardian having care or custody of the minor may prevent or terminate the
appointment at any time by filing a written objection in the court in which the
appointing instrument is filed and giving notice of the objection to the guardian and
any other persons entitled to notice of the acceptance of the appointment. An
objection may be withdrawn, and if withdrawn is of no effect. The objection does
not preclude judicial appointment of the person selected by the parent. The court
may treat the filing of an objection as a petition for the appointment of an emergency
or a temporary guardian under Section 204 5-204, and proceed
accordingly.
SECTION 204 5-204. JUDICIAL
APPOINTMENT OF GUARDIAN:
CONDITIONS FOR APPOINTMENT.
(a) A minor or a person interested in the welfare of a minor may petition for appointment of a guardian.
(b) The court may appoint a guardian for a minor if the court finds the appointment is in the minor's best interest, and:
(i) the parents consent;
(ii) all parental rights have been terminated; or
(iii) the parents are unwilling or unable to exercise their parental rights.
(c) If a guardian is appointed by a parent pursuant to Section
202 5-202 and
the appointment has not been prevented or terminated under Section 203
5-203, that
appointee has priority for appointment. However, the court may proceed with
another appointment upon a finding that the appointee under Section 202
5-202 has
failed to accept the appointment within 30 days after notice of the guardianship
proceeding.
(d) If necessary and on petition or motion and whether or not the conditions
of subsection (b) have been established, the court may appoint a temporary guardian
for a minor upon a showing that an immediate need exists and that the appointment
would be in the best interest of the minor. Notice in the manner provided in Section
113 5-113 must be given to the parents and to a minor who has
attained 14 years of
age. Except as otherwise ordered by the court, the temporary guardian has the
authority of an unlimited guardian, but the duration of the temporary guardianship
may not exceed six months. Within five days after the appointment, the temporary
guardian shall send or deliver a copy of the order to all individuals who would be
entitled to notice of hearing under Section 205 5-205.
(e) If the court finds that following the procedures of this [article
part] will
likely result in substantial harm to a minor's health or safety and that no other
person appears to have authority to act in the circumstances, the court, on
appropriate petition, may appoint an emergency guardian for the minor. The
duration of the guardian's authority may not exceed [30] days and the guardian may
exercise only the powers specified in the order. Reasonable notice of the time and
place of a hearing on the petition for appointment of an emergency guardian must be
given to the minor, if the minor has attained 14 years of age, to each living parent of
the minor, and a person having care or custody of the minor, if other than a parent.
The court may dispense with the notice if it finds from affidavit or testimony that the
minor will be substantially harmed before a hearing can be held on the petition. If
the guardian is appointed without notice, notice of the appointment must be given
within 48 hours after the appointment and a hearing on the appropriateness of the
appointment held within [five] days after the appointment.
SECTION 205 5-205. JUDICIAL
APPOINTMENT OF GUARDIAN:
PROCEDURE.
(a) After a petition for appointment of a guardian is filed, the court shall schedule a hearing, and the petitioner shall give notice of the time and place of the hearing, together with a copy of the petition, to:
(1) the minor, if the minor has attained 14 years of age and is not the petitioner;
(2) any person alleged to have had the primary care and custody of the minor during the 60 days before the filing of the petition;
(3) each living parent of the minor or, if there is none, the adult nearest in kinship that can be found;
(4) any person nominated as guardian by the minor if the minor has attained 14 years of age;
(5) any appointee of a parent whose appointment has not been prevented
or terminated under Section 203 5-203; and
(6) any guardian or conservator currently acting for the minor in this State or elsewhere.
(b) The court, upon hearing, shall make the appointment if it finds that a
qualified person seeks appointment, venue is proper, the required notices have been
given, the conditions of Section 204(b) 5-204(b) have been
met,
and the best
interest of the minor will be served by the appointment. In other cases, the court
may dismiss the proceeding or make any other disposition of the matter that will
serve the best interest of the minor.
(c) If the court determines at any stage of the proceeding, before or after appointment, that the interests of the minor are or may be inadequately represented, it may appoint a lawyer to represent the minor, giving consideration to the choice of the minor if the minor has attained 14 years of age.
SECTION 206 5-206. JUDICIAL
APPOINTMENT OF GUARDIAN:
PRIORITY OF MINOR'S NOMINEE; LIMITED GUARDIANSHIP.
(a) The court shall appoint as guardian a person whose appointment will be in the best interest of the minor. The court shall appoint a person nominated by the minor, if the minor has attained 14 years of age, unless the court finds the appointment will be contrary to the best interest of the minor.
(b) In the interest of developing self-reliance of a ward or for other good
cause, the court, at the time of appointment or later, on its own motion or on
motion of the minor ward or other interested person, may limit the powers of a
guardian otherwise granted by this [article part] and thereby
create a limited
guardianship. Following the same procedure, the court may grant additional powers
or withdraw powers previously granted.
SECTION 207 5-207. DUTIES OF
GUARDIAN.
(a) Except as otherwise limited by the court, a guardian of a minor ward has the duties and responsibilities of a parent regarding the ward's support, care, education, health, and welfare. A guardian shall act at all times in the ward's best interest and exercise reasonable care, diligence, and prudence.
(b) A guardian shall:
(1) become or remain personally acquainted with the ward and maintain sufficient contact with the ward to know of the ward's capacities, limitations, needs, opportunities, and physical and mental health;
(2) take reasonable care of the ward's personal effects and bring a protective proceeding if necessary to protect other property of the ward;
(3) expend money of the ward which has been received by the guardian for the ward's current needs for support, care, education, health, and welfare;
(4) conserve any excess money of the ward for the ward's future needs, but if a conservator has been appointed for the estate of the ward, the guardian shall pay the money at least quarterly to the conservator to be conserved for the ward's future needs;
(5) report the condition of the ward and account for money and other assets in the guardian's possession or subject to the guardian's control, as ordered by the court on application of any person interested in the ward's welfare or as required by court rule; and
(6) inform the court of any change in the ward's custodial dwelling or address.
SECTION 208 5-208. POWERS OF
GUARDIAN.
(a) Except as otherwise limited by the court, a guardian of a minor ward has the powers of a parent regarding the ward's support, care, education, health, and welfare.
(b) A guardian may:
(1) apply for and receive money for the support of the ward otherwise payable to the ward's parent, guardian, or custodian under the terms of any statutory system of benefits or insurance or any private contract, devise, trust, conservatorship, or custodianship;
(2) if otherwise consistent with the terms of any order by a court of competent jurisdiction relating to custody of the ward, take custody of the ward and establish the ward's place of custodial dwelling, but may only establish or move the ward's custodial dwelling outside the State upon express authorization of the court;
(3) if a conservator for the estate of a ward has not been appointed with existing authority, commence a proceeding, including an administrative proceeding, or take other appropriate action to compel a person to support the ward or to pay money for the benefit of the ward;
(4) consent to medical or other care, treatment, or service for the ward;
(5) consent to the marriage of the ward; and
(6) if reasonable under all of the circumstances, delegate to the ward certain responsibilities for decisions affecting the ward's well-being.
(c) The court may specifically authorize the guardian to consent to the adoption of the ward.
SECTION 209 5-209. RIGHTS AND
IMMUNITIES OF GUARDIAN.
(a) A guardian is entitled to reasonable compensation for services as guardian and to reimbursement for room, board, and clothing provided by the guardian to the ward, but only as approved by the court. If a conservator, other than the guardian or a person who is affiliated with the guardian, has been appointed for the estate of the ward, reasonable compensation and reimbursement to the guardian may be approved and paid by the conservator without order of the court.
(b) A guardian need not use the guardian's personal funds for the ward's expenses. A guardian is not liable to a third person for acts of the ward solely by reason of the guardianship. A guardian is not liable for injury to the ward resulting from the negligence or act of a third person providing medical or other care, treatment, or service for the ward except to the extent that a parent would be liable under the circumstances.
SECTION 210 5-210. TERMINATION
OF GUARDIANSHIP; OTHER
PROCEEDINGS AFTER APPOINTMENT.
(a) A guardianship of a minor terminates upon the minor's death, adoption, emancipation or attainment of majority or as ordered by the court.
(b) A ward or a person interested in the welfare of a ward may petition for any order that is in the best interest of the ward. The petitioner shall give notice of the hearing on the petition to the ward, if the ward has attained 14 years of age and is not the petitioner, the guardian, and any other person as ordered by the court.
SECTION 301 5-301. APPOINTMENT
AND STATUS OF GUARDIAN.
A person becomes a guardian of an incapacitated person by a parental or spousal
appointment or upon appointment by the court. The guardianship continues until
terminated, without regard to the location of the guardian or ward.
SECTION 302 5-302. APPOINTMENT
OF GUARDIAN BY WILL OR
OTHER WRITING.
(a) A parent, by will or other signed writing, may appoint a guardian for an unmarried child who the parent believes is an incapacitated person, specify desired limitations on the powers to be given to the guardian, and revoke or amend the appointment before confirmation by the court.
(b) An individual, by will or other signed writing, may appoint a guardian for the individual's spouse who the appointing spouse believes is an incapacitated person, specify desired limitations on the powers to be given to the guardian, and revoke or amend the appointment before confirmation by the court.
(c) The incapacitated person, the person having care or custody of the
incapacitated person if other than the appointing parent or spouse, or the adult
nearest in kinship to the incapacitated person may file a written objection to an
appointment, unless the court has confirmed the appointment under subsection (d).
The filing of the written objection terminates the appointment. An objection may be
withdrawn and, if withdrawn, is of no effect. The objection does not preclude
judicial appointment of the person selected by the parent or spouse. Notice of the
objection must be given to the guardian and any other person entitled to notice of
the acceptance of the appointment. The court may treat the filing of an objection as
a petition for the appointment of an emergency guardian under Section
312 5-312 or
for the appointment of a limited or unlimited guardian under Section 304
5-304 and
proceed accordingly.
(d) Upon petition of the appointing parent or spouse, and a finding that the appointing parent or spouse will likely become unable to care for the incapacitated person within [two] years, and after notice as provided in this section, the court, before the appointment becomes effective, may confirm the appointing parent's or spouse's selection of a guardian and terminate the rights of others to object.
SECTION 303 5-303. APPOINTMENT
OF GUARDIAN BY WILL OR
OTHER WRITING: EFFECTIVENESS; ACCEPTANCE;
CONFIRMATION.
(a) The appointment of a guardian under Section 302
5-302 becomes
effective upon the death of the appointing parent or spouse, the adjudication of
incapacity of the appointing parent or spouse, or a written determination by a
physician who has examined the appointing parent or spouse that the appointing
parent or spouse is no longer able to care for the incapacitated person, whichever
first occurs.
(b) A guardian appointed under Section 302
5-302 becomes eligible to act
upon the filing of an acceptance of appointment, which must be filed within 30 days
after the guardian's appointment becomes effective. The guardian shall:
(1) file the notice of acceptance of appointment and a copy of the will with the court of the [county] in which the will was or could be probated or, in the case of another appointing instrument, file the acceptance of appointment and the appointing instrument with the court in the [county] in which the incapacitated person resides or is present; and
(2) give written notice of the acceptance of appointment to the appointing parent or spouse if living, the incapacitated person, a person having care or custody of the incapacitated person other than the appointing parent or spouse, and the adult nearest in kinship.
(c) Unless the appointment was previously confirmed by the court, the
notice given under subsection (b)(2) must include a statement of the right of those
notified to terminate the appointment by filing a written objection as provided in
Section 302 5-302.
(d) An appointment effected by filing the guardian's acceptance under a will probated in the State of the testator's domicile is effective in this State.
(e) Unless the appointment was previously confirmed by the court, within
30 days after filing the notice and the appointing instrument, a guardian appointed
under Section 302 5-302 shall file a petition in the court for
confirmation of the
appointment. Notice of the filing must be given in the manner provided in Section
309 5-309.
(f) The authority of a guardian appointed under Section
302 5-302
terminates upon the appointment of a guardian by the court or the giving of written
notice to the guardian of the filing of an objection pursuant to Section
302
5-302,
whichever first occurs.
(g) The appointment of a guardian under this section is not a determination of incapacity.
(h) The powers of a guardian who timely complies with the requirements of subsections (b) and (e) relate back to give acts by the guardian which are of benefit to the incapacitated person and occurred on or after the date the appointment became effective the same effect as those that occurred after the filing of the acceptance of appointment.
SECTION 304 5-304. JUDICIAL
APPOINTMENT OF GUARDIAN:
PETITION.
(a) An individual or a person interested in the individual's welfare may petition for a determination of incapacity, in whole or in part, and for the appointment of a limited or unlimited guardian for the individual.
(b) The petition must set forth the petitioner's name, residence, current address if different, relationship to the respondent, and interest in the appointment and, to the extent known, state or contain the following with respect to the respondent and the relief requested:
(1) the respondent's name, age, principal residence, current street address, and, if different, the address of the dwelling in which it is proposed that the respondent will reside if the appointment is made;
(2) the name and address of the respondent's:
(A) spouse, or if the respondent has none, an adult with whom the respondent has resided for more than six months before the filing of the petition; and
(B) adult children or, if the respondent has none, the respondent's parents and adult brothers and sisters, or if the respondent has none, at least one of the adults nearest in kinship to the respondent who can be found;
(3) the name and address of any person responsible for care or custody of the respondent;
(4) the name and address of any legal representative of the respondent;
(5) the name and address of any person nominated as guardian by the respondent;
(6) the name and address of any proposed guardian and the reason why the proposed guardian should be selected;
(7) the reason why guardianship is necessary, including a brief description of the nature and extent of the respondent's alleged incapacity;
(8) if an unlimited guardianship is requested, the reason why limited guardianship is inappropriate and, if a limited guardianship is requested, the powers to be granted to the limited guardian; and
(9) a general statement of the respondent's property with an estimate of its value, including any insurance or pension, and the source and amount of any other anticipated income or receipts.
SECTION 305 5-305. JUDICIAL
APPOINTMENT OF GUARDIAN:
PRELIMINARIES TO HEARING.
(a) Upon receipt of a petition to establish a guardianship, the court shall set a date and time for hearing the petition and appoint a [visitor]. The duties and reporting requirements of the [visitor] are limited to the relief requested in the petition. The [visitor] must be an individual having training or experience in the type of incapacity alleged.
[(b) The court shall appoint a lawyer to represent the respondent in the proceeding if:
(1) requested by the respondent;
(2) recommended by the [visitor]; or
(3) the court determines that the respondent needs representation.]
[(b) Unless the respondent is represented by a lawyer, the court shall appoint a lawyer to represent the respondent in the proceeding.]
(c) The [visitor] shall interview the respondent in person and, to the extent that the respondent is able to understand:
(1) explain to the respondent the substance of the petition, the nature, purpose, and effect of the proceeding, the respondent's rights at the hearing, and the general powers and duties of a guardian;
(2) determine the respondent's views about the proposed guardian, the proposed guardian's powers and duties, and the scope and duration of the proposed guardianship;
(3) inform the respondent of the right to employ and consult with a lawyer at the respondent's own expense and the right to request a court-appointed lawyer; and
(4) inform the respondent that all costs and expenses of the proceeding, including respondent's attorney's fees, will be paid from the respondent's estate.
(d) In addition to the duties imposed by subsection (c), the [visitor] shall:
(1) interview the petitioner and the proposed guardian;
(2) visit the respondent's present dwelling and any dwelling in which the respondent will live if the appointment is made;
(3) obtain information from any physician or other person who is known to have treated, advised, or assessed the respondent's relevant physical or mental condition; and
(4) make any other investigation the court directs.
(e) The [visitor] shall promptly file a report in writing with the court, which must include:
(1) a recommendation as to whether a lawyer should be appointed to represent the respondent;
(2) a summary of daily functions the respondent can manage without assistance, could manage with the assistance of supportive services or benefits, including use of appropriate technological assistance, and cannot manage;
(3) recommendations regarding the appropriateness of guardianship, including as to whether less restrictive means of intervention are available, the type of guardianship, and, if a limited guardianship, the powers to be granted to the limited guardian;
(4) a statement of the qualifications of the proposed guardian, together with a statement as to whether the respondent approves or disapproves of the proposed guardian, and the powers and duties proposed or the scope of the guardianship;
(5) a statement as to whether the proposed dwelling meets the respondent's individual needs;
(6) a recommendation as to whether a professional evaluation or further evaluation is necessary; and
(7) any other matters the court directs.
SECTION 306 5-306. JUDICIAL
APPOINTMENT OF GUARDIAN:
PROFESSIONAL EVALUATION. At or before a hearing under this
[article
part], the court may order a professional evaluation of the respondent and shall
order the evaluation if the respondent so demands. If the court orders the
evaluation, the respondent must be examined by a physician, psychologist, or other
individual appointed by the court who is qualified to evaluate the respondent's
alleged impairment. The examiner shall promptly file a written report with the
court. Unless otherwise directed by the court, the report must contain:
(1) a description of the nature, type, and extent of the respondent's specific cognitive and functional limitations;
(2) an evaluation of the respondent's mental and physical condition and, if appropriate, educational potential, adaptive behavior, and social skills;
(3) a prognosis for improvement and a recommendation as to the appropriate treatment or habilitation plan; and
(4) the date of any assessment or examination upon which the report is based.
SECTION 307 5-307.
CONFIDENTIALITY OF RECORDS. The written
report of a [visitor] and any professional evaluation are confidential and must be
sealed upon filing, but are available to:
(1) the court;
(2) the respondent without limitation as to use;
(3) the petitioner, the [visitor], and the petitioner's and respondent's lawyers, for purposes of the proceeding; and
(4) other persons for such purposes as the court may order for good cause.
SECTION 308 5-308. JUDICIAL
APPOINTMENT OF GUARDIAN:
PRESENCE AND RIGHTS AT HEARING.
(a) Unless excused by the court for good cause, the proposed guardian shall attend the hearing. The respondent shall attend and participate in the hearing, unless excused by the court for good cause. The respondent may present evidence and subpoena witnesses and documents; examine witnesses, including any court-appointed physician, psychologist, or other individual qualified to evaluate the alleged impairment, and the [visitor]; and otherwise participate in the hearing. The hearing may be held in a location convenient to the respondent and may be closed upon the request of the respondent and a showing of good cause.
(b) Any person may request permission to participate in the proceeding. The court may grant the request, with or without hearing, upon determining that the best interest of the respondent will be served. The court may attach appropriate conditions to the participation.
SECTION 309 5-309.
NOTICE.
(a) A copy of a petition for guardianship and notice of the hearing on the petition must be served personally on the respondent. The notice must include a statement that the respondent must be physically present unless excused by the court, inform the respondent of the respondent's rights at the hearing, and include a description of the nature, purpose, and consequences of an appointment. A failure to serve the respondent with a notice substantially complying with this subsection precludes the court from granting the petition.
(b) In a proceeding to establish a guardianship, notice of the hearing must be given to the persons listed in the petition. Failure to give notice under this subsection does not preclude the appointment of a guardian or the making of a protective order.
(c) Notice of the hearing on a petition for an order after appointment of a guardian, together with a copy of the petition, must be given to the ward, the guardian, and any other person the court directs.
(d) A guardian shall give notice of the filing of the guardian's report, together with a copy of the report, to the ward and any other person the court directs. The notice must be delivered or sent within 14 days after the filing of the report.
SECTION 310 5-310. WHO MAY BE
GUARDIAN: PRIORITIES.
(a) Subject to subsection (c), the court in appointing a guardian shall consider persons otherwise qualified in the following order of priority:
(1) a guardian, other than a temporary or emergency guardian, currently acting for the respondent in this State or elsewhere;
(2) a person nominated as guardian by the respondent, including the respondent's most recent nomination made in a durable power of attorney, if at the time of the nomination the respondent had sufficient capacity to express a preference;
(3) an agent appointed by the respondent under [a durable power of attorney for health care] [the Uniform Health-Care Decisions Act];
(4) the spouse of the respondent or a person nominated by will or other signed writing of a deceased spouse;
(5) an adult child of the respondent;
(6) a parent of the respondent, or an individual nominated by will or other signed writing of a deceased parent; and
(7) an adult with whom the respondent has resided for more than six months before the filing of the petition.
(b) With respect to persons having equal priority, the court shall select the one it considers best qualified. The court, acting in the best interest of the respondent, may decline to appoint a person having priority and appoint a person having a lower priority or no priority.
(c) An owner, operator, or employee of [a long-term-care institution] at which the respondent is receiving care may not be appointed as guardian unless related to the respondent by blood, marriage, or adoption.
SECTION 311 5-311. FINDINGS;
ORDER OF APPOINTMENT.
(a) The court may:
(1) appoint a limited or unlimited guardian for a respondent only if it finds by clear and convincing evidence that:
(A) the respondent is an incapacitated person; and
(B) the respondent's identified needs cannot be met by less restrictive means, including use of appropriate technological assistance; or
(2) with appropriate findings, treat the petition as one for a protective
order under Section 401 5-401, enter any other appropriate
order, or dismiss the
proceeding.
(b) The court, whenever feasible, shall grant to a guardian only those powers necessitated by the ward's limitations and demonstrated needs and make appointive and other orders that will encourage the development of the ward's maximum self-reliance and independence.
(c) Within 14 days after an appointment, a guardian shall send or deliver to the ward and to all other persons given notice of the hearing on the petition a copy of the order of appointment, together with a notice of the right to request termination or modification.
SECTION 312 5-312. EMERGENCY
GUARDIAN.
(a) If the court finds that compliance with the procedures of this
[article
part] will likely result in substantial harm to the respondent's health, safety, or
welfare, and that no other person appears to have authority and willingness to act in
the circumstances, the court, on petition by a person interested in the respondent's
welfare, may appoint an emergency guardian whose authority may not exceed [60]
days and who may exercise only the powers specified in the order. Immediately
upon receipt of the petition for an emergency guardianship, the court shall appoint a
lawyer to represent the respondent in the proceeding. Except as otherwise provided
in subsection (b), reasonable notice of the time and place of a hearing on the petition
must be given to the respondent and any other persons as the court directs.
(b) An emergency guardian may be appointed without notice to the respondent and the respondent's lawyer only if the court finds from affidavit or testimony that the respondent will be substantially harmed before a hearing on the appointment can be held. If the court appoints an emergency guardian without notice to the respondent, the respondent must be given notice of the appointment within 48 hours after the appointment. The court shall hold a hearing on the appropriateness of the appointment within [five] days after the appointment.
(c) Appointment of an emergency guardian, with or without notice, is not a determination of the respondent's incapacity.
(d) The court may remove an emergency guardian at any time. An
emergency guardian shall make any report the court requires. In other respects, the
provisions of this [Act article] concerning guardians apply to
an
emergency
guardian.
SECTION 313 5-313. TEMPORARY
SUBSTITUTE GUARDIAN.
(a) If the court finds that a guardian is not effectively performing the guardian's duties and that the welfare of the ward requires immediate action, it may appoint a temporary substitute guardian for the ward for a specified period not exceeding six months. Except as otherwise ordered by the court, a temporary substitute guardian so appointed has the powers set forth in the previous order of appointment. The authority of any unlimited or limited guardian previously appointed by the court is suspended as long as a temporary substitute guardian has authority. If an appointment is made without previous notice to the ward or the affected guardian, the court, within five days after the appointment, shall inform the ward or guardian of the appointment.
(b) The court may remove a temporary substitute guardian at any time. A
temporary substitute guardian shall make any report the court requires. In other
respects, the provisions of this [Act article] concerning
guardians apply to a
temporary substitute guardian.
SECTION 314 5-314. DUTIES OF
GUARDIAN.
(a) Except as otherwise limited by the court, a guardian shall make decisions regarding the ward's support, care, education, health, and welfare. A guardian shall exercise authority only as necessitated by the ward's limitations and, to the extent possible, shall encourage the ward to participate in decisions, act on the ward's own behalf, and develop or regain the capacity to manage the ward's personal affairs. A guardian, in making decisions, shall consider the expressed desires and personal values of the ward to the extent known to the guardian. A guardian at all times shall act in the ward's best interest and exercise reasonable care, diligence, and prudence.
(b) A guardian shall:
(1) become or remain personally acquainted with the ward and maintain sufficient contact with the ward to know of the ward's capacities, limitations, needs, opportunities, and physical and mental health;
(2) take reasonable care of the ward's personal effects and bring protective proceedings if necessary to protect the property of the ward;
(3) expend money of the ward that has been received by the guardian for the ward's current needs for support, care, education, health, and welfare;
(4) conserve any excess money of the ward for the ward's future needs, but if a conservator has been appointed for the estate of the ward, the guardian shall pay the money to the conservator, at least quarterly, to be conserved for the ward's future needs;
(5) immediately notify the court if the ward's condition has changed so that the ward is capable of exercising rights previously removed; and
(6) inform the court of any change in the ward's custodial dwelling or address.
SECTION 315 5-315. POWERS OF
GUARDIAN.
(a) Except as otherwise limited by the court, a guardian may:
(1) apply for and receive money payable to the ward or the ward's guardian or custodian for the support of the ward under the terms of any statutory system of benefits or insurance or any private contract, devise, trust, conservatorship, or custodianship;
(2) if otherwise consistent with the terms of any order by a court of competent jurisdiction relating to custody of the ward, take custody of the ward and establish the ward's place of custodial dwelling, but may only establish or move the ward's place of dwelling outside this State upon express authorization of the court;
(3) if a conservator for the estate of the ward has not been appointed with existing authority, commence a proceeding, including an administrative proceeding, or take other appropriate action to compel a person to support the ward or to pay money for the benefit of the ward;
(4) consent to medical or other care, treatment, or service for the ward;
(5) consent to the marriage [or divorce] of the ward; and
(6) if reasonable under all of the circumstances, delegate to the ward certain responsibilities for decisions affecting the ward's well-being.
(b) The court may specifically authorize the guardian to consent to the adoption of the ward.
SECTION 316 5-316. RIGHTS AND
IMMUNITIES OF GUARDIAN;
LIMITATIONS.
(a) A guardian is entitled to reasonable compensation for services as guardian and to reimbursement for room, board, and clothing provided to the ward, but only as approved by order of the court. If a conservator, other than the guardian or one who is affiliated with the guardian, has been appointed for the estate of the ward, reasonable compensation and reimbursement to the guardian may be approved and paid by the conservator without order of the court.
(b) A guardian need not use the guardian's personal funds for the ward's expenses. A guardian is not liable to a third person for acts of the ward solely by reason of the relationship. A guardian who exercises reasonable care in choosing a third person providing medical or other care, treatment, or service for the ward is not liable for injury to the ward resulting from the wrongful conduct of the third party.
(c) A guardian, without authorization of the court, may not revoke a power of attorney for health care [made pursuant to the Uniform Health-Care Decisions Act] of which the ward is the principal. If a power of attorney for health care [made pursuant to the Uniform Health-Care Decisions Act] is in effect, absent an order of the court to the contrary, a health-care decision of the agent takes precedence over that of a guardian.
(d) A guardian may not initiate the commitment of a ward to a [mental health-care] institution except in accordance with the State's procedure for involuntary civil commitment.
SECTION 317 5-317. REPORTS;
MONITORING OF GUARDIANSHIP.
(a) Within 30 days after appointment, a guardian shall report to the court in writing on the condition of the ward and account for money and other assets in the guardian's possession or subject to the guardian's control. A guardian shall report at least annually thereafter and whenever ordered by the court. A report must state or contain:
(1) the current mental, physical, and social condition of the ward;
(2) the living arrangements for all addresses of the ward during the reporting period;
(3) the medical, educational, vocational, and other services provided to the ward and the guardian's opinion as to the adequacy of the ward's care;
(4) a summary of the guardian's visits with the ward and activities on the ward's behalf and the extent to which the ward has participated in decision-making;
(5) if the ward is institutionalized, whether the guardian considers the current plan for care, treatment, or habilitation to be in the ward's best interest;
(6) plans for future care; and
(7) a recommendation as to the need for continued guardianship and any recommended changes in the scope of the guardianship.
(b) The court may appoint a [visitor] to review a report, interview the ward or guardian, and make any other investigation the court directs.
(c) The court shall establish a system for monitoring guardianships, including the filing and review of annual reports.
SECTION 318 5-318. TERMINATION
OR MODIFICATION OF
GUARDIANSHIP.
(a) A guardianship terminates upon the death of the ward or upon order of the court.
(b) On petition of a ward, a guardian, or another person interested in the ward's welfare, the court may terminate a guardianship if the ward no longer needs the assistance or protection of a guardian. The court may modify the type of appointment or powers granted to the guardian if the extent of protection or assistance previously granted is currently excessive or insufficient or the ward's capacity to provide for support, care, education, health, and welfare has so changed as to warrant that action.
(c) Except as otherwise ordered by the court for good cause, the court, before terminating a guardianship, shall follow the same procedures to safeguard the rights of the ward as apply to a petition for guardianship. Upon presentation by the petitioner of evidence establishing a prima facie case for termination, the court shall order the termination unless it is proven that continuation of the guardianship is in the best interest of the ward.
SECTION 401 5-401. PROTECTIVE
PROCEEDING. Upon petition and
after notice and hearing, the court may appoint a limited or unlimited conservator or
make any other protective order provided in this [article part] in
relation to the
estate and affairs of:
(1) a minor, if the court determines that the minor owns money or property requiring management or protection that cannot otherwise be provided or has or may have business affairs that may be put at risk or prevented because of the minor's age, or that money is needed for support and education and that protection is necessary or desirable to obtain or provide money; or
(2) any individual, including a minor, if the court determines that, for reasons other than age:
(A) by clear and convincing evidence, the individual is unable to manage property and business affairs because of an impairment in the ability to receive and evaluate information or make decisions, even with the use of appropriate technological assistance, or because the individual is missing, detained, or unable to return to the United States; and
(B) by a preponderance of evidence, the individual has property that will be wasted or dissipated unless management is provided or money is needed for the support, care, education, health, and welfare of the individual or of individuals who are entitled to the individual's support and that protection is necessary or desirable to obtain or provide money.
SECTION 402 5-402. JURISDICTION
OVER BUSINESS AFFAIRS OF
PROTECTED PERSON. After the service of notice in a proceeding seeking a
conservatorship or other protective order and until termination of the proceeding,
the court in which the petition is filed has:
(1) exclusive jurisdiction to determine the need for a conservatorship or other protective order;
(2) exclusive jurisdiction to determine how the estate of the protected person which is subject to the laws of this State must be managed, expended, or distributed to or for the use of the protected person, individuals who are in fact dependent upon the protected person, or other claimants; and
(3) concurrent jurisdiction to determine the validity of claims against the person or estate of the protected person and questions of title concerning assets of the estate.
SECTION 403 5-403. ORIGINAL
PETITION FOR APPOINTMENT OR
PROTECTIVE ORDER.
(a) The following may petition for the appointment of a conservator or for any other appropriate protective order:
(1) the person to be protected;
(2) an individual interested in the estate, affairs, or welfare of the person to be protected, including a parent, guardian, or custodian; or
(3) a person who would be adversely affected by lack of effective management of the property and business affairs of the person to be protected.
(b) A petition under subsection (a) must set forth the petitioner's name, residence, current address if different, relationship to the respondent, and interest in the appointment or other protective order, and, to the extent known, state or contain the following with respect to the respondent and the relief requested:
(1) the respondent's name, age, principal residence, current street address, and, if different, the address of the dwelling where it is proposed that the respondent will reside if the appointment is made;
(2) if the petition alleges impairment in the respondent's ability to receive and evaluate information, a brief description of the nature and extent of the respondent's alleged impairment;
(3) if the petition alleges that the respondent is missing, detained, or unable to return to the United States, a statement of the relevant circumstances, including the time and nature of the disappearance or detention and a description of any search or inquiry concerning the respondent's whereabouts;
(4) the name and address of the respondent's:
(A) spouse or, if the respondent has none, an adult with whom the respondent has resided for more than six months before the filing of the petition; and
(B) adult children or, if the respondent has none, the respondent's parents and adult brothers and sisters or, if the respondent has none, at least one of the adults nearest in kinship to the respondent who can be found;
(5) the name and address of the person responsible for care or custody of the respondent;
(6) the name and address of any legal representative of the respondent;
(7) a general statement of the respondent's property with an estimate of its value, including any insurance or pension, and the source and amount of other anticipated income or receipts; and
(8) the reason why a conservatorship or other protective order is in the best interest of the respondent.
(c) If a conservatorship is requested, the petition must also set forth to the extent known:
(1) the name and address of any proposed conservator and the reason why the proposed conservator should be selected;
(2) the name and address of any person nominated as conservator by the respondent if the respondent has attained 14 years of age; and
(3) the type of conservatorship requested and, if an unlimited conservatorship, the reason why limited conservatorship is inappropriate or, if a limited conservatorship, the property to be placed under the conservator's control and any limitation on the conservator's powers and duties.
SECTION 404 5-404.
NOTICE.
(a) A copy of the petition and the notice of hearing on a petition for conservatorship or other protective order must be served personally on the respondent, but if the respondent's whereabouts is unknown or personal service cannot be made, service on the respondent must be made by [substituted service] [or] [publication]. The notice must include a statement that the respondent must be physically present unless excused by the court, inform the respondent of the respondent's rights at the hearing, and, if the appointment of a conservator is requested, include a description of the nature, purpose, and consequences of an appointment. A failure to serve the respondent with a notice substantially complying with this subsection precludes the court from granting the petition.
(b) In a proceeding to establish a conservatorship or for another protective order, notice of the hearing must be given to the persons listed in the petition. Failure to give notice under this subsection does not preclude the appointment of a conservator or the making of another protective order.
(c) Notice of the hearing on a petition for an order after appointment of a conservator or making of another protective order, together with a copy of the petition, must be given to the protected person, if the protected person has attained 14 years of age and is not missing, detained, or unable to return to the United States, any conservator of the protected person's estate, and any other person as ordered by the court.
(d) A conservator shall give notice of the filing of the conservator's inventory, report, or plan of conservatorship, together with a copy of the inventory, report, or plan of conservatorship to the protected person and any other person the court directs. The notice must be delivered or sent within 14 days after the filing of the inventory, report, or plan of conservatorship.
SECTION 405 5-405. ORIGINAL
PETITION: MINORS;
PRELIMINARIES TO HEARING.
(a) Upon the filing of a petition to establish a conservatorship or for another protective order for the reason that the respondent is a minor, the court shall set a date for hearing. If the court determines at any stage of the proceeding that the interests of the minor are or may be inadequately represented, it may appoint a lawyer to represent the minor, giving consideration to the choice of the minor if the minor has attained 14 years of age.
(b) While a petition to establish a conservatorship or for another protective order is pending, after preliminary hearing and without notice to others, the court may make orders to preserve and apply the property of the minor as may be required for the support of the minor or individuals who are in fact dependent upon the minor. The court may appoint a [master] to assist in that task.
SECTION 406 5-406. ORIGINAL
PETITION: PRELIMINARIES TO
HEARING.
(a) Upon the filing of a petition for a conservatorship or other protective order for a respondent for reasons other than being a minor, the court shall set a date for hearing. The court shall appoint a [visitor] unless the petition does not request the appointment of a conservator and the respondent is represented by a lawyer. The duties and reporting requirements of the [visitor] are limited to the relief requested in the petition. The [visitor] must be an individual having training or experience in the type of incapacity alleged.
[(b) The court shall appoint a lawyer to represent the respondent in the proceeding if:
(1) requested by the respondent;
(2) recommended by the [visitor]; or
(3) the court determines that the respondent needs representation.]
[(b) Unless the respondent is represented by a lawyer, the court shall appoint a lawyer to represent the respondent in the proceeding.]
(c) The [visitor] shall interview the respondent in person and, to the extent that the respondent is able to understand:
(1) explain to the respondent the substance of the petition and the nature, purpose, and effect of the proceeding;
(2) if the appointment of a conservator is requested, inform the respondent of the general powers and duties of a conservator and determine the respondent's views regarding the proposed conservator, the proposed conservator's powers and duties, and the scope and duration of the proposed conservatorship;
(3) inform the respondent of the respondent's rights, including the right to employ and consult with a lawyer at the respondent's own expense, and the right to request a court-appointed lawyer; and
(4) inform the respondent that all costs and expenses of the proceeding, including respondent's attorney's fees, will be paid from the respondent's estate.
(d) In addition to the duties imposed by subsection (c), the [visitor] shall:
(1) interview the petitioner and the proposed conservator, if any; and
(2) make any other investigation the court directs.
(e) The [visitor] shall promptly file a report with the court, which must include:
(1) a recommendation as to whether a lawyer should be appointed to represent the respondent;
(2) recommendations regarding the appropriateness of a conservatorship, including whether less restrictive means of intervention are available, the type of conservatorship, and, if a limited conservatorship, the powers and duties to be granted the limited conservator, and the assets over which the conservator should be granted authority;
(3) a statement of the qualifications of the proposed conservator, together with a statement as to whether the respondent approves or disapproves of the proposed conservator, and a statement of the powers and duties proposed or the scope of the conservatorship;
(4) a recommendation as to whether a professional evaluation or further evaluation is necessary; and
(5) any other matters the court directs.
(f) The court may also appoint a physician, psychologist, or other individual qualified to evaluate the alleged impairment to conduct an examination of the respondent.
(g) While a petition to establish a conservatorship or for another protective order is pending, after preliminary hearing and without notice to others, the court may issue orders to preserve and apply the property of the respondent as may be required for the support of the respondent or individuals who are in fact dependent upon the respondent. The court may appoint a [master] to assist in that task.
SECTION 407 5-407.
CONFIDENTIALITY OF RECORDS. The written
report of a [visitor] and any professional evaluation are confidential and must be
sealed upon filing, but are available to:
(1) the court;
(2) the respondent without limitation as to use;
(3) the petitioner, the [visitor], and the petitioner's and respondent's lawyers, for purposes of the proceeding; and
(4) other persons for such purposes as the court may order for good cause.
SECTION 408 5-408. ORIGINAL
PETITION: PROCEDURE AT
HEARING.
(a) Unless excused by the court for good cause, a proposed conservator shall attend the hearing. The respondent shall attend and participate in the hearing, unless excused by the court for good cause. The respondent may present evidence and subpoena witnesses and documents, examine witnesses, including any court-appointed physician, psychologist, or other individual qualified to evaluate the alleged impairment, and the [visitor], and otherwise participate in the hearing. The hearing may be held in a location convenient to the respondent and may be closed upon request of the respondent and a showing of good cause.
(b) Any person may request permission to participate in the proceeding. The court may grant the request, with or without hearing, upon determining that the best interest of the respondent will be served. The court may attach appropriate conditions to the participation.
SECTION 409 5-409. ORIGINAL
PETITION: ORDERS.
(a) If a proceeding is brought for the reason that the respondent is a minor, after a hearing on the petition, upon finding that the appointment of a conservator or other protective order is in the best interest of the minor, the court shall make an appointment or other appropriate protective order.
(b) If a proceeding is brought for reasons other than that the respondent is a minor, after a hearing on the petition, upon finding that a basis exists for a conservatorship or other protective order, the court shall make the least restrictive order consistent with its findings. The court shall make orders necessitated by the protected person's limitations and demonstrated needs, including appointive and other orders that will encourage the development of maximum self-reliance and independence of the protected person.
(c) Within 14 days after an appointment, the conservator shall deliver or send a copy of the order of appointment, together with a statement of the right to seek termination or modification, to the protected person, if the protected person has attained 14 years of age and is not missing, detained, or unable to return to the United States, and to all other persons given notice of the petition.
(d) The appointment of a conservator or the entry of another protective order is not a determination of incapacity of the protected person.
SECTION 410 5-410. POWERS OF
COURT.
(a) After hearing and upon determining that a basis for a conservatorship or other protective order exists, the court has the following powers, which may be exercised directly or through a conservator:
(1) with respect to a minor for reasons of age, all the powers over the estate and business affairs of the minor which may be necessary for the best interest of the minor and members of the minor's immediate family; and
(2) with respect to an adult, or to a minor for reasons other than age, for the benefit of the protected person and individuals who are in fact dependent on the protected person for support, all the powers over the estate and business affairs of the protected person which the person could exercise if the person were an adult, present, and not under conservatorship or other protective order.
(b) Subject to Section 110 5-110 requiring
endorsement of limitations on
the letters of office, the court may limit at any time the powers of a conservator
otherwise conferred and may remove or modify any limitation.
SECTION 411 5-411. REQUIRED
COURT APPROVAL.
(a) After notice to interested persons and upon express authorization of the court, a conservator may:
(1) make gifts, except as otherwise provided in Section
427(b) 5-427(b);
(2) convey, release, or disclaim contingent and expectant interests in property, including marital property rights and any right of survivorship incident to joint tenancy or tenancy by the entireties;
(3) exercise or release a power of appointment;
(4) create a revocable or irrevocable trust of property of the estate, whether or not the trust extends beyond the duration of the conservatorship, or revoke or amend a trust revocable by the protected person;
(5) exercise rights to elect options and change beneficiaries under insurance policies and annuities or surrender the policies and annuities for their cash value;
(6) exercise any right to an elective share in the estate of the protected person's deceased spouse and to renounce or disclaim any interest by testate or intestate succession or by transfer inter vivos; and
(7) make, amend, or revoke the protected person's will.
(b) A conservator, in making, amending, or revoking the protected person's will, shall comply with [the State's statute for executing wills].
(c) The court, in exercising or in approving a conservator's exercise of the powers listed in subsection (a), shall consider primarily the decision that the protected person would have made, to the extent that the decision can be ascertained. The court shall also consider:
(1) the financial needs of the protected person and the needs of individuals who are in fact dependent on the protected person for support and the interest of creditors;
(2) possible reduction of income, estate, inheritance, or other tax liabilities;
(3) eligibility for governmental assistance;
(4) the protected person's previous pattern of giving or level of support;
(5) the existing estate plan;
(6) the protected person's life expectancy and the probability that the conservatorship will terminate before the protected person's death; and
(7) any other factors the court considers relevant.
(d) Without authorization of the court, a conservator may not revoke or amend a durable power of attorney of which the protected person is the principal. If a durable power of attorney is in effect, absent a court order to the contrary, a decision of the agent takes precedence over that of a conservator.
SECTION 412 5-412. PROTECTIVE
ARRANGEMENTS AND SINGLE
TRANSACTIONS.
(a) If a basis is established for a protective order with respect to an individual, the court, without appointing a conservator, may:
(1) authorize, direct, or ratify any transaction necessary or desirable to achieve any arrangement for security, service, or care meeting the foreseeable needs of the protected person, including:
(A) payment, delivery, deposit, or retention of funds or property;
(B) sale, mortgage, lease, or other transfer of property;
(C) purchase of an annuity;
(D) making a contract for life care, deposit contract, or contract for training and education; or
(E) addition to or establishment of a suitable trust[, including a trust created under the Uniform Custodial Trust Act]; and
(2) authorize, direct, or ratify any other contract, trust, will, or transaction relating to the protected person's property and business affairs, including a settlement of a claim, upon determining that it is in the best interest of the protected person.
(b) In deciding whether to approve a protective arrangement or other
transaction under this section, the court shall consider the factors described in
Section 411(c) 5-411(c).
(c) The court may appoint a [master] to assist in the accomplishment of any protective arrangement or other transaction authorized under this section. The [master] has the authority conferred by the order and shall serve until discharged by order after report to the court.
SECTION 413 5-413. WHO MAY BE
CONSERVATOR: PRIORITIES.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (d), the court, in appointing a conservator, shall consider persons otherwise qualified in the following order of priority:
(1) a conservator, guardian of the estate, or other like fiduciary appointed or recognized by an appropriate court of any other jurisdiction in which the protected person resides;
(2) a person nominated as conservator by the respondent, including the respondent's most recent nomination made in a durable power of attorney, if the respondent has attained 14 years of age and at the time of the nomination had sufficient capacity to express a preference;
(3) an agent appointed by the respondent to manage the respondent's property under a durable power of attorney;
(4) the spouse of the respondent;
(5) an adult child of the respondent;
(6) a parent of the respondent; and
(7) an adult with whom the respondent has resided for more than six months before the filing of the petition.
(b) A person having priority under subsection (a)(1), (4), (5), or (6) may designate in writing a substitute to serve instead and thereby transfer the priority to the substitute.
(c) With respect to persons having equal priority, the court shall select the one it considers best qualified. The court, acting in the best interest of the protected person, may decline to appoint a person having priority and appoint a person having a lower priority or no priority.
(d) An owner, operator, or employee of [a long-term care institution] at which the respondent is receiving care may not be appointed as conservator unless related to the respondent by blood, marriage, or adoption.
SECTION 414 5-414. PETITION FOR
ORDER SUBSEQUENT TO
APPOINTMENT.
(a) A protected person or a person interested in the welfare of a protected person may file a petition in the appointing court for an order:
(1) requiring bond or collateral or additional bond or collateral, or reducing bond;
(2) requiring an accounting for the administration of the protected person's estate;
(3) directing distribution;
(4) removing the conservator and appointing a temporary or successor conservator;
(5) modifying the type of appointment or powers granted to the conservator if the extent of protection or management previously granted is currently excessive or insufficient or the protected person's ability to manage the estate and business affairs has so changed as to warrant the action; or
(6) granting other appropriate relief.
(b) A conservator may petition the appointing court for instructions concerning fiduciary responsibility.
(c) Upon notice and hearing the petition, the court may give appropriate instructions and make any appropriate order.
SECTION 415 5-415.
BOND. The court may require a conservator to furnish
a bond conditioned upon faithful discharge of all duties of the conservatorship
according to law, with sureties as it may specify. Unless otherwise directed by the
court, the bond must be in the amount of the aggregate capital value of the property
of the estate in the conservator's control, plus one year's estimated income, and
minus the value of assets deposited under arrangements requiring an order of the
court for their removal and the value of any real property that the fiduciary, by
express limitation, lacks power to sell or convey without court authorization. The
court, in place of sureties on a bond, may accept collateral for the performance of
the bond, including a pledge of securities or a mortgage of real property.
SECTION 416 5-416. TERMS AND
REQUIREMENTS OF BOND.
(a) The following rules apply to any bond required:
(1) Except as otherwise provided by the terms of the bond, sureties and the conservator are jointly and severally liable.
(2) By executing the bond of a conservator, a surety submits to the jurisdiction of the court that issued letters to the primary obligor in any proceeding pertaining to the fiduciary duties of the conservator in which the surety is named as a party. Notice of any proceeding must be sent or delivered to the surety at the address shown in the court records at the place where the bond is filed and to any other address then known to the petitioner.
(3) On petition of a successor conservator or any interested person, a proceeding may be brought against a surety for breach of the obligation of the bond of the conservator.
(4) The bond of the conservator may be proceeded against until liability under the bond is exhausted.
(b) A proceeding may not be brought against a surety on any matter as to which an action or proceeding against the primary obligor is barred.
SECTION 417 5-417. COMPENSATION
AND EXPENSES. If not
otherwise compensated for services rendered, a guardian, conservator, lawyer for
the respondent, lawyer whose services resulted in a protective order or in an order
beneficial to a protected person's estate, or any other person appointed by the court
is entitled to reasonable compensation from the estate. Compensation may be paid
and expenses reimbursed without court order. If the court determines that the
compensation is excessive or the expenses are inappropriate, the excessive or
inappropriate amount must be repaid to the estate.
SECTION 418 5-418. GENERAL
DUTIES OF CONSERVATOR; PLAN.
(a) A conservator, in relation to powers conferred by this
[article part] or
implicit in the title acquired by virtue of the proceeding, is a fiduciary and shall
observe the standards of care applicable to a trustee.
(b) A conservator may exercise authority only as necessitated by the limitations of the protected person, and to the extent possible, shall encourage the person to participate in decisions, act in the person's own behalf, and develop or regain the ability to manage the person's estate and business affairs.
(c) Within 60 days after appointment, a conservator shall file with the appointing court a plan for protecting, managing, expending, and distributing the assets of the protected person's estate. The plan must be based on the actual needs of the person and take into consideration the best interest of the person. The conservator shall include in the plan steps to develop or restore the person's ability to manage the person's property, an estimate of the duration of the conservatorship, and projections of expenses and resources.
(d) In investing an estate, selecting assets of the estate for distribution, and invoking powers of revocation or withdrawal available for the use and benefit of the protected person and exercisable by the conservator, a conservator shall take into account any estate plan of the person known to the conservator and may examine the will and any other donative, nominative, or other appointive instrument of the person.
SECTION 419 5-419. INVENTORY;
RECORDS.
(a) Within 60 days after appointment, a conservator shall prepare and file with the appointing court a detailed inventory of the estate subject to the conservatorship, together with an oath or affirmation that the inventory is believed to be complete and accurate as far as information permits.
(b) A conservator shall keep records of the administration of the estate and make them available for examination on reasonable request of an interested person.
SECTION 420 5-420. REPORTS;
APPOINTMENT OF [VISITOR];
MONITORING.
(a) A conservator shall report to the court for administration of the estate annually unless the court otherwise directs, upon resignation or removal, upon termination of the conservatorship, and at other times as the court directs. An order, after notice and hearing, allowing an intermediate report of a conservator adjudicates liabilities concerning the matters adequately disclosed in the accounting. An order, after notice and hearing, allowing a final report adjudicates all previously unsettled liabilities relating to the conservatorship.
(b) A report must state or contain:
(1) a list of the assets of the estate under the conservator's control and a list of the receipts, disbursements, and distributions during the period for which the report is made;
(2) a list of the services provided to the protected person; and
(3) any recommended changes in the plan for the conservatorship as well as a recommendation as to the continued need for conservatorship and any recommended changes in the scope of the conservatorship.
(c) The court may appoint a [visitor] to review a report or plan, interview the protected person or conservator, and make any other investigation the court directs. In connection with a report, the court may order a conservator to submit the assets of the estate to an appropriate examination to be made in a manner the court directs.
(d) The court shall establish a system for monitoring conservatorships, including the filing and review of conservators' reports and plans.
SECTION 421 5-421. TITLE BY
APPOINTMENT.
(a) The appointment of a conservator vests title in the conservator as trustee to all property of the protected person, or to the part thereof specified in the order, held at the time of appointment or thereafter acquired. An order vesting title in the conservator to only a part of the property of the protected person creates a conservatorship limited to assets specified in the order.
(b) Letters of conservatorship are evidence of vesting title of the protected person's assets in the conservator. An order terminating a conservatorship transfers title to assets remaining subject to the conservatorship, including any described in the order, to the formerly protected person or the person's successors.
(c) Subject to the requirements of other statutes governing the filing or recordation of documents of title to land or other property, letters of conservatorship and orders terminating conservatorships may be filed or recorded to give notice of title as between the conservator and the protected person.
SECTION 422 5-422. PROTECTED
PERSON'S INTEREST
INALIENABLE.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in subsections (c) and (d), the interest of a
protected person in property vested in a conservator is not transferable or assignable
by the protected person. An attempted transfer or assignment by the protected
person, although ineffective to affect property rights, may give rise to a claim
against the protected person for restitution or damages which, subject to
presentation and allowance, may be satisfied as provided in Section 429
5-429.
(b) Property vested in a conservator by appointment and the interest of the
protected person in that property are not subject to levy, garnishment, or similar
process for claims against the protected person unless allowed under Section
429
5-429.
(c) A person without knowledge of the conservatorship who in good faith and for security or substantially equivalent value receives delivery from a protected person of tangible personal property of a type normally transferred by delivery of possession, is protected as if the protected person or transferee had valid title.
(d) A third party who deals with the protected person with respect to property vested in a conservator is entitled to any protection provided in other law.
SECTION 423 5-423. SALE,
ENCUMBRANCE, OR OTHER
TRANSACTION INVOLVING CONFLICT OF INTEREST. Any transaction
involving the conservatorship estate which is affected by a substantial conflict
between the conservator's fiduciary and personal interests is voidable unless the
transaction is expressly authorized by the court after notice to interested persons. A
transaction affected by a substantial conflict between personal and fiduciary interests
includes any sale, encumbrance, or other transaction involving the conservatorship
estate entered into by the conservator, the spouse, descendant, agent, or lawyer of a
conservator, or a corporation or other enterprise in which the conservator has a
substantial beneficial interest.
SECTION 424 5-424. PROTECTION OF
PERSON DEALING WITH
CONSERVATOR.
(a) A person who assists or deals with a conservator in good faith and for
value in any transaction other than one requiring a court order under Section
410
5-410 or 411 5-411 is protected as though the
conservator properly exercised the
power. That a person knowingly deals with a conservator does not alone require
the person to inquire into the existence of a power or the propriety of its exercise,
but restrictions on powers of conservators which are endorsed on letters as provided
in Section 110 5-110 are effective as to third persons. A person
who pays or
delivers assets to a conservator is not responsible for their proper application.
(b) Protection provided by this section extends to any procedural irregularity or jurisdictional defect that occurred in proceedings leading to the issuance of letters and is not a substitute for protection provided to persons assisting or dealing with a conservator by comparable provisions in other law relating to commercial transactions or to simplifying transfers of securities by fiduciaries.
SECTION 425 5-425. POWERS OF
CONSERVATOR IN
ADMINISTRATION.
(a) Except as otherwise qualified or limited by the court in its order of appointment and endorsed on the letters, a conservator has all of the powers granted in this section and any additional powers granted by law to a trustee in this State.
(b) A conservator, acting reasonably and in an effort to accomplish the purpose of the appointment, and without further court authorization or confirmation, may:
(1) collect, hold, and retain assets of the estate, including assets in which the conservator has a personal interest and real property in another State, until the conservator considers that disposition of an asset should be made;
(2) receive additions to the estate;
(3) continue or participate in the operation of any business or other enterprise;
(4) acquire an undivided interest in an asset of the estate in which the conservator, in any fiduciary capacity, holds an undivided interest;
(5) invest assets of the estate as though the conservator were a trustee;
(6) deposit money of the estate in a financial institution, including one operated by the conservator;
(7) acquire or dispose of an asset of the estate, including real property in another State, for cash or on credit, at public or private sale, and manage, develop, improve, exchange, partition, change the character of, or abandon an asset of the estate;
(8) make ordinary or extraordinary repairs or alterations in buildings or other structures, demolish any improvements, and raze existing or erect new party walls or buildings;
(9) subdivide, develop, or dedicate land to public use, make or obtain the vacation of plats and adjust boundaries, adjust differences in valuation or exchange or partition by giving or receiving considerations, and dedicate easements to public use without consideration;
(10) enter for any purpose into a lease as lessor or lessee, with or without option to purchase or renew, for a term within or extending beyond the term of the conservatorship;
(11) enter into a lease or arrangement for exploration and removal of minerals or other natural resources or enter into a pooling or unitization agreement;
(12) grant an option involving disposition of an asset of the estate and take an option for the acquisition of any asset;
(13) vote a security, in person or by general or limited proxy;
(14) pay calls, assessments, and any other sums chargeable or accruing against or on account of securities;
(15) sell or exercise stock subscription or conversion rights;
(16) consent, directly or through a committee or other agent, to the reorganization, consolidation, merger, dissolution, or liquidation of a corporation or other business enterprise;
(17) hold a security in the name of a nominee or in other form without disclosure of the conservatorship so that title to the security may pass by delivery;
(18) insure the assets of the estate against damage or loss and the conservator against liability with respect to a third person;
(19) borrow money, with or without security, to be repaid from the estate or otherwise and advance money for the protection of the estate or the protected person and for all expenses, losses, and liability sustained in the administration of the estate or because of the holding or ownership of any assets, for which the conservator has a lien on the estate as against the protected person for advances so made;
(20) pay or contest any claim, settle a claim by or against the estate or the protected person by compromise, arbitration, or otherwise, and release, in whole or in part, any claim belonging to the estate to the extent the claim is uncollectible;
(21) pay taxes, assessments, compensation of the conservator and any guardian, and other expenses incurred in the collection, care, administration, and protection of the estate;
(22) allocate items of income or expense to income or principal of the estate, as provided by other law, including creation of reserves out of income for depreciation, obsolescence, or amortization or for depletion of minerals or other natural resources;
(23) pay any sum distributable to a protected person or individual who is in fact dependent on the protected person by paying the sum to the distributee or by paying the sum for the use of the distributee:
(A) to the guardian of the distributee;
(B) to a distributee's custodian under [the Uniform Transfers to Minors Act] or custodial trustee under [the Uniform Custodial Trust Act]; or
(C) if there is no guardian, custodian, or custodial trustee, to a relative or other person having physical custody of the distributee;
(24) prosecute or defend actions, claims, or proceedings in any jurisdiction for the protection of assets of the estate and of the conservator in the performance of fiduciary duties; and
(25) execute and deliver all instruments that will accomplish or facilitate the exercise of the powers vested in the conservator.
SECTION 426 5-426.
DELEGATION.
(a) A conservator may not delegate to an agent or another conservator the entire administration of the estate, but a conservator may otherwise delegate the performance of functions that a prudent trustee of comparable skills may delegate under similar circumstances.
(b) The conservator shall exercise reasonable care, skill, and caution in:
(1) selecting an agent;
(2) establishing the scope and terms of a delegation, consistent with the purposes and terms of the conservatorship;
(3) periodically reviewing an agent's overall performance and compliance with the terms of the delegation; and
(4) redressing an action or decision of an agent which would constitute a breach of trust if performed by the conservator.
(c) A conservator who complies with subsections (a) and (b) is not liable to the protected person or to the estate for the decisions or actions of the agent to whom a function was delegated.
(d) In performing a delegated function, an agent shall exercise reasonable care to comply with the terms of the delegation.
(e) By accepting a delegation from a conservator subject to the law of this State, an agent submits to the jurisdiction of the courts of this State.
SECTION 427 5-427. PRINCIPLES OF
DISTRIBUTION BY
CONSERVATOR.
(a) Unless otherwise specified in the order of appointment and endorsed on
the letters of appointment or contrary to the plan filed pursuant to Section
418
5-418, a conservator may expend or distribute income or principal of the estate of
the protected person without further court authorization or confirmation for the
support, care, education, health, and welfare of the protected person and individuals
who are in fact dependent on the protected person, including the payment of child or
spousal support, in accordance with the following rules:
(1) A conservator shall consider recommendations relating to the appropriate standard of support, care, education, health, and welfare for the protected person or an individual who is in fact dependent on the protected person made by a guardian, if any, and, if the protected person is a minor, the conservator shall consider recommendations made by a parent.
(2) A conservator may not be surcharged for money paid to persons furnishing support, care, education, or benefit to a protected person, or an individual who is in fact dependent on the protected person, in accordance with the recommendations of a parent or guardian of the protected person unless the conservator knows that the parent or guardian derives personal financial benefit therefrom, including relief from any personal duty of support, or the recommendations are not in the best interest of the protected person.
(3) In making distributions under this subsection, the conservator shall consider:
(A) the size of the estate, the estimated duration of the conservatorship, and the likelihood that the protected person, at some future time, may be fully self-sufficient and able to manage business affairs and the estate;
(B) the accustomed standard of living of the protected person and individuals who are in fact dependent on the protected person; and
(C) other money or sources used for the support of the protected person.
(4) Money expended under this subsection may be paid by the conservator to any person, including the protected person, as reimbursement for expenditures that the conservator might have made, or in advance for services to be rendered to the protected person if it is reasonable to expect the services will be performed and advance payments are customary or reasonably necessary under the circumstances.
(b) If an estate is ample to provide for the distributions authorized by subsection (a), a conservator for a protected person other than a minor may make gifts that the protected person might have been expected to make, in amounts that do not exceed in the aggregate for any calendar year 20 percent of the income of the estate in that year.
SECTION 428 5-428. DEATH OF
PROTECTED PERSON.
[(a)] If a protected person dies, the conservator shall deliver to the court for safekeeping any will of the protected person which may have come into the conservator's possession, inform the personal representative or beneficiary named in the will of the delivery, and retain the estate for delivery to the personal representative of the decedent or to another person entitled to it.
[(b) If a personal representative has not been appointed within 40 days after the death of a protected person and an application or petition for appointment is not before the court, the conservator may apply to exercise the powers and duties of a personal representative in order to administer and distribute the decedent's estate. Upon application for an order conferring upon the conservator the powers of a personal representative, after notice given by the conservator to any person nominated as personal representative by any will of which the applicant is aware, the court may grant the application upon determining that there is no objection and endorse the letters of conservatorship to note that the formerly protected person is deceased and that the conservator has acquired all of the powers and duties of a personal representative.
(c) The issuance of an order under this section has the effect of an order of
appointment of a personal representative [as provided in Section 3-308 and Parts 6
through 10 of Article III of the Uniform Probate Code]. However, the
estate in the
name of the conservator, after administration, may be distributed to the decedent's
successors without retransfer to the conservator as personal representative.]
SECTION 429 5-429. PRESENTATION
AND ALLOWANCE OF
CLAIMS.
(a) A conservator may pay, or secure by encumbering assets of the estate, claims against the estate or against the protected person arising before or during the conservatorship upon their presentation and allowance in accordance with the priorities stated in subsection (d). A claimant may present a claim by:
(1) sending or delivering to the conservator a written statement of the claim, indicating its basis, the name and address of the claimant, and the amount claimed; or
(2) filing a written statement of the claim, in a form acceptable to the court, with the clerk of court and sending or delivering a copy of the statement to the conservator.
(b) A claim is deemed presented on receipt of the written statement of claim by the conservator or the filing of the claim with the court, whichever first occurs. A presented claim is allowed if it is not disallowed by written statement sent or delivered by the conservator to the claimant within 60 days after its presentation. The conservator before payment may change an allowance to a disallowance in whole or in part, but not after allowance under a court order or judgment or an order directing payment of the claim. The presentation of a claim tolls the running of any statute of limitations relating to the claim until 30 days after its disallowance.
(c) A claimant whose claim has not been paid may petition the court for determination of the claim at any time before it is barred by a statute of limitations and, upon due proof, procure an order for its allowance, payment, or security by encumbering assets of the estate. If a proceeding is pending against a protected person at the time of appointment of a conservator or is initiated against the protected person thereafter, the moving party shall give to the conservator notice of any proceeding that could result in creating a claim against the estate.
(d) If it appears that the estate is likely to be exhausted before all existing claims are paid, the conservator shall distribute the estate in money or in kind in payment of claims in the following order:
(1) costs and expenses of administration;
(2) claims of the federal or state government having priority under other law;
(3) claims incurred by the conservator for support, care, education, health, and welfare previously provided to the protected person or individuals who are in fact dependent on the protected person;
(4) claims arising before the conservatorship; and
(5) all other claims.
(e) Preference may not be given in the payment of a claim over any other claim of the same class, and a claim due and payable may not be preferred over a claim not due.
(f) If assets of the conservatorship are adequate to meet all existing claims, the court, acting in the best interest of the protected person, may order the conservator to grant a security interest in the conservatorship estate for the payment of any or all claims at a future date.
SECTION 430 5-430. PERSONAL
LIABILITY OF CONSERVATOR.
(a) Except as otherwise agreed, a conservator is not personally liable on a contract properly entered into in a fiduciary capacity in the course of administration of the estate unless the conservator fails to reveal in the contract the representative capacity and identify the estate.
(b) A conservator is personally liable for obligations arising from ownership or control of property of the estate or for other acts or omissions occurring in the course of administration of the estate only if personally at fault.
(c) Claims based on contracts entered into by a conservator in a fiduciary capacity, obligations arising from ownership or control of the estate, and claims based on torts committed in the course of administration of the estate may be asserted against the estate by proceeding against the conservator in a fiduciary capacity, whether or not the conservator is personally liable therefor.
(d) A question of liability between the estate and the conservator personally may be determined in a proceeding for accounting, surcharge, or indemnification, or in another appropriate proceeding or action.
[(e) A conservator is not personally liable for any environmental condition
on or injury resulting from any environmental condition on land solely by reason of
an acquisition of title under Section 421 5-421.]
SECTION 431 5-431. TERMINATION
OF PROCEEDINGS.
(a) A conservatorship terminates upon the death of the protected person or upon order of the court. Unless created for reasons other than that the protected person is a minor, a conservatorship created for a minor also terminates when the protected person attains majority or is emancipated.
(b) Upon the death of a protected person, the conservator shall conclude the administration of the estate by distribution to the person's successors. The conservator shall file a final report and petition for discharge within [30] days after distribution.
(c) On petition of a protected person, a conservator, or another person interested in a protected person's welfare, the court may terminate the conservatorship if the protected person no longer needs the assistance or protection of a conservator. Termination of the conservatorship does not affect a conservator's liability for previous acts or the obligation to account for funds and assets of the protected person.
(d) Except as otherwise ordered by the court for good cause, before terminating a conservatorship, the court shall follow the same procedures to safeguard the rights of the protected person that apply to a petition for conservatorship. Upon the establishment of a prima facie case for termination, the court shall order termination unless it is proved that continuation of the conservatorship is in the best interest of the protected person.
(e) Upon termination of a conservatorship and whether or not formally distributed by the conservator, title to assets of the estate passes to the formerly protected person or the person's successors. The order of termination must provide for expenses of administration and direct the conservator to execute appropriate instruments to evidence the transfer of title or confirm a distribution previously made and to file a final report and a petition for discharge upon approval of the final report.
(f) The court shall enter a final order of discharge upon the approval of the final report and satisfaction by the conservator of any other conditions placed by the court on the conservator's discharge.
SECTION 432 5-432. PAYMENT OF
DEBT AND DELIVERY OF
PROPERTY TO FOREIGN CONSERVATOR WITHOUT LOCAL
PROCEEDING.
(a) A person who is indebted to or has the possession of tangible or intangible property of a protected person may pay the debt or deliver the property to a foreign conservator, guardian of the estate, or other court-appointed fiduciary of the State of residence of the protected person. Payment or delivery may be made only upon proof of appointment and presentation of an affidavit made by or on behalf of the fiduciary stating that a protective proceeding relating to the protected person is not pending in this State and the foreign fiduciary is entitled to payment or to receive delivery.
(b) Payment or delivery in accordance with subsection (a) discharges the debtor or possessor, absent knowledge of any protective proceeding pending in this State.
SECTION 433 5-433. FOREIGN
CONSERVATOR: PROOF OF
AUTHORITY; BOND; POWERS. If a conservator has not been appointed in
this State and a petition in a protective proceeding is not pending in this State, a
conservator appointed in the State in which the protected person resides may file in
a court of this State, in a [county] in which property belonging to the protected
person is located, authenticated copies of letters of appointment and of any bond.
Thereafter, the conservator may exercise all powers of a conservator appointed in
this State as to property in this State and may maintain actions and proceedings in
this State subject to any conditions otherwise imposed upon nonresident parties.
MISCELLANEOUS
PROVISIONS
SECTION 501. UNIFORMITY OF APPLICATION AND
CONSTRUCTION. In applying and construing this Uniform Act, consideration
must be given to the need to promote uniformity of the law with respect to its
subject matter among States that enact it.
SECTION 502. SEVERABILITY CLAUSE. If
any provision of this [Act] or
its application to any person or circumstances is held invalid, the invalidity does not
affect other provisions or applications of the [Act] which can be given effect without
the invalid provision or application, and to this end the provisions of this [Act] are
severable.
SECTION 503. EFFECTIVE DATE. This [Act]
takes effect ................
SECTION 504. REPEAL. The following acts and
parts of acts are repealed:
(1) ........................................
(2) ........................................
(3) ........................................