It is a good idea to have a Medical Power of Attorney and Healthcare Directive in place for when the time comes that you are unable to make your own medical decisions.
A Medical Power of Attorney allows you to select a person of your choosing to make medical decisions on your behalf when you are not capable. You may hear this person referred to as an agent. You may even select back up agents in case the person you choose in unable or unwilling to act as your agent when the time comes. In addition to other powers, your agent can be given power to consent to, prohibit or withdraw medical treatment. It is important to choose someone that you trust to follow your instructions even if they would not make the same decisions themselves. This document goes hand in hand with a Healthcare Directive where you can make your wishes clear to the person you have chosen to make decisions for you.
In a Healthcare Directive you can make the job of your agent easier because they will know what your wishes are. It may even help reduce conflict between family members when they can see that the other family member was acting on your wishes and not on their own. If there was no reasonable expectation of recovery from a serious illness or condition would you want life-prolonging procedures to be withdrawn? If so, you can make those wishes known through your Healthcare Directive. If a doctor believes that life-prolonging procedure may lead to a significant recovery would you want your doctor to try the treatment for a period of time but withdraw it if does not improve your condition? Again, these wishes can be placed in the Healthcare Directive so that your agent will know how to proceed in such circumstances. Would you want to be given treatment for pain? Do you wish to donate your organs upon your death? These wishes can also be written into your Healthcare Directive.
Take Control Through Estate Planning
I recently had the pleasure of sitting down with Chris Finny from the Finney Law Office. As Chris was explaining how he helps individuals through difficult events in their lives (car accidents, getting hurt on the job, medical procedures gone wrong) I noticed a common theme. Yes, Chris’s clients have been injured in some form, but the bigger more lasting effect is that they have had control taken away from them. Maybe that’s control of their body, their ability to earn a living, or just the management of their finances. Unfortunately, as I learned from Chris, those who have gone through a personal injury case know how quickly they can lose the ability to make decisions. But through effective legal planning, some of that lose is preventable.
I want to suggest some basic documents everyone should think about, so that if you do experience an injury of that type, your wishes are still the ones that are being considered.
First is a medial power of attorney and health care directive. This allows you to set out your medical wishes if you aren’t able later to communicate or enforce them. It also gives you the power to choose who will help enforce those wishes.
There’s also another power of attorney to cover your financial and legal decisions. I truly consider this one of the most important documents of an estate plan and would highly recommend everyone of any age to have one. Again, in this document, you get to choose who handles your finances and makes decisions for you or your family if you’re not capable of making your own.
And of course, don’t forget about the will. While this is the document where you get to override state law and say where your possessions go, for parents it’s a lot more. This is the ONLY legal way to have a say in who will take care of your minor children.
But if you really want control, a trust really is the most effective and detailed way to do so. A trust gives you the ability to make detailed decisions over your finances and beneficiaries, even allowing you to make sure your beneficiaries cannot touch their inheritance until an age or event you decide.
Without these documents, those left to take care of you will have to go to court to earn those rights, and the court has the final say on who will be making decisions for you. So whether you’ve been involved in a personal injury case or just know it can happen to anyone, take some control now and consider your estate plan today.
How Much Do You Know
When I sit down with clients, there’s a varying level of knowledge about estate planning, the different documents, and just what everything means. As such, my job is often to make sure people know how the law works and what happens in different situations so my clients can make the best decisions themselves with advice from me where they want it. So, for this month, I thought I’d start with the basics:
What is probate?
- What is a will?
- What is a trust?
- What is a power of attorney?
- What is an advance health care directive?
Probate is the court process a person’s property goes through when they die to transfer the property out of the deceased’s name. Wills must go through probate (though it took Esq. behind my name for my mother to believe me on that). You can avoid through non-probate transfers, such as transfer-on-death (“TOD”s), payable-on-death (“POD”s), trusts, joint titling, and other methods. Probate is time consuming and can be very expensive. Because of this many people specifically form an estate plan to avoid probate. If you’re worried about your beneficiaries being unable to access quickly or wasting resources on court, talk to an attorney. There are many methods to avoid probate and not all are appropriate for everyone.
Trusts, however, are the main way to avoid probate. A properly funded trust effectively re-titles property from a person’s name to the trust. The person then decides who benefits from the trust assets and who controls those assets until they pass or are no longer competent to make decisions. Generally, the person setting up the trust may benefit and control the assets. This allows a person who becomes incapacitated to continue to benefit from their property, but gives a different, competent person the ability to make decisions regarding that property.
It’s very important to note the “properly funded” part. If property is not actually transferred to a trust (normally by renaming the asset in the name of the trust), then the property cannot be transferred through the trust documents and must still go through probate and a will or state inheritance law.
So, every estate plan (whether a trust is involved or not) should include a will. Wills set out a person’s wishes upon their death for guardianship of minor children and any property not transferred through non-probate transfers. This means that anything with a beneficiary (i.e. life insurance, retirement plans), TOD, POD, jointly titled, etc. are not given away according to the will.
Along the same lines, every estate plan needs a Power of Attorney. Powers of Attorneys come in many different types, but generally should cover legal, financial, and medical decisions. The document gives another person the power to make decisions for the person. The types of decisions can be limited and the document can be drafted so it only goes into effect when a person becomes incompetent.
Finally, a Health Care Directive establishes a person’s desires regarding specific medical situations. It covers circumstances where a person is unable to make decisions regarding their wishes, but can be used outside of terminal conditions (unlike a Living Will).
A full estate plan covers all of these areas and uses each document to make sure you are completely protected. Hopefully, this has explained the basics for you, but please if you have any questions email me or contact me here.