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Conservatorships

Conservatorship is a legal proceeding to appoint someone (conservator) to care for the personal needs of an incapacitated person (conservatee) and his or her assets.  The conservator becomes responsible for making decisions for the conservatee when the conservatee cannot make decisions for herself.

A probate conservatorship petition is usually brought by a family member or friend of an incapacitated person. Such a conservatorship is appropriate when a person cannot take care of his personal needs and/or is substantially unable to manage their finances or resist fraud or undue influence.

Sometimes, the proposed conservatee has sufficient capacity to nominate their conservator, or they may have put a durable power of attorney in place prior to becoming incapacitated, which names the conservator of their choice. Otherwise, a spouse, adult child, parent, sibling, or friend can volunteer to be conservator.  If there are no family or fiends willing or able to be appointed by the Court, a professional conservator can be appointed.

A Court order appointing a temporary conservator can be obtained within a few days if there is a pressing need for protection of the proposed conservatee’s person or assets; in the absence of such pressing need, the petition for conservatorship will be scheduled, at the earliest, six weeks from the date of filing in Los Angeles County courts. In the interim, a Court investigator is appointed, and usually an attorney for the proposed conservatee is also appointed, from the Court’s Private Volunteer Panel (a “PVP attorney”). The investigator and PVP attorney work to determine whether a conservator is needed, and whether the proposed conservator is suitable. The proposed conservator will be expected to attend the hearing on the petition, in most courts. On occasions, the PVP will recommend a professional conservator instead of the petitioner. This will often happen where the proposed conservatee or other family members object to the petitioner’s appointment, and there is a valid basis for the objection. The PVP attorney’s recommendations are given considerable weight by the courts.

Once a petition is granted, it is often a couple of weeks more before the Letters authorizing the conservator to act as such are obtained from the Court.  

A bond will most likely be required of the conservator, unless they are the spouse of the conservatee. The amount of the bond is determined by the value of the conservatee’s assets which will be subject to the Court’s jurisdiction; if the conservatees’ assets are in a trust which states no bond is required of the trustees, then the bond will not have to cover those assets. Also, the bond will usually not have to cover the value of the conservatee’s residence, since a special court order would have to be obtained in order for the conservator to sell the conservatee’s residence.  

Where the conservatee does not have an estate plan, a petition for substituted judgment may be brought to obtain a court order putting one in place. Where appropriate for Medi- Cal planning, an order may be obtained making an immediate gift of the conservatee’s residence to their children or others, subject to an Occupancy Agreement allowing the conservatee to go on living in the residence for the rest of their lives.

The Court will require an Inventory and Appraisal identifying the conservatee’s assets and their value, followed by annual accountings to record the income and expenses of the conservatorship with the court.  

Conservatorships are expensive; the conservatee’s estate will ultimately bear the costs of the attorney fees both for the conservator’s attorney and the PVP, and for the fees charged by the conservator. A well-drafted estate plan which includes a comprehensive durable power of attorney and advanced health care directive executed by the proposed conservatee prior to incapacity can often prevent the need for a conservatorship.



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