Conservatorship vs Trust
>> YOUR LINK HERE: ___ http://youtube.com/watch?v=za4u7wq6kQ8
#conservatorship #avoidconservatorship • Probate attorney Jennifer F. Scharre explains when a conservatorship is necessary. For more information visit https://needprobatehelp.com/conservat... and learn how with proper estate planning documents a conservatorship may not be necessary. • Many clients ask me when they first walk into my office which direction they should go. Should they go the estate planning direction – create some durable power of attorney documents, advanced health directive or a trust? Or do they need to go the conservatorship route? That really depends on the capacity of the individual you are working with. If someone has the capacity and is able to execute estate planning documents then a conservatorship may not be necessary at all. • Unfortunately, in my practice often times people are in a position where they are only seeing my services because we have gone too far down the road of incapacity, and drafting documents at that point would not be appropriate. When that happens you do have to go to court for a conservatorship. But, there are opportunities for the court to actually create a revocable living trust for that client even though they are conserved at the time. This is absolutely at the discretion of the court and whether they believe it is in the person’s best interest. One reason this could be good is that there is less supervision, less court time, and fewer people involved. Where there is a functional family and maybe some simple assets this may be an appropriate measure for the court to take. Other times, where there are lots of challenging family dynamics the court may want to retain jurisdiction over this estate and won’t necessarily permit one to create a revocable living trust after the conservatorship has been initiated. • The key is always the court's determination of that person’s capacity. Conservatorships are very broad in that the court can order a variety of relief. They can say that someone does still have the capacity to execute estate planning documents but potentially those documents have to be approved by the court or they could say that someone has no capacity to make any decisions in their life and that the conservator is appointed for all of those decisions. When you are looking at a conservatorship proceeding, you want to be clear on what is the range of what you need in order to assist your client. • Jennifer F. Scharre is an attorney at the San Jose law firm, Temmerman, Cilley Kohlmann, LLP. She provides representation in an estate plan, conservatorship matters, power of attorneys, guardianship matters, and trust and estate administration and litigation. Jennifer may be reached at 408-998-9500 Ext. 6394. • Kathleen Daniels is a California Real Estate Broker and Realtor. She specialized in probate and trust real estate sales in Santa Clara County. • If you need help selling real property in probate, conservatorship, or trust, we can help. Kathleen is a trained and certified probate real estate agent. Give us a call at 408-972-1822.
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