My oldest half brother had my mom who is in assisted living and not of sound mind and also cannot read english, sign POA over all of her assets and is now trying to sell her house which my youngest brother with severe disablity is living and was in her will to keep the house. Seems that all of the brothers are now excluded from her will and he gets everything. There was no one present at signing of POA except my youngest brother and he really had no idea what was going on. Is this legal and what can we do to stop him and make it right?
1. POA. It is not impossible for an elderly lady in the earlier stages of dementia and unable to read English to create a valid power of attorney, giving her eldest son authority to sell her property and use her assets to, for example, pay her assisted living fees. Not impossible. But there would have to have been certain steps taken, such as ensuring that she was given accurate information about what the POA stated in a way that she could understand, and that she was able to understand what authority she was giving to her son. So: how was this POA drawn up? Did she have a lawyer involved? Was she given a written translation into her own mother-tongue? Have you seen the document?
2. The will. Where are you getting your information about a possible new will and its contents?
3. What sort of disability does the youngest son have?
No one can "get" PoA "over" another person. The person (your mom) is the only one who can assign a PoA -- anyone of her choosing -- and no one else has to "approve" of her choice.
Perhaps you are thinking about guardianship? He could have pursued legal guardianship of her, but not sure how he could do that without anyone else in the family knowing about it prior to it going before a judge in court. Also, it can be an extremely expensive process.
IF there was no attorney and the son simply shoved a paper under Mom's nose and made her sign you are welcome to ask APS to open a case for elder abuse and fraud; that would be giving them your proof of fraud. You also can attend an elder law attorney with your suspicion and proof and ask him how to proceed.
HOWEVER, your Mom's assets stand for HER to use for HER own care. They belong to her, not her siblings, whether disabled or not.
So basically you are down to "did Mom understand what she was doing when she conferred upon this sibling POA to act for her, and is the sibling acting as she wishes, or in her best interests if she is no longer competent.
You are welcome to take this evidence to an elder law attorney and ask that he let you know if there is any way you can proceed to know that the POA is legitimate and was correctly done. As I said, unlikely he could sell real property if not well done, and he is responsible under the law to keep meticulous records of all his actions.
In my state, Arizona, it must not only be notarized but witnessed.
Legally a POA can do nothing to benefit themselves and they can NOT change a will. However, a will doesn't mean anything until the person dies.
So, if your mom needs care in a facility, all of her assets are at her disposal to provide for that care.
Your mom can grant POA to whomever she chooses, just so you know.
One thing I would like to add. If your brother is disabled enough to not understand what was going on, your mom may have decided that he could not reasonably live alone and care for a house. Perhaps that is what has been revealed with your mom in AL.
It is definitely easier to get your brother the help he needs if he doesn't have anything, like a house. So it is a good thing for him and whomever is his guardian.
https://info.legalzoom.com/article/does-power-attorney-require-notarization
One witness: Utah
Two witnesses: Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Georgia, Indiana, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Missouri, Montana, Nevada, New York, Oregon, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, South Dakota, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, and Wisconsin.
Two witnesses or a notary: Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Minnesota, Mississippi, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, North Dakota, Ohio, Rhode Island, Tennessee, Texas, and Wyoming.
Two witnesses and a notary: Florida, North Carolina, Iowa, Kansas, and Kentucky.
Notary: New Mexico
This is for DPOA which would be required to sell property. DHCPOA is different requirements.
However, it is done all the time. By scam artists, by adult children trying to exploit their parent, by an adult child just trying to skirt the law and be in control-thinking they are protecting their loved one from others (often siblings) trying to control and exploit their loved one.
She wasn't of sound mind a t t h e t i m e? How long ago was this? After discovery, how long have you waited?
Hire an attorney.
Talk to the realtor or escrow to stop the sale if appropriate. A house in escrow cannot be finalized if there are conflicting interests (in writing) to the escrow company. That is my understanding and my experience.
Your disabled brother needs you to act NOW.
Good luck and prayers for The Lords guidance.
ps. Also. If she’s incapable you could also go to department of elder abuse and get them involved depending upon which state your in. Florida is on top of people abusing seniors. Signing a fraud POA is financial abuse since your mom needs money to pay her bills
Yes. Also get letter of her inability to make decisions from doctors ASAP
Agree with other posters...get an attorney like, yesterday.
Best wishes.
financial institutions have fiduciary duties to recognize unusual financial activity by the POA and are requires to report it.
I sold my parents house and signed the paperwork but it certainly didn't go in my bank account, it went to theirs for example.
POA does not give authority iver the disabled son as well. Could it be that there was legal authority given to this brother to take over in the case Mom became incapacitated?
I think it would save much heartache and family fighting if people found out what the law says.