estate planning
Do You Fear Powerless Powers Of Attorney?
By Rick Law, Senior Estate Planner and Elder Care Lawyer in Chicagoland. Almost every month I am invited to teach other lawyers at a continuing legal education forum. The typical invitation comes from either a county bar association or a national legal organization. My most requested class is entitled “Elder Law for Every Lawyer.” In that class, I share this concept about powerful powers of attorney for property between a husband and a wife, as most of the people who come to my office are couples who have had long marriages and usually are parents. Most powers of attorney created by lawyers in our area use the Illinois statutory power of attorney for property as the foundational document. You can find this document by typing these words into your internet search engine: “Illinois statutory power of attorney property.” The latest version became effective on July 1, 2011. It has been my experience that most attorneys are familiar with the power of attorney for property form, but they are not familiar with the very special and important issues that confront a couple when one of the two of them receives a diagnosis of dementia, Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s, ALS, MS, etc. I was trained as a tax attorney. My job until the year 2000 had been focused on helping successful people arrange their personal and business matters to be tax-efficient. In the year 2000, I received a call from a family friend, Luise, that would change my professional life. She was panicked when she said, “Rick, Bob has been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s. What are we going to do? Am I going to lose my home? Are we going to lose everything?” I had never been asked these questions before, and my tax law training in high net worth estate planning was irrelevant. Luise needed solutions that would:
- Provide Alzheimer’s care for her husband Bob
- Protect the marital home for her, the healthy spouse
- Preserve sufficient resources to protect her lifestyle
- Use gifting powers, consistent with your estate plan, to effectuate appropriate asset protection
- Take all reasonable and prudent actions allowable under Medicaid law to qualify the ill person for care, but also avoid doing anything that would make the ill person ineligible for benefits
- If appropriate, encourage an adult child to move into the home as a caretaker
- Allow a caretaker child to be paid a market rate for care
- Create and fund a special needs trust to provide you with dignity and supplemental monies, even though you may be receiving nursing home Medicaid
- And much more, subject to each client’s circumstances and the law