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This information is reproduced from a
Government website
Please
also see our Wills Instruction
Form
There may come a time when, because you are
incapable of managing your property and financial affairs or personal
welfare, you will need someone to do this for you. You can formally
appoint a friend, relative or professional to hold a lasting power of
attorney that will allow them to act on your behalf.
Lasting power of attorney (LPA) in England and Wales.
A LPA has no legal
standing until it is registered with the Office of the Public Guardian.
A lasting power of attorney is a legal
document that lets you appoint someone you trust as an ‘attorney’ to
make decisions on your behalf.
It can be drawn up at any time while you have
capacity, but has no legal standing until it is registered with the
Office of the Public Guardian.
A registered LPA can be used at any time,
whether you have the mental ability to act for yourself or not.
You can create two types of LPA:
Property and Affairs
LPA
Personal Welfare LPA
Property and Affairs LPA
A Property and Affairs LPA allows you to choose someone to make
decisions about how to spend your money and the way your property and
affairs are managed.
Personal Welfare LPA
A Personal Welfare LPA allows you to choose someone to make decisions
about your healthcare and welfare. This includes decisions to refuse or
consent to treatment on your behalf and deciding where you live. These
decisions can only be taken on your behalf when the LPA is registered
and you lack the capacity to make the decisions yourself.
How many people should you appoint and who?
You may not be able to check up on the
attorney yourself if you become incapable, so it may be a good idea to
appoint more than one person to help prevent abuse of the
responsibility. Choose people you can trust to act in your best
interests. You should consider how well they look after their own
financial affairs and whether you can trust them to use your money to
meet your needs.
Seeking
professional advice.
Depending on the complexity of your property
and financial affairs it may be a good idea to get advice from a
solicitor before making an LPA.
You can get further advice from the Office of
the Public Guardian about making an LPA.
Registering an LPA
Either you or your attorney can apply to the
Public Guardian to register your LPA. The application can be made at any
time after you have made an LPA.
Before the application to register the LPA is
made, the people named as being entitled to receive notification of the
application must be told by the person who wants to register it.
The Public Guardian will give notice that the
application has been received to:
You as the donor.
The attorney or attorneys.
Your relatives will not be notified of the
application to register the LPA unless you have named them as being
persons who should be given notice.
Anyone who has been notified can object to the
LPA being registered.
Once the LPA is registered it continues
indefinitely. The LPA can be registered by the attorney after you have
lost capacity.
Enduring power of attorney (EPA)
Lasting power of attorney replaced the EPA on
1 October 2007. A person given power under an EPA before 1 October 2007
can still use it and apply to have it registered. This person has a duty
to apply to register the EPA as soon as they believe that you are
becoming or have become mentally incapable of making financial decisions
for yourself.
If you have an unregistered EPA and still have
the capacity to make decisions for yourself, you can make a Personal
Welfare LPA to run alongside it.
Cancelling powers of attorney.
Lasting power of attorney (LPA)
You can cancel your LPA if you have the mental capacity to do so. If
there is a dispute about whether your LPA has been cancelled, the Court
of Protection has the authority to make a decision.
A Property and Affairs LPA is revoked if you
or your attorney becomes bankrupt; bankruptcy does not terminate a
Personal Welfare LPA.
Enduring power of attorney (EPA)
You can cancel an unregistered EPA if you have the mental capacity to do
so, without applying to the Court of Protection.
To
cancel a registered EPA you must show the Court of Protection:
That
you understand who the attorney is and what powers they have.
That
you understand the effect of the cancellation.
Why
the EPA needs to be cancelled.
An EPA
is revoked if you or the appointed attorney becomes bankrupt.
Please
also see our Wills Instruction
Form
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