A Lasting Power of Attorney (LPA) is a legal document that enables you to appoint one or more trusted people (known as attorneys) to manage your affairs and make decisions on your behalf in the event that you lose mental capacity. There are two types of LPA:
LPA for financial decisions
This type of LPA allows you to appoint one or more attorney(s) to make decisions about your property and financial affairs including operating bank and building society accounts, the buying and selling of your house and other assets, dealing with your tax affairs, claiming and receiving benefits and pension payments, and paying household, care and other bills.
LPA for health and care decisions
This type of LPA allows you to appoint one or more attorney(s) to make decisions relating to matters such as where you should live and what care you should receive, consenting to or refusing medical treatment on your behalf, and day-to-day matters such as your diet, clothes and daily routine. It is also possible to grant power to your attorney(s) to make decisions about accepting or refusing life-sustaining medical treatment.
If you were to lose capacity to manage your affairs without having put in place an LPA, your loved ones would need to make an application to the Court of Protection for an individual known as a ‘Deputy’ to be appointed to manage your affairs.
A Deputy can be appointed to make financial decisions on health and care decisions, in a similar way to an LPA attorney. However, there are several key differences, which mean that we would advise, if possible, for clients to have LPAs prepared instead of falling back on the Deputyship system.
Lack of delay
Once an LPA has been registered with the Office of the Public Guardian (OPG), it is available for use immediately so, in the event of a sudden or unexpected loss of capacity, your attorney(s) would be able to step in immediately to take over the management of your affairs and take decisions on your behalf.
In contrast, it takes several months for a Deputyship application to be processed by the Court of Protection, during which time there will be no one with the legal authority to access your bank accounts or take decisions on your behalf.
Control over choice of Attorney
When you make an LPA, you can choose whom you would like to deal with your affairs when you are no longer able to do so yourself. You can choose whether to appoint one or more attorney(s) and specify how joint attorneys are to take decisions (i.e. jointly or separately or jointly for certain key decisions and separately for other decisions). You can even appoint one or more replacement attorney(s) to act in the event that your first choice is not able to act for any reason. You are free to appoint a family member, friend, a professional such as a solicitor, or a combination of these. In the case of a deputyship application, you would no longer have capacity to decide whom should be appointed as your deputy and the court would have the final say in this decision. If no family members or friends put themselves forwards to act as deputy or if there were to be a disagreement as to whom should be appointed, the court might decide to appoint a neutral professional deputy.
Control over extent of Attorney’s powers
When you make an LPA, you can include preferences or instructions within the LPA form to guide your attorneys as to how you would like them to exercise their powers. For example, in a financial LPA, you could specify that your attorney is not to sell your home unless, in your doctor’s opinion, you can no longer live independently. You could also include instructions about investments, for example, specifying that your attorney is not to make any investments without seeking professional advice, or that your attorney can only invest in a limited class of safe investments or in ethical investments. In a health and care LPA, you could specify, for example, that you wish to live close to a particular relative or include instructions about dietary requirements or personal care requirements.
However, it is important to note that some instructions and preferences might prevent the document from operating as a valid LPA and could be struck out by the OPG when the LPA is registered. It is therefore recommended that you consult a solicitor on the details of any instructions or preferences you wish to include in your LPA form.
In contrast, the powers granted to the deputy would be determined by the Court of Protection. In most cases, Deputies are granted broad powers to take decisions on the patient’s behalf and in their best interests. In the case of a property and financial affairs Deputyship, this would allow the deputy to take possession or control of the patient’s property and affairs and to exercise the same powers of management and investment as they would have as beneficial owner.
Less expensive than Deputyship
It currently costs £82 to register an LPA with the OPG compared with £365 for an application to the Court of Protection to appoint a Deputy. In addition, a solicitor’s fee for dealing with a Deputyship application would typically be much more than to create and register an LPA. There are also ongoing fees which are payable if a Deputy is appointed, including annual Deputy Supervision Fees. An insurance premium also needs to be paid for a Deputy who is appointed, in the form of a bond, which the Court of Protection insist on to insure against any future mismanagement of the individual’s finances.
Peace of mind
Putting in place one or both types of LPA whilst you have capacity will give you peace of mind that your affairs will be taken over by trusted individuals in the event that you are no longer able to take the relevant decisions yourself. You can also have peace of mind that your loved ones will be spared a lengthy court application in order to take over your affairs at an already difficult time.
We use our experience and skills to give you peace of mind, knowing your LPA is in place and legally valid, when you or your family need to rely on it the most. We do this by:
1. Identifying any mental capacity issues that may affect the validity of your Lasting Powers of Attorney and arranging for additional due diligence to be undertaken, for example a mental capacity assessment by a medical professional;
2. Thinking outside the box and anticipating potential issues or conflicts that may arise in the use of the Lasting Powers of Attorney;
3. Advising you how to make provision for as many unforeseeable circumstances as possible;
4. Advising you who you could appoint to be your attorneys and identifying potential conflicts and issues that may arise in the future between them;
5. Advising you and your chosen attorneys of the duties and responsibilities they are bound to under the principles of the Mental Capacity Act 2005;
6. Explaining the different ways in which attorneys can be appointed and authorised to make decisions on your behalf, including the potential implications and pitfalls;
7. Helping you understand the need to nominate replacement attorneys in the event that your original attorneys are unable to act;
8. Advising and drafting instructions, guidance and preferences which may need to be included to enable your attorneys to perform tasks on your behalf;
9. Considering your personal circumstances and advising you as to any limitations in the use of the Lasting Powers of Attorney; and
10. Identifying and addressing any drafting issues that may prevent your application for registration of the Lasting Powers of Attorney being rejected by the Office of the Public Guardian.
Our 'Planning for your Future' podcast series discusses, in everyday language, how planning can help you navigate your way through the ups and downs of life and how getting your affairs in place now can assist your loved ones’ future responsibilities.
In this episode, Partner & Head of Private Client, Dhruva Patel, talks in detail about Powers of Attorney.
Choose your Attorney(s)
The first step is to think about whom you would like to appoint as your attorney(s). Your attorney(s) must be over the age of 18 and, in the case of a financial LPA, must not be bankrupt or a person in relation to whom a debt relief order applies. You should also choose individuals who are trustworthy and who possess the necessary skills to take decisions on your behalf. You may choose to appoint family members such as your spouse and/or children but you could also appoint a close friend or, in the case of a financial LPA, your solicitor. It is also possible to appoint one or more replacement attorneys to act in the event that your first choice is not able to act for any reason.
If you choose to appoint your spouse or civil partner as attorney, you should bear in mind that their power to act as your attorney will cease if your relationship is dissolved or annulled unless you have included an instruction in the LPA that the spouse or civil partner can continue to act as your attorney in such circumstances.
If you choose to appoint more than one attorney, you should bear in mind that the attorneys will need to get on well enough to work together to manage your affairs. You will also need to decide how you would like them to act, i.e. jointly or separately or jointly for certain key decisions (e.g. selling your house) and separately for other decisions.
If you are making both financial and health and care LPAs, you may appoint different persons to act as attorneys under each type of LPA.
Once you have decided whom you would like to appoint as your attorney(s), it is important that you talk to these individuals to ensure they are comfortable taking on the role of attorney.
Choose your certificate provider
You will also need to choose somebody to act as your ‘certificate provider’. The certificate provider is an independent individual who signs the LPA form to confirm that they have discussed the LPA with you and that, in their opinion, at the date of creation of the LPA you understand the purpose of the LPA and the scope of the authority conferred under it, that no fraud or undue pressure is being used to induce you to create the LPA and that there is nothing else that would prevent the LPA from being created. The certificate provider must be over 18 years of age and either someone you have known personally for at least two years or someone who, because of their professional skills and expertise, reasonably considers themselves competent to make the judgments necessary to give the certificate, such as a solicitor or doctor. None of the following classes of persons can act as your certificate provider:
Complete the LPA forms
If you wish to complete both financial and health and care LPAs, we will need to complete a separate form for each. As indicated above, it is possible to include instructions or preferences within your LPA form to guide your attorney(s) as to how you would wish them to carry out their role. It is important that you discuss these with your solicitor to ensure they are drafted in such a way as to be acceptable to the OPG on registration of the LPA.
In order for your LPA to be valid, the various parties involved must sign the form in a specific order and their signatures must be witnessed by independent witnesses.
Your solicitor will be able to advise you about the exact execution formalities to ensure that your LPA is validly created.
Register your LPA
Once the LPA form has been completed and signed by all the relevant parties, it will need to be registered with the OPG before it can be used. Once it has been registered with the OPG, a financial LPA can be used at your direction whilst you are still mentally capable, unless you include an instruction stating that the LPA is not to be used unless you have lost capacity. This could be useful if you are out of the country for an extended period of time or find yourself physically incapacitated but mentally capable of taking decisions. Unlike a financial LPA, a health and care LPA can only be used if you are incapable of taking the relevant decision yourself.
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