There's not just one kind of Power of Attorney, and you need to make sure that you choose the right kind. After all, conferring Power of Attorney means that someone will be able to act on your behalf on health decisions and financial matters, making decisions for you when you're unable. It's important to get the right Power of Attorney, and these tips can help you choose the kind that's best for your individual situation.
1. If you wish to confer Power of Attorney on someone, or are applying to act with Power of Attorney on someone else's behalf, it is important to ensure that you get the right type. There are several to choose from. Nondurable, durable and springing are three types, and all of these can be verbal or oral, witnessed or unwitnessed.
2. Nondurable power of attorney applies immediately upon being granted and is appropriate for a set amount of time or for the duration of a specified matter - such as the sale of a house - after which it ceases to apply. This is suitable when someone needs a level of help with a transaction or operation of some sort but still retains many of their faculties.
3. Durable power of attorney is more appropriate in cases which will continue either in perpetuity or for the foreseeable future. If an individual has suffered serious physical injury or mental degradation to the extent where they are unable to make decisions with confidence and consistency (most usually in cases of senility), they may confer power of attorney to a trusted member of their family or a friend.
4. Springing power of attorney is for many people the most desirable state of affairs as it comes into effect at a specific time - most usually when a doctor certifies you as incapacitated or other circumstances have become effective, thus making it unsuitable or undesirable for you to make your own decisions.
5. If you are the one on whom Power of Attorney is being conferred, it is worth ensuring that you have a witness to the conference - part of the nature of Power of Attorney is that the person who is conferring it may often become confused, irritable or unreasonable, and may switch between lucidity and confusion without notice. They may well accuse you of defrauding them.
6. For similar reasons to the above, it is worth asking yourself before you take on Power of Attorney whether you are certain you can emotionally endure what will result from being empowered in such a way. It will often require making very fundamental and seismic changes in the person's life, and to do this will require great emotional strength, particularly if they are someone to whom you are close.
7. When acting with Power of Attorney, it is possible that you will encounter interference and displeasure from their family - which may also be your family. It is important to have the full confidence of people to whom the individual is close and with whom they retain a strong bond of trust. This will allow transparency in all stages.
8. Inform yourself as much as you can about the concept of power of attorney. Find out specifically where you stand as a result of taking on power of attorney before you enter into an agreement. Although the situation is a strain on everyone, it is you who will be required to conduct financial and organizational details, and it is therefore important that you make sure you are protected and allowed to do so.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational and entertainment purposes only, and should not be construed as legal advice on any subject matter.
- Related Videos
- Related Articles
- Ask / Related Q&A
- Types of Power of Attorney Forms
- Power Of Attorney Forms Are Essential For Peace Of Mind
- The Purpose of a Medical Power of Attorney Form
- Avoiding Serious Financial Problems With a Durable Power of Attorney Form
- What is a Power of Attorney Form?
- Power of Attorney - Special Power of Attorney: The Basics
- What is a Durable Power of Attorney Form?
- Living Will Form Vs. Health Care Power of Attorney Form




How to tips: Should I File a Police Report?
By: Scott Hallock | 08/01/2010Do you call the Police to report the crime or just let it go? Am I obligated to call the Police? Can I just cut my losses, forget about it, move on and not get the Police involved?
Probation Violation Consequences
By: Kevin Jones | 08/01/2010What are the different probation violation consequences.
How to Violate Probation
By: Kevin Jones | 08/01/2010A look into violating probation and would could result from it.
What happens when you violate probation?
By: Kevin Jones | 08/01/2010An explanation as what happens when someone violates their probation.
U.S. Criminal Law
By: Kevin Jones | 08/01/2010A detailed insight into US Criminal Law
Registered Sex Offender Listings
By: Kevin Jones | 08/01/2010An explanation of sex offender listings
What Probation Officers Do
By: Kevin Jones | 08/01/2010A description as to what the probation officers duties are.
Who are Probation officers?
By: Kevin Jones | 08/01/2010A look into what probation officers do
5 Reasons to Get Divorced
By: Melissa Gordon | 23/08/2009 | LawOK, the question is one that even thinking about answering makes you feel a little bit morally compromised. If speaking to a close friend, who really would be better off getting divorced, you might with a heavy heart tell them - in seriously conciliatory language - that maybe, yes, they...
What is Incorporation?
By: Melissa Gordon | 21/08/2009 | LawIncorporation has existed as a business practice for some time now, and despite some challenge from the creation of the Limited Liability Company legislation it is still a highly popular way of creating a company identity. Setting up as a corporation allows a business to operate with a great deal...
Exactly What is an LLC?
By: Melissa Gordon | 18/08/2009 | LawThe term "LLC" is short for "Limited Liability Company" and not, as some people erroneously presume, Limited Liability Corporation. In fact, an LLC is set up specifically by business members who wish to avoid the limitations that incorporation would place upon their business. The term, then, clearly separates the LLC...
Top Five Tips on Setting Up an LLC
By: Melissa Gordon | 18/08/2009 | LawAn LLC, or Limited Liability Company, is emerging as an alternative way of doing things for people who want to set up in business and avoid some of the legal and fiscal hassles inherent in the other ways of doing it. It has become more popular in recent years due...
Tips on Forming a Corporation
By: Melissa Gordon | 17/08/2009 | LawThere is some confusion between what constitutes an LLC and what constitutes a corporation - indeed this exists to the point where many people still erroneously refer to an LLC as a "Limited Liability Corporation" where the "C" actually stands for "company". There are close similarities between a corporation and...
Reasons For Going Bankrupt
By: Melissa Gordon | 13/08/2009 | LawBankruptcy is a situation that could not be considered desirable by anyone who has experienced the emotional roller coaster that precedes it. There is a lot of work involved in filing for bankruptcy correctly, and anyone taking a half-hearted approach to this work may well find that, even after being...
5 Great Reasons For Forming A Corporation
By: Melissa Gordon | 08/08/2009 | LawThere are many good reasons for forming a corporation, if you are minded to do so. People tend to believe that a Corporation and a Limited Liability Company are all but interchangeable, and in many ways they are not too far wide of the mark. However, there are differences between...
The International Forerunners of the American LLC
By: Melissa Gordon | 07/08/2009 | LawAlthough the LLC in itself was founded in the United States, the brainchild for this idea was actually first raised elsewhere. There are new elements in the actual letter of what makes an LLC, but the first seed of the idea came from the German business concept of a GmbH...