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I Have a Relative in Alabama who needs a Person to Protect them or their
Property
WHAT IS A CONSERVATORSHIP AND GUARDIANSHIP?
A Conservatorship is used to manage the business and financial affairs of a person who has become incapacitated or otherwise unable to handle their affairs themselves due to illness, injury or incapacity of age, either a minor child, a person under the age of 19 in Alabama, or due to advanced age combined with sufficient degree of incapacitation from dementia, or mental infirmities. The Guardianship deals with making decisions over a persons “body” or well being, including living arrangements, healthcare and other important life decisions. A Conservator and a Guardian are the individuals appointed by the Probate Court over such incapacitated people. Keep in mind the difference between a Conservator and a Guardian is that a Conservator is appointed to protect the assets and manage the financial affairs of the incapacitated person; while a Guardian is appointed to be responsible for the health, welfare and care of the individual. A person may have a Conservator but no Guardian or vice versa. Either of these positions can be held by a family member, an interested person, or an attorney or other person appointed by the Court, including a County Conservator. The Alabama Probate Attorneys at Harville-Stein Law Offices have years of experience establishing and representing Conservatorships. Attorney Dean Stein has a financial education and background, while Attorney Susan Harville-Stein has a Masters degree in Social Work and is a Licensed Certified Social Worker. We render service by helping incapacitated persons and their families. Conservators are required to make inventories, keep good financial records, and to submit an accounting at least once every three years to the Probate Court for approval. The legal name for a person whom a guardian or a conservator has been appointed for is an “incapacitated person”, a “person in need of protection” or a “Ward”. Any qualified person may be appointed by the court to be a Guardian for an adult Ward; however the state law establishes the following priorities:
Once appointed Guardian, the appointee (whether an attorney, family member, or an interested person) has the power to do the following:
HOW WE CAN HELP
At Harville-Stein Law Offices, we are experienced in establishing
Conservatorships and Guardianships. In Birmingham, Bessemer, Jefferson
County, Shelby County, Talladega County, St. Clair County, and any other
county in Alabama, we can assist you in open the Conservatorship or
Guardianship. In certain circumstances, you will not have a family member
who is available or qualifies to serve as the Conservator or Guardian, and
we can help to determine a proper, bondable person for this important
position.
IN SUMMARY
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