Feature
posted 1 Nov 1999 in Volume 5 Issue 1
Enduring Powers of Attorney:
Guidelines for Solicitors, September 1999
The Mental Health and Disability
Sub-Committee of the Law Society has just published an update on its previous
(1996) guidelines for solicitors. It contains a number of additions to the
original guidelines which focus, almost exclusively, on the scope for abuse
offered by EPAs in respect of vulnerable clients. Para 3.1 states: 'Many EPAs
are made when the donors are already losing capacity, consequently they could be
unaware of the implications of their actions and are more likely to be
vulnerable to exploitation'.
These days it seems to be the received
wisdom that EPAs offer considerable scope for financial abuse. The guidelines
themselves say that 'the Master of the Court of Protection has estimated that
financial abuse occurs in 10 to 15% of cases of registered EPAs, and even more
often with unregistered powers' . (Para 4.1.) With all due respect to the
Master, this is anecdotal evidence, and no reference is made to any objective
research evidence which might lend support. This is important because the
guidelines now constantly refer to the 'risk' of abuse (e.g. paras 4.1, 5.3,
5.10) and to the need for a solicitor to discuss with the donor of a power ways
of preventing abuse (e.g. paras 4.1and 5.13). Given that such advice is likely
to raise clients' levels of anxiety and uncertainty, it would be helpful to have
a clear idea as to what the risks actually are. Evidence-based practice is now
considered to be of prime importance for the medical profession, and legal
practitioners should, surely, be moving in the same direction.
The specific practice
issues highlighted by the new guidelines are as follows:
i) Para 2.3 reminds us that where a
solicitor is instructed to prepare an EPA, the donor is the client. This remains
the position throughout, although instructions may be accepted from the
attorney. In addition, it now emphasises that before the EPA is registered it
may be advisable for the solicitor, where appropriate, to satisfy him/herself
that the donor continues to have capacity and to confirm instructions with the
donor.
ii) Para
3.2 reiterates the need to obtain a medical opinion as to the donor's mental
capacity to make an EPA wherever this is in doubt.
iii) Para 4.1 suggests that
'written information for clients on both the benefits and risks of EPAs,
whether in a brochure or correspondence, may also be helpful'.
iv) Para 4.2 does not
appear at all in the 1996 guidelines. It states that, during the initial stages
of advising a client, the solicitor should consider:
1) That there may be circumstances
where an EPA may not be appropriate and receivership, with oversight by the
Court of Protection may be preferable (for example where there are persistent
family conflicts, or where assets are substantial or complex).
2) That the use of an
unregistered EPA as an ordinary power of attorney for vulnerable elderly clients
should be discouraged. It is suggested that a restriction might be included in
the instrument itself, or that the donor might be advised to lodge the power
with the solicitor, with instructions that it is not to be used until the donor
is, or is becoming incapable.
As regards (2) many practitioners
already do keep EPAs, but the absence of a general power of attorney will create
financial management problems, as, for example, where an older person is
mentally alert but physically frail, or is admitted to hospital for an extended
period, or indeed may induce premature registration of an EPA. Clearly
practitioners will always need to balance the risks which are emphasised in the
new guidelines against the practicalities which originally brought EPAs into
being.
v) It is
suggested that the donor should be advised that the appointment of a sole
attorney may provide greater opportunity for 'abuse and exploitation' than
appointing more than one attorney. (Para 5.1.) The solicitor should always ask
questions about the donor's relationship with the proposed and whether the
attorney has the skills required to manage the donor's financial affairs. The
donor should also consider the suitability of appointing a family member, or
someone independent of the family, or a combination of both. 'Joint
appointments may provide a safeguard against possible abuse, since each attorney
will be able to oversee the actions of the other(s)'.
vi) Para 5.4 states that 'improper
gifting is the most widespread form of abuse in attorneyship'. It is suggested
that donors should consider restricting or excluding the authority which is
available to attorneys under section 3 (5) of the EPAA 1985. Para 5.4 makes no
reference to section 3 (4) of the Act, which permits an attorney to act under
the power so as to benefit himself, and also appears to offer scope for
abuse.
vii) Paras
5.10 and 5.13 suggests that solicitors should discuss with donors appropriate
measures to safeguard against an EPA being misused or exploited, and that it may
be helpful to notify other family members of the existence of an EPA at an early
stage. Solicitors could also consider 'offering an auditing service, by
inserting a clause into the power requiring the attorney to produce to the
solicitor on a specified date each year, an account of his/her
actions'.
viii) Para 12.1 which, like para 4.2 was not to be found in the previous
guidelines says that where solicitors suspect that an attorney may be abusing an
EPA, they should try to facilitate the donor's remedies where the donor is
unable to take action, and should, in the first instance, seek guidance from the
Court of Protection as to how to proceed. Action by a solicitor might involve an
application to cancel registration of the power; allegations to the police of
theft of fraud; and, in the case of residential care, using the local
authority's complaints procedure or involving the registration authority (use of
the complaints procedure presupposes arrangements under the National Assistance
Act 1948; the complaints procedure would not be available where the arrangements
are privately made).
More generally, the guidelines refer to the implementation on 1st
January 2000 of the Trustee Delegation Act 1999, which repeals section 3(3) of
the EPAA 1985. In addition the Financial Services and Markets Bill (due to come
into effect in mid-2000) is flagged up.
As already indicated, the effect of
the amendments and additions to the guidelines is to emphasise the risks
involved where very vulnerable clients create EPAs, rather than the factors
which brought the EPAA into operation in the first place. One problem with this
sort of approach is that the baby may be thrown out with the bath water and
receivership under the Court of Protection given a new lease of life without
addressing the reasons why it was so problematic in the 1980s. It would be
reassuring to feel that receivership offers protection from financial abuse, but
again the evidence is lacking.
It is important, however, for
practitioners to be encouraged to reappraise their professional responsibilities
and their practice in this most complex and sensitive area, and this last output
of the Mental Health and Disability Sub-Committee is timely and welcome.
Margaret Richards,
Solicitor and Community Care Adviser, Tel: 0113 278 1810
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