Hitting  up one's relatives for money is a time honored survival skill in every  culture. Most people give up the practice when they reach middle age,  but all of us have certain family members who simply can't wean  themselves from the parental checking account. In the past we just felt  sorry for these family members and let them go about their business. In  today's world, with severe legal penalties for elder financial abuse,  the ancient practice of finagling money out of elderly relatives can put  a person on the wrong end of a very ugly lawsuit. 
Here is how it works.
Elder financial abuse means wrongfully  taking money or property from a person who is disabled or over  sixty-five years old. That covers a lot of people. We can't  even retire  at sixty-five any more, but we are nevertheless protected by Oregon's  elder financial abuse law.
To  be elder financial abuse the taking must be “wrongful." So what makes  it wrongful? Stealing is wrongful. Embezzlement, extortion, and armed  robbery are wrongful. Withholding money that belongs to the elder is  wrongful. But those kinds of wrongful taking are not so common, and when  they occur we normally call the police. Where the lawyers come swooping  in is when money is taken from an elder using what the law calls “undue  influence.” 
“Undue  influence” is a  complicated concept that has been imported into the  law of elder financial abuse from the world of will contests. In Oregon,  a will can be set aside if it was the result of undue influence. Since  the passage of Oregon's elder financial abuse law, courts have decided  that undue influence is also a good concept for deciding whether taking  money from and elder was wrongful.  Those court decisions have broadened  the protection of elders, made it dangerous to accept gifts from  elderly relatives, and given new legal weapons to children dissatisfied  with their parent's estate plan.
You  take money by use of “undue influence” if you have a “confidential  relationship” with an elder and thereafter use that relationship to get  money transferred to yourself. A confidential relationship is a slippery  legal concept. You might have a confidential relationship because the  elder wants you to be on his or her bank account, wants you to be an  agent on a power or attorney, or simply takes your advice on financial  matters. If you have a confidential relationship with an elder and the  elder wants to give you money or property (without having received  independent and professional legal or financial advice) you may have a  legal obligation to say no. If you fail to say no, you can get sued for  three times the amount you received and required to pay the attorney  fees incurred in suing you. If you are close to an elder relative and  have some influence over his or her financial decisions, taking gifts of  money from that person can be risky.
How  do you protect yourself? Easy, don't accept gifts from elderly  relatives or other disabled people unless the gift is wrapped in  Christmas wrap and fits beneath a tree. If the gift doesn't fit that  description send the elder to an Oregon elder law lawyer who has never  been your lawyer. Then let the lawyer do the work. If you elderly mother  thinks you should be on the deed to her house, or really wants you to  have a new Mercedes, send her to a lawyer. Failure to do so could end up  with you being sued.
You  think, “But why would a loving parent who gave a lot of money to their  kid, then sue to get it back?” The answer is that the parent doesn't  sue. Somebody does it in his or her place. To see how that happens and  why lawyers love to do it, check out my next post.
 
 
Orrin, what say you about the information contained here? http://nancylynnesucks.blogspot.com/
ReplyDeleteThanks in advance for your thoughts.
Brenda Haines
Co-Beneficiary
My elderly mother health was failing her and she ended up do a reverse mortage on her home. Mom had alzthmier (excuse the spelling) My sister who was staying with mom ended up taking all moms money and cashing in cd's and using moms railroad retirement, and other pensions. this is a mess.
ReplyDeleteThose court decisions have broadened the protection of elders, made it dangerous to accept gifts from elderly relatives, and given new legal weapons to children dissatisfied with their parent's estate plan.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.pinterest.com/1800accountant/