Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The thing about durable POA’s for business affairs, health care powers and especially wills, is that (1) they are difficult or even impossible to fix if screwed up; and (2) one typically only finds out about the screw up after it is too late to fix.
But DCUM responds to questions such as OP’s with the constant refrain of “you don’t need a lawyer.”
Why the self-defeating stinginess?
Find somebody associated with the National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys (NAELA), pay the modest fee and know it’s done right and that if it proves not to be you at least have the lawyer’s malpractice carrier as a backstop.
OP here, thanks PPs for sharing so much information!
So it sounds like I could use the legal websites but it also sounds like it might better to hire a lawyer to ensure it's done right.
Can anyone share how much a lawyer would cost to do this? I see that PP above stated it's better to "pay the modest fee", I'm curious what "modest fee" means when dealing with legal matters? Thanks!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The thing about durable POA’s for business affairs, health care powers and especially wills, is that (1) they are difficult or even impossible to fix if screwed up; and (2) one typically only finds out about the screw up after it is too late to fix.
But DCUM responds to questions such as OP’s with the constant refrain of “you don’t need a lawyer.”
Why the self-defeating stinginess?
Find somebody associated with the National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys (NAELA), pay the modest fee and know it’s done right and that if it proves not to be you at least have the lawyer’s malpractice carrier as a backstop.
You really need to separate those things out. Wills, yes, a lawyer and perhaps accountant or financial planner makes sense. There is absolutely no need for a lawyer for a PoA.
Anonymous wrote:The thing about durable POA’s for business affairs, health care powers and especially wills, is that (1) they are difficult or even impossible to fix if screwed up; and (2) one typically only finds out about the screw up after it is too late to fix.
But DCUM responds to questions such as OP’s with the constant refrain of “you don’t need a lawyer.”
Why the self-defeating stinginess?
Find somebody associated with the National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys (NAELA), pay the modest fee and know it’s done right and that if it proves not to be you at least have the lawyer’s malpractice carrier as a backstop.
Anonymous wrote:The thing about durable POA’s for business affairs, health care powers and especially wills, is that (1) they are difficult or even impossible to fix if screwed up; and (2) one typically only finds out about the screw up after it is too late to fix.
But DCUM responds to questions such as OP’s with the constant refrain of “you don’t need a lawyer.”
Why the self-defeating stinginess?
Find somebody associated with the National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys (NAELA), pay the modest fee and know it’s done right and that if it proves not to be you at least have the lawyer’s malpractice carrier as a backstop.
Anonymous wrote:Legal zoom is fine for a POA!
Anonymous wrote:I would google. I recall there being a form we both signed and had notarized. I’m not sure to something I’d pay a lawyer for unless I was loaded and it didn’t matter.
Anonymous wrote:I would do a lawyer. YOu mentioned POA, but did not mention will or health care agent. are those in place?