My mom completed a DPoA naming me back in 1997. She kept it in a safe deposit box until it was needed. Now in 2017 Bank of America refused to honor it as it did not have the wording they use specifically in relation to bank accounts. Obviously we cannot update it to a newer form as she is now incapacitated. I need to be able to pay her bills and this is very frustrating.
Beware that SOME items CANNOT be forwarded. I, through my own local post office, temporarily (1-1.5 months, indicated on the form) forwarded mom's mail so that I could take over the bills, add all the info to the online bill payment system and have the billing addresses changed. That worked for all the usual suspects. However... some items WILL NOT be forwarded (note on some envelopes forwarding might be requested while on others it might specify NOT to).
The issues I have run into is that federal entities do not like your DPOA, new, old does not matter.
* The IRS has their own form (we have not gotten to them yet, but my question is going to be simple - HOW does an incompetent person sign your stupid form!).
* The VA has for 21-22a "APPOINTMENT OF INDIVIDUAL AS CLAIMANT'S REPRESENTATIVE" that you need to use (I send the DPOA in with the 'intent to file', wanting them to discuss with me - nope. Had to file this form, not the one they sent, 21-22, which assigns a rep from their org for her)
* Office of Personnel Mgmt (fed pension) - requires a specific dx, letter from doctor or affidavits before they allow us to intervene!
* SS - have not gotten that far yet... needed to get over #3 above
The pension took about TWO years, because previous doctor was USELESS despite pinging them AT LEAST once/month to provide the letter he promised. Changing docs helped, but we had to keep throwing it at the wall until it stuck!
I just confirmed today that the VA now has the 21-22a, so I think we're good there (they do not mail anything back for confirmation!)
But I digress - because we still did not have those items changed, I had to schlep on down to mom's condo to get the tax paperwork needed for this year. And behold! About a YEAR AND A HALF AFTER the TEMPORARY forward, those documents had that nice yellow banner stuck on it that stated - UNABLE TO FORWARD. I questioned this, since the forwarding was long gone, but got no satisfactory answer. Even better, a replacement refund check from the IRS did NOT have that sticky on it!
Imagine all this crap they give you, protecting the person's information, identity, whatever... but as I said to one place - if we decide to rent OR sell the place, YOU will be sending her PRIVATE information to STRANGERS!!!
Bottom line: although this may work temporarily, it is NOT a real fix.
We were told to either go to court and gain consevatorship and guardianship or get lawyer to to challenge them. All options just more money out of our pockets which I refused. We were told account is now frozen until mom dies at which time me and brother are beneficiaries. I'm still fuming as the acct has substantial amt of money.
I have ended up setting a new acct and will use money from sale of property to pay moms care and back bills.
You try to be honest with all the right paperwork and banks refuse to work with families nor disclose to their depositors that they require their own POA and may not acknowledge ones legal notarized DPOA. It should be part of their marketing materials to remind customers of this critical requirement.
The B of A seems to want to make their own rules - thank goodness they are south of border & I will make sure they stay that way should they try to shoulder their way up here - it seems they are not well loved in the U.S.A. so that shows much!
My mom had me joint on her accounts so I've been lucky but one credit union told me otherwise they would have to verify any transactions with her under a POA
You stated: " Luckily the bulk of his money is in another account but his SS gets direct deposited there and he has a small annuity with them."
Our mother had two bank accounts, one more local to make it easier to access cash when needed. She had her SS direct deposited. When we were taking over the finances, an attempt to change deposit was made via SS - because mom's hearing is bad, she could not hear well enough to understand the woman was asking for ok to talk to me. I could hear the whole other end of the call from 3+ feet away and told mom they just want you to okay talking to me... that's when SS got me back on the phone and rudely told me we would have to go to the SS office and hung up.
Well, I actually found out that you can REQUEST direct deposit via the OTHER financial institution. They (credit union) were a little perplexed (they probably do not get many requests for this!), but I showed them the documentation and made them do it! Basically, when the direct deposit request goes through from them, it automatically stops the other deposit. Once the deposit was made at the CU, I took mom to the bank and closed the account (I was NOT joint on that account, but she was not as bad off at that time - not really paying attention, but they did not give me any grief.
As for the annuity, if it is small, perhaps leave it alone. Of course, from what others have written, it will likely be a nightmare again if/when your dad passes getting that from them! If there is any kind of existing trust account for other assets (house, any savings, etc), you CAN move it there with DPOA. Just use the force, initiate from the "light" side, to defeat the "dark" side!
"How Long Does the Durable Power Last?
The durable power of attorney lasts until the death of the principal or until the principal revokes the power.
In spite of statutes in many states which specify that durable powers of attorney do not expire by reason of time, many financial institutions are hesitant to accept durable powers of attorney which are more than three or four years old. Because of this, we prefer that clients re-execute durable powers of attorney every three years."
That said, some places (your BoA and probably many of those big banks that cause us so much grief) want to use their own. In our case, we found that the FEDERAL government does not honor the DPOA. So, the IRS has their own form... The VA requires the person to sign to have a representative, the Federal Pension needs a specific letter (magic words!) or affidavits from others... Social Security has not been approached yet, but now that we have the magic doctor letter along with our DPOA (2006), we may be able to get past them!
Anyway, back to your issue. The problem we ran into was with Discover - they allowed, with a DPOA copy, change of billing address, contact point, etc, but refuse any online banking (we can check things by phone though). Older DPOAs and POAs probably do not cover/have the wording for online access. However despite having mother sign a letter granting online access, NOPE. Even better, I just had to call them because they are required (federal) to get us to update our "profile" online and of course this CANNOT be done!
No one else gave us any problems in changing billing address and contact information. BCBS had to be updated so that they would not override the Caremark Rx mailing, but still sent statements until we moved mom. I called them and they made the changes, no problem.
Although the quoted section I posted talks about doing a re-execute every few years, this sounds like just a money grab. A DPOA that is 20 years old, I can see that some might fight that, but if you could back it up with location, doctor letter, something... I would push back on them. If ALL you want to do is get the bills and pay them, they should *NOT* be fighting you. I can certainly understand the CC not wanting to grant online access, to a point, but not from their arguments. Now, if this is her bank account, and you are not list on it, you are likely going to have to hire an attorney to request Conservatorship via the courts. We were lucky that mom put us all on the account, and was still lucid enough when I took her to the bank to change over everything. Until we made all the billing changes AND made old paperwork at home disappear, she would try calling the bank to get checks. That, thankfully, is all behind us now.
Anyway, If it is credit card payments, loans, or something along those lines, you could push back and explain you just want to be sure her debts ARE PAID. If it is her account and you are not joint, you are going to have to contact an attorney, elder is best.
Write to her lawyer stating all efforts you made so that keeps everything above board - copy any siblings if you feel that is a good idea so they can never say you snuck around behind their backs - get one close to where you live/work so you can go in easily
What I did with mom was her bank was different from mine so that all items from that bank automatically is for her use - I even got a separate credit card to keep track of purchases for her & that is paid off automatically every month - it is even a different colour so that makes it easy
one required by law.