I am ready to file and have been told my an attorney that I should file for both consecutively. They are wanting a retainer of $4K and I'm pretty certain my brother will use dad's $$ to contest. I simply cannot afford it. All I'm looking for is transparency but my brother(s) will not even return my call/letters. So I won't nag, I'm putting this in God's hands and filing on my own I suppose. Any pearls of wisdom from similar situations in the Mitten?
I hope this helps. If you have questions. I may have answers.
Good luck!
G/C can be expensive. 4K actually seems low to me. I would think with all costs incurred it will run double that. If your brother contests all this, there could be many, many hearings all of which you have to be there for and also your attorney which will drive up costs. You do want to make sure that the attorney's are experienced in doing G/C. Most are not and there are alot of nuances in what is needed or how to turn what is presented to your side. Probate court is public access, so all filings are available and attorney's names are attached to the files. You can - in most county's - go to an on-line document finder for recent probate court filings. When you do this, there will appear the attorney's names
(because they filed it), there probably will be the same names over & over as the attorney's who filed in court. Those are the guys you want to hire. They have the experience and more importantly know how the judges run their court. Probate judges are pretty savvy (like was Mom'sAngel's one) as they have heard everything from families and their court IS THEIR COURT. They are the most important person (and best looking too even if they look like Jabba the Hut) in the room. It's important you remember that all the time. Your focus is the judge not your brother.
They (judge) seem to bend over backwards to be fair but there could be issues with the filing party that cannot be overlooked even if they would be the best G/C.
If you or your hubby or your kids who live in your home have any debt issues, or any arrests or previous felony issues or any outstanding legal issues, and you file for a G/C well......all that will surface and you will be viewed as unfit to be a G/C. So if your kid has been in juvee court in the past & still lives @ home, you are toast on getting appointed a G/C. Unfit household. If you have declared bankruptcy or have a lousy credit report, then you may be toast on being a G/C. If the G/C is being contested, the court routinely runs a check on the applicants. So think carefully if there could be any issues within your family situation.
If brother is mom's DPOA, then he has the right to use mom's $ to pay for the attorney to contest your application to be a G/C. She named him and therefore it is her intention for him to do whatever for her as per his discretion. If you mom did a "Guardianship in case of Incapacity" statement (my mom's attorney had her do this ages ago when she updated her will), then whomever is named will be appointed G/C - this is often done if there is a good bit of assets or there has been a history of family friction or some other bad family dynamic that might happen. So if your mom did this, it would be a waste for you to file to become her G/C.
Another thing is that if there is alot of he said/she said going on, the judge does NOT have to appoint either of you. What the judge can do is to have the person declared a ward of the state and then there will be a temporary G/C named. It will be an attorney or a specially trained legal / social worker professional who is vetted by the court and does this all the time. They get paid either from the assets of the person or by the state to do this. Neither you or your brother can do much about this, if it happens. The court appointed guardian then go through everything for the parent, can place them in a facility for a through evaluation, etc. The couple of court appointed G/C's, I have met, take all this very, very seriously. You can provide input but cannot interfere with what the court appointed G/C does.
Another thing on G/C, there is specific detailed reporting required by the court. How much depends on your state or the judge. There are specific forms and things that have to be done in the reporting. All this is filed and public too. Some folks just can't keep up with the required reporting so get removed as a G/C.
G/C is a pretty serious legal situation so think carefully and discuss with your family what all would be involved before you do this. Good luck.