He has been the sole provider in the marriage for the whole marriage. She has took care of him before he entered the nursing. And before even him in the nursing home she has always did what he had asked.she is his power of attorney. But recently my brother in law has claimed to be his power of attorney but will not show her anything stating that. So can my father in law legally take away the money to pay the bills that aquired together before he went in to the nursing home and her money for food, shelter,etc. Also can my father in law change his power of attorney with out legally notifing her?
Does she receive Social Security? If they share a joint account, then she needs to open one of her own and contact SS to reroute her money.
I don't understand why people won't provide proof of POA. It would make things so much easier for everyone involved. If FIL did change POA, MIL should have been made aware of the change in a letter saying her POA is revoked, IMO. If FIL has been found incompetent, no POA can be assigned or revoked.
I agree, you need a lawyer.
This isn't a DIY.
The VA should be able to provide proof that he is the POA of record by producing a copy.
I would contact a certified elder law attorney, www.nelf.org is where you would find one in your area.
Leaving your mom destitute is not legal, she needs an attorney to help her sort out what her marital rights are.
Please do not go by what an anonymous forum has to offer. Find her an attorney pronto and get her protected.
She sounds like she needs a family-law or divorce attorney to straighten out who's is what, and get some order put in so she is not put out on the street.
Whatever assets he had prior to the marriage have always remained his, and if the son or whoever this is wants to take charge, there is little she can do with that part of it.
But she's entitled to her half of their joint earnings, no matter who earned them, for the past 16 years.