Monday, 9 October 2017

YOUR TESTAMENT & DECEASED ESTATE ADMINISTRATION

Epiphyllum 2017

My wife and I are lawyers for the individual.

We, my wife and I, provide discreet personal attention to the drafting of testaments and estate administration.

We believe that the individual is most important especially in this day and age we are living in where computers and impersonal call centres are most fashionable and pervasive. It is our view that personal attention matters most, not only during times of bereavement but at all times. You and your family members need sympathetic and personal attention during such trying times.

We can assist you to tailor make your will – to your own dictates and preferences. It is obvious that you are not going to rule from the grave, as it were, but to have a testament drafted to suite your own personal circumstances. Please refrain from having a joint will between spouses; you are entitled to have your own testament drafted for you specifically.

If your testament is drawn properly, it goes a long way to smooth the administration of your estate. You should keep your documents in a safe place where someone you love and trust, will have access to.

This brings me to the point of deceased estate administration. When your loved one passes away, you are left with the task of sorting out his/her last will and wishes.

Who is going to attend to that?

Big corporate financial institutions?

Let me immediately admit that these big corporations do a good job of it. But it is, and remains impersonal, and you get a reference number and the call centre’s telephone numbers. You will hardly see somebody in person. To attend to the last wishes of your loved one needs careful consideration, execution and personal attention – don’t leave that to an impersonal touch!

My wife and I are a legal team with some years of experience behind us; I for instance was admitted as an attorney during 1979 and have also practised as an advocate at the Johannesburg Bar. Our offices are in Sandton.

We are available to serve you and your deceased loved one’s best interests.

Please get in touch with us immediately before it is too late.

Telephone: 084-456-1030 or e-mail: neelscoertse@wirelessza.co.za

Neels Coertse

Sunday, 8 October 2017

MENTAL HEALTH: THE PRINCES OF THE UK AND YOU AND I

PRINCE WILLIAM: HEADS TOGETHER: NATION'S MENTAL HEALTH ISSUES 

It is interesting and heart warming that the two princes of the UK, Prince William and Prince Harry, disclosed their mental well being after the death of their mother Princess Diana way back on 31 August 1997. Prince Harry gave an extraordinarily frank interview about coping with his mother's death and he hoped to help "smash the stigma" and start a national conversation about mental health.

We all are hurting - some more than others. Having said that, I do not suggest for one moment that my hurt is bigger or more serious than yours or vice versa. There are various things that hurt us. Some of us have been rejected by their children; others had children dying or suffering from incurable diseases - suffering takes on a million different "faces".

What is hurting you? Jobless? Children becoming estranged from you? Write me a letter: neelscoertse@wirelessza.co.za  I would love to hear from you.

Thank you for reading my posts.

Thursday, 5 October 2017

PERMANENTLY RE-WIRE YOUR BRAIN? IS IT POSSIBLE?

White epiphyllum in our garden - cultivated from slips 

Is  it really possible to re-wire your brain and the negative thoughts bothering you? Science is coming up with positive results to proof that it really does work; here's a link to that article. There are only 3 steps to implement: 1: Reframe your unhelpful thoughts. 2. Prove yourself wrong and lastly 3. Create a personal mantra.

St Paul knew this many many years ago when he advised us to change our ways we are thinking. He recommended 8 specifics to think about - you can read it in the Bible at Philippians 4:8. Try it and let me know whether it helped you in any way.

Tuesday, 3 October 2017

ADULTS WITH IMPAIRED DECISION MAKING CAPACITY

Clematis 29 September 2017

ADULTS WITH IMPAIRED DECISION MAKING CAPACITY AND A POWER OF ATTORNEY UNDER SOUTH AFRICAN CIRCUMSTANCES

Social workers and medical practitioners all have some form of experience of adults with impaired decision-making capacity. You can give moving testimony of family members battling with this occurrence and not always knowing what they are allowed or not allowed in terms of the law. Medical practitioners and social workers might also be at a loss of how to deal with such a situation on a practical and day to day level.

During my years of practice, I was consulted on numerous occasions to assist family members with legal advice on this topic. I held Court appointments to act as a curator-ad-litem and to report to the High Court in terms of the High Court Rules. This is the very last thing children [because it is normally the children that has to act] want to do and mostly there is not enough money to pay the legal fees.

Given the situation, the very last thing on anybody’s mind will be the legal principles that relates to a power of attorney [“PoA”] and it is perfectly understandable. It stands to reason that this situation should of necessity be cleared out prior to such a situation arising but for a sudden emergency such as a motor vehicle collision or such like trauma.

The thrust of this article is to give an overview of South African law pertaining to a PoA vis-à-vis an adult patient with impaired decision-making capacity. Please note that I am not referring to overseas legal principles for a very good reason, namely it is completely different from our legal situation.

Please note that this article does not constitute legal advice; you are advised however, to consult your own lawyer. Each case hinges on its own facts and circumstances.  

What is to be done in such a situation? Let us limit us to, for instance, where a patient develops dementia – it develops over time and gives ample time to the patient and family to obtain legal advice before it is too late. Unfortunately, this does not happen often; in fact, family almost always get to a lawyer when dad or mom are far gone! How tragic, because lawyers can do a lot to bring some kind of rationality into the situation.

A PoA is a unilateral act with only one party acting and that is the principal who executes a written PoA. An agreement by contrast is a multilateral act between two or more parties. A testament is also a unilateral act – it is executed only by one party and that is the testator or testatrix.

In this article, I stick to the legal relationship vis-à-vis the PoA, an aging parent [the principal] and an adult child [the agent].

REQUIREMENTS FOR A PoA IN THIS CONTEXT
The requirements for a valid PoA may be summarised as follows:
  • ·         The aging parent must, when granting the PoA, have contractual capacity and so must the adult child have contractual capacity.
  • ·         It must be physically and juridically possible [only lawful acts] to execute the PoA.

·     If a PoA is subject to a suspensive condition, it must be fulfilled. A PoA may therefore be granted with the intention that it will become legally effective only when a future condition is fulfilled. If that future condition is fulfilled, then the PoA is legally effective.

CAPACITY OF THE PARTIES
The principal [your dad in this article]
If your dad gives you a PoA, it is a question of fact whether he was mentally capable of doing so at the time. If he was mentally not capable of signing the PoA, it is a nullity from the beginning and of no force and effect. If, however, he was capable of understanding the nature and consequences of the particular act, then that PoA is valid until he loses his legal capacity to act.

Incidentally, the same argument hits at the validity of the execution of a testament. If the testator/testatrix is of unsound mind and incapable of managing his/her own affairs, and such a person purports to execute a testament, that testament is tainted from the beginning with a nullity and maybe set aside by a Court of law.

The agent [you acting on behalf of your dad]
If you lack mental capacity to act, then you cannot act in terms of the PoA at all. You cannot even act on your own behalf, let alone on behalf of someone else. It is also a question of fact whether you were mentally capable of acting legally at the time.

TYPES OF PoA
General
A general PoA is exactly that and it means that the agent can more or less do anything that the principal [your dad] could have done if he had chosen to do it personally. You are however, bound by the specific terms and conditions in the PoA and you cannot go beyond that.

Special
A special PoA grants specific powers to the agent to do a limited number of things, for instance the PoA to give transfer of property. The agent is bound to execute only that specific thing, in this instance to pass transfer of the property from the owner to the new owner. When that is done, the PoA is no longer of any force or effect. This specific PoA to transfer property is prescribed by law.

Another example is where you got the PoA to buy a specific motor vehicle for a specific price that is sold at a specific motor dealership – the PoA comes to its natural end when you have executed it exactly.

If you have however, not executed it exactly, then your dad [being the principal] might ratify your actions later. It goes without saying that if your dad lacks the mental capacity, he cannot ratify it.


FORMALITIES
The type of PoA I am referring to in this article is by nature and form reduced to writing. The document is the source of the agent’s powers to act on behalf of the principal.

Generally, there are no prescribed formalities for a PoA. 

It is not subject to stamp duties at all.

SCOPE AND EXTENT OF AGENT’S AUTHORITY
The scope and extent of the agent’s authority is clearly described in the written PoA and you should have regard to that. The principal is free to limit the powers he gives to his agent or to extend it as wide as is possible.

The PoA’s you can buy at bookstores are generally extremely wide and all inclusive. If that is what your dad wants to grant you, that is fine.

When there are ambiguities the PoA should be interpreted in a normal manner like any other legal instrument.

It goes without saying that there are certain acts that are in its nature outside the scope and extent of a PoA for example the agent cannot get married to anybody on behalf of the principal. Another example is that the agent cannot vote in a governmental election on behalf of his principal.

LEGAL EFFECT VIS-Á-VIS 3RD PARTIES
When an agent enters into a contract in terms of a valid PoA, he is not bound by that agreement. The principal and not the agent, is bound to the other party in terms of the contract. The agent is protected from liability arising from the agreement.

Let us briefly examine the situation where the agent knows that the principal is no longer of a sound mind and is incapable of managing his/her own affairs and despite that knowledge, continues to act in terms of the PoA. What is the position then? Shortly, the agent will become liable to the other contracting party in terms of the contract. In light of the fact that the principal [your dad] is incapable of signing the PoA, he cannot ratify your actions and you remain bound. The other contracting party might hold the principal liable and the principal consequently have a right of recourse against his agent.

TERMINATION OF A PoA
PoA’s come to an end some time or another.

Once again, the PoA is the primary source to determine when and how it comes to an end. Having regard to a special PoA, it comes to its natural end when the agent has executed his/her duties.

The PoA might even have a clause stipulating how and when it comes to an end. For instance, it might stipulate that it comes to an end at a specific date or on the fulfilment of a specific condition.

The PoA comes to an end in the event of the death of either the principal or the agent.

The principal may at any time revoke the authority to act on his behalf.

It becomes clear that if the principal is no longer in a mental state to manage his/her own affairs and is of unsound mind, then he/she cannot revoke the authority – it terminates automatically under these circumstances. This is how it works presently under SA law because there are no principles in respect of an enduring power of attorney in place to legalise the situation.

What is the situation where the PoA states that it is irrevocable? The general rule in law is that a principal has the power to revoke a PoA. The South African Reform Commission [“SALRC”] states that there is authority to the contrary; it should be noted that this is still open for debate and for the Constitutional Court to pronounce on it; I am of the view that the legal sentiment is overwhelmingly against it.

Change of status of the principal
If the principal can no longer legally act for himself, then the PoA has come to it end. In other words, if the principal has lost his legal capacity by reason of him being of an unsound mind, the status of that principal has changed and consequently the relationship between the principal and the agent has been affected negatively and came to an end. This occurrence goes to the heart of the matter!

The termination of a PoA occurs automatically when the principal dies.

Change of status of the agent
If the agent dies, that is the end of the PoA.

It goes now without saying that if the agent becomes of unsound mind, then it is also the end of the PoA.

If the agent’s estate is sequestrated, that terminates the PoA.

In the event where the agent is an unmarried female and she gets married her legal status has changed. Does it have a negative effect on the PoA? In the distant past, it had indeed a negative effect especially if she married in community of property. Do you remember the days when a husband who was married in community of property, had the marital power over his wife? Well, that is thankfully something that indeed belong to the distant past.

The Matrimonial Property Act 88 of 1984, as amended, is applicable and presently the marital power of husbands is excluded in terms of section 12 of this Act. This means, that although the legal status of an unmarried woman changes with a marriage in community of property, it does not affect the PoA negatively.

APPOINTMENT OF A CURATOR FOR THE PATIENT
When a person loses his/her legal capacity to legally partake in the legal sphere, it is necessary to approach the High Court for the appointment of a curator. A curator acts in his/her own name on behalf of the person, as opposed to the actions of an agent in terms of a PoA. An agent in terms of a PoA does not act in his/her own name but in the name of the principal.

It is an expensive and time-consuming exercise to obtain such an appointment. The applicant who approaches the Court must file affidavits and medical reports from two medical practitioners of which one should be a psychiatrist. The court first appoints a curator-ad-litem [an advocate or an attorney] who must investigate the situation and report back to the Court. If the Court is satisfied with this report it might issue an order appointing a curator bonis who then takes charge of the affairs.

This is the legal way of doing things under these tragic circumstances.

Unfortunately, in a great number of cases, it doesn’t happen at all; even the SALRC is aware of this situation. People that continue acting in terms of the now defunct PoA is taking the law into their own hands and are exposed to being held liable in personal capacity to the full extent.

This situation cries out loud for Government to act speedily and to rectify matters.

THE CONCEPT OF AN ENDURING PoA?
It is definitely not operative in the RSA.
 
It is, however, operative in inter alia England, Scotland, Australia, Canada, New Zealand and some states in the United States of America.

The SALRC is working on it for a number of years. It should be noted however, that it has submitted its report to the relevant Minister and that is as far as my information goes! Your guess is as good as mine – we simply don’t know what is going to happen.

I have in the past presented a number of lectures to interested parties about this situation and I am acutely aware of the necessity of having something like an enduring PoA in place. We are also aware that on a day to day level, people continue to act on PoA’s that are legally no longer in force because the principal’s mental capacity have been so impaired that he no longer has legal capacity. The agent, mostly the patient’s child, is at risk to be held liable in law for acting on an invalid PoA.

POSSIBLE SOLUTIONS TO THE CURRENT PROBLEM
Seek legal advice well in advance to see how to effectively address the situation.

You should seek legal assistance in good time to draft, for instance, a valid agreement between the parent and a child. There is a world of a difference between an agreement, a PoA and a curator bonis.
If an agreement, for instance to act as a manager of the business of the aging and frail father, is concluded prior to him losing his legal capacity, that agreement is not tainted by the subsequent deteriorating parent – this is how I see matters. This kind of agreement might be the solution for the lack of an enduring PoA and it might be tailor made to suit the parties best interest.

If a parent is still of a sound mind but starts suffering from any sort of dementia you should also have a good look at the testament. It becomes important not to have a financial institution to be appointed as an executor in the estate – rather stick to a family member who knows what is going on. If it is a financial institution, it will request the family member in any case to step in and to submit documents and information to it to administer the estate. I am of the view that it is the last and probably the ultimate good deed to your ailing parent to look after him or her and their affairs in a legally sound way.

Please get in touch with me to discuss this situation further.

NEELS COERTSE
PRACTISING ATTORNEY & NOTARY
E-mail address: neelscoertse@wirelessza.co.za
48 MIDDLE ROAD
MORNINGSIDE
SANDTON
011-783-2248
084-456-1030

Tuesday, 19 September 2017

THERE ARE TODAY 40 MILLION MODERN DAY SLAVES IN THE WORLD!

 Modern day slavery

Modern day slavery

The UN reports that there were 40 million modern day slaves in the world during 2016.

Please spread the word about this scourge and evil. Read the newspaper report at this link. This evil mostly affects women and children. Forced labor and sex slaves are predominantly in this kind of a thing.

ARE YOU CHANGING THE WORLD ONE STEP AT A TIME TO BE A BETTER PLACE?

Are you changing the world one step at a time to be better place? Good for you!! I am also doing my bit - one step at a time and at times only to improve the life of one person at a time. 

 Pope Francis - he's got the world as his platform to speak out!


My friend Werner Perufsky - he's got Fochville as his platform to perform good deeds.

My wife referred me to the then President of the United States Theodore Roosevelt's ARENA SPEECH that he delivered 1910; it is called THE MAN IN THE ARENA. 

Here is the quote: "It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs, who comes short again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming; but who does actually strive to do the deeds; who knows great enthusiasms, the great devotions; who spends himself in a worthy cause; who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who neither know victory nor defeat."

Theodore Roosevelt, excerpt from the speech "Citizenship In A Republic", delivered at the Sorbonne, in Paris, France on 23 April, 1910; here is the link to the internet

My question to you: Are you in the arena? Yes, I know you are and let's us keep up the good works we do. And may God bless you!

Thursday, 14 September 2017

WHAT DO YOU READ?

This is a part of my rather extensive law libray

I have to do a lot of legal research to serve my client's interests best and I am continuously updating my legal skills by my own research and then of course I attend a lot of legal training seminars. My wife is also a qualified attorney and she assists me in my practice.

The post that prompted this write-up is more of a general kind of reading - I take it for granted that you are reading of necessity a lot about your profession to keep you updated of the latest in your field of expertise. Besides that, what are you reading? Or do you just flop down on a coach and watch TV with the brain dead material soaking it up like a sponge? I encourage you to take a book and read. Grab a difficult subject and read it slowly devouring every single word as you go along. 

I suggest that you look at the recommendation of TED about 50 books to read during 2017 or maybe you have your own extensive reading list. 

Please write me at neelscoertse@wirelessza.co.za and tell me what you read and why you are reading the book/s? 

Enjoy your day reading.