No Will but currently have POA
Discussion
Please can anyone give some advice.
My brother and I but not my sister (lives in Australia) have POA over my mothers finances, my mother has a bank account, S&S ISA and a joint bank account with me. My mother doesn't have a will, she has recently had a stroke and the doctors don't expect her to be with us past this month.
Do I do nothing and just apply for Grant of letter administration when my mother passes or should I start moving her money now?
My brother and I but not my sister (lives in Australia) have POA over my mothers finances, my mother has a bank account, S&S ISA and a joint bank account with me. My mother doesn't have a will, she has recently had a stroke and the doctors don't expect her to be with us past this month.
Do I do nothing and just apply for Grant of letter administration when my mother passes or should I start moving her money now?
Ridealong said:
I was thinking of withdrawing/putting the money (approx.60k in total) into each other bank accounts.
But why?Sounds too much like trying to avoid taxes etc. You need to be patient and let nature take its way first. Only then do the legalities.
The PoA is still valid for her expenses etc during her lifetime and that is your priority.
My sympathies to you and the family.
POA allow you to act in the interests of your mum, not your own.
I presume you’re under IHT thresholds unless there are significant investment/savings. Even if you weren’t, you’d have to declare the “gifts” you’re proposing - essentially the time your mum could have done something to minimise exposure was years ago.
Value the time you have with her. Worry about what’s after later.
Ridealong said:
I was thinking of withdrawing/putting the money (approx.60k in total) into each other bank accounts.
How does this benefit your mother?POA allow you to act in the interests of your mum, not your own.
I presume you’re under IHT thresholds unless there are significant investment/savings. Even if you weren’t, you’d have to declare the “gifts” you’re proposing - essentially the time your mum could have done something to minimise exposure was years ago.
Value the time you have with her. Worry about what’s after later.
Edited by Mr E on Friday 23 May 07:07
Ridealong said:
I'm not trying to avoid taxes or benefit myself as I could have move money around much earlier. I know things can/could get complicated when there isn't a will. I will just apply for grant of letter administration when the time comes.
If you're going to do it, make sure you open a new bank account and put the money in there. Then make absolutely certain you keep clear records explaining every single transaction so it's 100% clear you haven't had your fingers in the till. Whatever you do, avoid mixing your own money and your mum's money in one bank account. You may start out with good intentions but it's the road to disaster.
As a statement of the obvious, any unspent cash is still your mum's money so will obviously form part of her estate when the time comes.
Ridealong said:
Please can anyone give some advice.
My brother and I but not my sister (lives in Australia) have POA over my mothers finances, my mother has a bank account, S&S ISA and a joint bank account with me. My mother doesn't have a will, she has recently had a stroke and the doctors don't expect her to be with us past this month.
Do I do nothing and just apply for Grant of letter administration when my mother passes or should I start moving her money now?
Sorry for how your mum is. My brother and I but not my sister (lives in Australia) have POA over my mothers finances, my mother has a bank account, S&S ISA and a joint bank account with me. My mother doesn't have a will, she has recently had a stroke and the doctors don't expect her to be with us past this month.
Do I do nothing and just apply for Grant of letter administration when my mother passes or should I start moving her money now?
Spend time with her.
If (when) the inevitable happens, a good list of what to do in what order is here - https://farewill.com/what-to-do-when-someone-dies?
Your POA is irrelevant - as someone said, it ends on death. If there are things that could help her now requiring money, then use it.
It will be probate you will apply for to distribute the monies later.
Best of luck, it’s a tough time.
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