Brother is threatening to sue. She told me I could take whatever I wanted. I didn't take much. but brother had sent me an email saying "you cannot take anything or sell or give away anything". He lives out of state and has been an absent son for 30 years. anyway.. my mom has the right to let me take what ever I want , right? She had made a list years ago of things she wanted to give us. but her verbal permission has more weight than that list since she is alive , right? My brother is POA. He doesn't communicate with me.. Does he have to share any financial reports?
Given family dynamics, dysfunction, you may want to look at the situation for what may be going on. Is your mother controlling you by giving you things knowing your brother is bothered? Why does she keep your absent brother as POA when you're the one who appears most involved in her daily life? Communication seems to be lacking among the three of you which is causing angst for the two of you. Perhaps if you ask her to explain this decision you could get some answers, and if you want to become her POA you could advocate that and update all the necessary docs (advanced directives, DNR, POA, Will, pet trust, etc) that would be conducive to her elder care at the same time as she ages. In this way this could benefit her, and she could continue to give things away without upsetting anyone. Banks don't like old POAs so it would be appropriate to have this document updated anyhow. If she's reluctant or you sense it's not worth the trouble to go that route, you might ask yourself, why she's playing the two of you against each other. It may be an attention tactic she's working on each of you. I've personally refrained from telling others what I've been given by my 95 y.o. grandmother and simply held on to small gifts as she has asked for items back! She has a trust and I no longer speak with my only brother given our longterm dysfunction. My peace and tranquility is most important to me these days so I avoid those situations and circumstances that rile me. That would include discussions about my brother, and inquires of her that would rile me, etc. As she's gotten older with fewer things to do, fewer friends and activities and now a widow, with me as the remaining closest relative in her life, she seems to want to manipulate me in small ways either for her own attention or to push my buttons, depending upon her moods. You as the closest care provider (like me) may relate to some of my family experiences.
The best thing I've learned is you must always take care of yourself.
In any case, I don't recommend taking legal advice through an internet forum. Talk to an attorney if you feel the POA should be reconsidered.
If your brother has active Power of Attorney, it is because your mother requested it when she was still competent, and is now not competent to make financial decisions on her own. You must honor that, or risk losing in court if he makes an accusation that you were stealing from her. Elder abuse is a serious issue, and you don't want to be the one accused unjustly! That property may be needed to pay for her care!
Be sure nothing you do can be interpreted as taking advantage of your elderly mother. A POA is a powerful document, designed to protect the dependent from predators, scam artists, or caregivers (family or otherwise) who may take liberties since the other family members are away. It's easy to say "but she wanted me to have it", or "I deserve it because I'm here doing a,b,c." but if a legal document says it wasn't your decision, you will lose.
It doesn't matter if the brother is an absentee POA. One of my clients had a POA who was a distant cousin who didn't even know her well. But she had a reason for choosing him, which became very obvious when the siblings started fighting. If you want to challenge it, you should do so through the courts, and be prepared for the courts to assign a third party POA who may not do what either of you want.
If you are really the primary caregiver, in some states you can request a stipend from the estate for your care services. But if she is in a nursing home and someone else has POA, you are not the primary caregiver.
My personal experience as a POA, working with other POA's in the elder-care industry as an estate liquidator, and the things I've witnessed family members do to each other makes me very wary of anyone who says "someone else has POA but my relative says I can have these things". Sorry if that sounds cold, but you really need to follow legal channels, or you will be the guilty one.
But check first if brothers POA is valid and mom either has been deemed by doctors to be incompetent or has invoked POA for him on her own by agreeing that he is now in charge of estate/finances. You need to determine that first and foremost.
IF he is POA then follow Churchmouse's advice.
Most of all, keep in mind the value of the items in question- - for an estate sale, most companies want several thousand up front BEFORE the sale, and then they still take 35-40 percent commission! Others will conduct an auction, but start every item (even a set of Limoges china) at one dollar. Estate sales/auctions are really only worth it when you have dozens of high value items such as silver (not silverplate), gold (not plated), diamonds over 1 carat individual stones, and other items worth 10,000 or more. Anything worn, broken, or not in demand (check ebay SOLD items) is not worth the expense of estate sale. If all dad had was some misc books, an old car and his clothing there is not enough value to merit a sale. You could call them yourself and have them come take a look, and then convey this info to daughter. But really she must have rose colored glasses on-- most people do not have enough of the rigjt kind of household items to make a sale worth it at all. The best thing was dad, not his "stuff", anyhow.
Movesouymom, You are telling her all wrong. mnbwca, just call an elder attorney and explain what the situation is and let him take care of it. Maybe some commenters have had problems in their past and they are thinking you'll have the same problem. An attorney in your state will know what the laws are for a POA, and what you can and cannot do so call one and ask a few questions.
Catyray, your brother is a jerk and greedy. It's a shame (I'm being sarcastic in case anyone is reading something else in my statement) your parents are living so long because he wants to get his hands on the furniture so badly, he's spending and trading while they're still alive. Unbelievable! Tell him I said he's worse that a greedy jerk.
As far as the out of touch brother being POA, many elderly people will choose a son over a daughter as their POA simply because they feel a son can handle things better. It's a very "traditional" way of looking at things, but IMHO, you give POA to the person who is going to honor your wishes.
Put the stuff back. Try to figure out the value of the things you want. Let brother know, or even have it appraised. Then maybe he'll feel better. My absentee aunt asked my mother to have grandmas furniture shipped from Utah to San Antonio. Cost? $15,000. Aunt quickly decided she could do without any of the stuff. People get so awful about the inheritance. Good luck.
mothers health records state that she was diagnosed with dimentia about 2 years ago. She ahd two bouts with dementia due to UTI but now she does seem to be mentally competant. altho losing her memory more and more. Since that is in her health records, does that automatically mean that my bro, as POA gets to make all decisions ? or.. is that determined by court?
Next : he had lawyers send me a letter stating that I cannot access her accounts altho she and I went to her bank and they said that I could view her accounts online - with her permission. There were several overdraft fees. I didn't accuse my bro but I did ask him why there was one bill that hasnt' been paid after almost 9 months.. It is sent to me and I have to forward it to him. I called the place and asked if bro had paid it , they said no. The lawyers letter said as POA my bro has sole access and threatens a lawsuit if I continue.. Asking politely about one overdue bill is threatening? lawyer's letter says "several sources " have told my bro that I am claiming he is mismanaging my mother's accounts and therefore threatening to sue for defamation of character. basically said that I cannot even talk to my mom about her finances.. He probably found notes I had at her house for her to ask him about "unpaid bill" etc.
Have the address changed to his.
Send a copy of the latest bill directly to the lawyer with a polite letter stating that your are concrned about its unpaid status. And that as your mom still has capacity ( is not under guardianship) is capable of asking about her finances.
Leave it there.