I managed to sell my sister's house and find her a comfortable independent living situation. Control of finances for a sister with declining abilities to manage her money. My 74 y.o. sister was a hoarder - I managed to sell her house and find her a comfortable independent living situation with her 43 y.o. daughter. The money is in a joint account with me. I also have POA. This money from the house sale was to be for her rent and living. She is spending the money frivolously and her kids are also taking advantage of this "windfall". The question is: can I transfer this money to an account in my name only so I can budget it for her? Her mental state is declining but she is still lucid. She is unwilling to get a medical assessment. This is her money but she simply doesn't understand that it's need for her rent, bills, etc.
I'm POA for my folks and take care of all the bills. Dad has dementia, thinks moms paying bills, mom knows I'm doing it and she's fine.
Dad has one charge card for the drug store and groceries but I might have to end that as he's beginning to give money to crap charities over the phone.
Sometimes you just have to do what has to be done. Chose your battles and take the path of least resistance. I get by with fibbing a little also.
Grace + Peace,
Bob
Eventually the only money she's going to end up with is SS and that won't be enough to live one I'm betting.
If she won't listen then you might bluff and tell her that you don't want to see her spend away her future so she's on her own unless she allows you to set an allowance for her and give you control of the check books.
She might feel better with everything in trust, as then she'll know that legally you will be bound to the trust and her wishes as to how she wants her assets divided when she's gone. You might suggest this...it's costly up front, but could save probate and lawyer fees later on to make up for the cost.
Good Luck...you are not in an easy situation and my heart goes out to you for wanting to help. Just know, that if being blunt (but caring) doesn't work, you might just have to walk away for your own self preservation. There's simply nothing legal you can do if she will not let you at this stage of the game.
Remind her she will be broke and remind daughter or others who are getting money from mom - that in 2yrs, 3yrs whatever at rate she is going -- all assets will be gone and you are not going to bail her out. Discuss realistic care costs for in-home care X hours a week or if mom goes into residential care "$4000+/month. That should be a wake up call. Ask daughter "if mom runs out of money, are you still willing to house and care for her?" Remind mom, daughter that you and others will not be pitching in to make ends meet and a budget and conservative spending is expected and necessary for the sake of all involved.
Good luck. Doubt it will make a difference -- but at least you can feel better about having done due diligence. It can all go very quick at $4000/mo and once you go to NH -- that can escalate to $10K/month or more and drain estate completely.
I'm a bit interested in how you came to be on her account in the first place, especially if she is lucid much of the time and also has children. So far it's her money and she can gamble it away if she wants.
That keeps the reset of the family out of it perhaps. When I was made POA for two friends with memory and worsening dementia issues, they gave me complete authority, even if my decisions were contrary to their wishes. Fortunately, that never got tested. It took a lot of convincing to get them to leave their condo and go into memory care, but once that happened, everything became much easier for them and for me. Can you look at the POA forms to see if giving you complete authority is one of the choices? It was here in MInnesota.
And for everyone else out there: never put anyone else as a joint owner on a bank account unless you are OK with them taking out all the money.
This really calls for an attorney who specializes in elder law.
As an irrelevant example (to this problem, anyway) I have given POA to a friend to sell my cars when I was going to be away. I wasn't incapacitated.