Rice v. Floyd

768 S.W.2d 57, 1989 Ky. LEXIS 22, 1989 WL 31162
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedApril 6, 1989
Docket88-SC-477-DG
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 768 S.W.2d 57 (Rice v. Floyd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rice v. Floyd, 768 S.W.2d 57, 1989 Ky. LEXIS 22, 1989 WL 31162 (Ky. 1989).

Opinions

WINTERSHEIMER, Justice.

This appeal involves a Petition pursuant to K.R.S. 387.500 which was dismissed by [58]*58the district court on the ground that an attorney-in-fact fulfilled all the purposes for which a guardian was sought by the petition. The circuit court affirmed the action of the district court and the Court of Appeals denied discretionary review. This Court granted review.

The question presented is whether a trial judge is required to conduct a hearing pursuant to K.R.S. 387.580 when a durable power of attorney is challenged by a petition for a guardianship.

Mayme Floyd is the mother of Peggy Rice. Mrs. Floyd has not been declared mentally incompetent but is wholly unable to care for herself. Prior to her disability, she executed on April 28, 1983 a Power of Attorney appointing Guy K. Duerson, a lawyer, as her attomey-in-fact. The appointment is comprehensive providing that Duerson has the power to make contracts, lease, sell or convey any of Mrs. Floyd’s property, whether real or personal, to receive moneys due her, to execute all checks, leases, deeds, to invest her assets, etc. The document granting the power of attorney concludes that it shall not be affected by disability and the powers conferred herein shall be exercised notwithstanding disability. In May, 1986, Mrs. Floyd became disabled and Duerson, with the consent of her husband who is now deceased, had Mrs. Floyd admitted to the Berea Hospital.

Subsequently, Mrs. Rice filed two petitions to have herself appointed as her mother’s guardian under the provisions of K.R.S. Chapter 387. The first petition was dismissed and no appeal was taken, and a second petition was also dismissed with the district judge stating that the needs of the mother as to the management of her personal and financial affairs are provided for in the Power of Attorney executed April 28, 1983, pursuant to K.R.S. 386.093. It is this order that provides the basis of the conflict in this case.

When the petition in the original proceedings was filed, an order for the examination of Mrs. Floyd was issued and a report of the interdisciplinary evaluation team determined that she was incompetent and unable to care for herself. Full guardianship and conservatorship was recommended for the duration of her life. The evaluation team did not believe there were any appropriate alternatives to guardianship. Although a hearing was scheduled to determine her disability, no jury was impaneled and the hearing was not conducted. The district judge dismissed the case because he believed that the power of attorney provided that the appointment survive her disability and there was no need for a guardian. In our view, the durable power of attorney provided by K.R.S. 386.093 does not make the appointment of a guardian automatically unnecessary. It was not intended to supplant the provisions of K.R.S. 387.500, the guardianship statute.

The Kentucky statute regarding durable power of attorney is derived from section 5-501 of the Uniform Probate Code (1969). The Kentucky law modified the common law principle that the acts of an attorney-in-fact taken after the principal’s loss of power to contract were void. The general purpose of the Uniform Act is to change the common law rules that voided powers upon the principal’s incompetency. Uniform Laws Annotated, Uniform Durable Power of Attorney Act, Prefatory Note p. 277 (1981). It is our interpretation that the Kentucky statute had the same purpose. K.R.S. 386.093 and K.R.S. 387.500 et seq. can be harmonized if this purpose is given to K.R.S. 386.093. The statutes in question provide a pattern for the systematic and rational resolution of the problems of incompetency and the time immediately prior thereto.

K.R.S. 386.093 is designed to validate the acts of the attorney-in-fact during a period of actual disability prior to a finding of legal disability. This law provides an answer to the timeless problem which existed under common law of determining when a principal became disabled and at what time the power of attorney terminated and the acts thereafter were void. See 2A C.J.S., Agency § 141.

The terms “incapacity” and “disability” as used in K.R.S. 386.093 do not mean an adjudication of disability pursuant to [59]*59Chapter 387. The terms are not defined in Chapter 386 and should be given their common and ordinary usage. Dept. of Revenue v. Greyhound Corp., Ky., 321 S.W.2d 60 (1959). The period of incapacity or disability referred to in K.R.S. 386.093 means that time prior to an adjudication of disability during which the principal’s competency is legally uncertain but is capable of being determined by the courts. K.R.S. 386.093 relates to the effect of a Power of Attorney during later uncertainty as to whether the principal is “alive or dead.” There is a parallel in the statute between a missing person not proven or presumed to be dead and a person considered as disabled but not legally adjudicated as such. We believe it assists in giving proper interpretation to the terms “incapacity and disability.”

Frequently, it is very uncertain as to when disability begins and K.R.S. 386.093 is very useful in eliminating questions about the legality of the acts of an attorney-in-fact during that period.

Proceeding with a guardianship petition does not infringe upon any civil or constitutional right of the principal. Rather it aids the principal in the proper judicial consideration of the rights of the parties. The durable power of attorney is not comprehensive enough to replace the provisions of Chapter 387 in regard to the administration of the estates of incompetents. The purpose of K.R.S. 387.500 is to appoint a person to take care of the day-to-day personal business of an incompetent. The scope of authority, duties and accountability of a guardian is much broader than that of a traditional power of attorney, even one intended to survive disability. The crucial phrase of K.R.S. 386.093 is found in the last sentence which states that, “[I]f a fiduciary is thereafter appointed by the court for the principal, the power of the attorney in fact shall thereupon terminate and he shall account to the court's appointed fiduciary.”

It was not the purpose of K.R.S. 386.093 to permit an attorney-in-fact to undertake all the obligations of a legally appointed guardian. A “durable power of attorney is not limitless.” Matter of Wilhelm, New York Surr.Ct., 134 Misc.2d 448, 511 N.Y.S. 2d 510, 511 (1987).

The process of appointing a guardian or conservator is the legal means by which the court applies due process to avoid the possible invasion of civil or legal rights in regard to a partial disability. K.R.S. 387.-500(2). The courts have always had the inherent duty to protect the rights and interests of incompetents. Metcalf v. Metcalf, 301 Ky. 817, 193 S.W.2d 446 (1946).

The position enunciated by the district court that a durable power of attorney can be substituted for a guardianship does not properly recognize the distinctions between the two statutory positions.

This Court notes that the guardian is answerable to a court and must file ac-countings at least annually. The attorney-in-fact is answerable and accountable only to the principal who may be mentally disabled.

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Bluebook (online)
768 S.W.2d 57, 1989 Ky. LEXIS 22, 1989 WL 31162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rice-v-floyd-ky-1989.