Any advice welcome. In a nutshell, elderly person with suspected incipient dementia (but no formal assessment yet due to Covid) may be under pressure from one of his adult children to sign a new Will (leaving everything to her).
The father's previous Will was made four years ago using a solicitor, after the same daughter was required by the family to repay substantial amounts which she had taken from his bank account over a 3 year period and used for her own purposes under the guise of caring for him. She does not accept accept that she anything wrong and only repaid the money to avoid being prosecuted. The elderly father cannot remember this distressing period - he can't remember anything after about 1950, in fact. He understands issues at the point when they are explained to him, but forgets to he conversation and the decisions he made, within hours. So you could explain why he should not sign anything the daughter asks him to, without seeking independent legal advice, and why, and he would agree that was a good idea, then within a few hours, he would forget he'd agreed to do that or even that he had had the conversation at all.
Two of his other children replaced that daughter as powers of attorney when the abuse came to light, but they are under the impression that legally he still has capacity and they are not sure what they can do to stop him signing his house over to her, or changing his will in her favour.
Any thoughts welcome.
The father's previous Will was made four years ago using a solicitor, after the same daughter was required by the family to repay substantial amounts which she had taken from his bank account over a 3 year period and used for her own purposes under the guise of caring for him. She does not accept accept that she anything wrong and only repaid the money to avoid being prosecuted. The elderly father cannot remember this distressing period - he can't remember anything after about 1950, in fact. He understands issues at the point when they are explained to him, but forgets to he conversation and the decisions he made, within hours. So you could explain why he should not sign anything the daughter asks him to, without seeking independent legal advice, and why, and he would agree that was a good idea, then within a few hours, he would forget he'd agreed to do that or even that he had had the conversation at all.
Two of his other children replaced that daughter as powers of attorney when the abuse came to light, but they are under the impression that legally he still has capacity and they are not sure what they can do to stop him signing his house over to her, or changing his will in her favour.
Any thoughts welcome.
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