Site icon Clarion Legal Costs

Gifting – OPG updates gift giving guidance

The Office of the Public Guardian (OPG) has issued updated guidance on gift giving, with particular emphasis on loans and circumstances in which Deputies or Attorneys may seek to benefit themselves.

The guidance makes clear that a conflict of interest is likely to arise where an Attorney makes a gift or loan to themselves, or to members of their family, from the donor’s assets.

Further emphasis had been made relation to loans and the position is unequivocal: Attorneys should seek prior authority from the Court of Protection before making any loan to themselves or to their family.

A general authority contained within a Deputyship Order does not extend to the power to make loans. Deputies must not enter such arrangements unless they have obtained specific authority from the Court of Protection.

In respect of gifts, the OPG cautions: “If you do accept a gift for yourself, the Court of Protection can look carefully at whether the [donor] had capacity and may decide you went beyond your authority.”

The guidance further stresses that where a proposed gift does not fall within the statutory exceptions, an application must be made to the Court of Protection for approval.

 

For a refresher of the OPG gifting guidance, please see below.

Before making a decision regarding a gift to be made, 2 key points must be considered by the Deputy:

  1. Does P have capacity to make this decision themselves?
  2. If they lack capacity, is the decision in their best interests?

Best interests entails consideration of:

 

What legally counts as a “Gift”?

 

When gifts can be made without Court approval

Three conditions must be satisfied:

1: The gift is on a customary occasion

“Customary” refers to occasions that are culturally or socially normal in the context of the person’s life.

Examples include:

 

2: The recipient is connected

The gift must be made to:

 

3: The gift is reasonable in value

What is “reasonable” will depend on:

 

The de minimis exceptions

The Court of Protection recognises that, in limited circumstances, a gift may technically exceed a Deputy’s authority but only to a minor extent such that a formal application is not required. These are referred to as ‘de minimis exceptions’ and apply only where P’s estate has a value of £325,000 or more.

When determining whether a gift falls within the de minimis exception, the Deputy must consider:

The de minimis exception does not apply in the following circumstances, and an application to the Court of Protection will still be required:

 

What Deputies cannot do without Court approval

An application must be made to the Court of Protection where a Deputy proposes to:

 

For the full guidance please click on the link Giving gifts – GOV.UK

You can find out more about our services here or you can contact the Costs and Litigation Funding team at costs.support@clarionsolicitors.com.

 

Exit mobile version