Practice Areas Elder Law
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Power Of Attorney This is a legal document that an individual (the principal) uses to give another person (the agent, or attorney-in-fact) the power to act on the principal’s behalf. The power may be general, give the agent unlimited control over the principal’s affairs, or it may be limited to a certain area (such as the sale of a house or car). For the power of attorney to be valid, the principal must be competent when he or she signs it; that is, the principal must have the mental capacity to understand the nature and significance of the power he or she is granting. This is why it is very important for individuals to execute these documents when they are competent and able to understand the legal significance of such a document.
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