POAs, Executors and Guardians and Your Funeral Home

By: Schilling Funeral Home & Cremation
Monday, October 5, 2020

Do you know what executors, guardians and people holding powers of attorney (POA) are?  Or what they have to do with planning a funeral or memorial at a funeral home in Amboy, IL? Read on to find out.  

 

To begin, some of the laws surrounding these roles vary from state to state, so be sure to research your local laws. Executors, guardians and people holding powers of attorney (POA) are similar in many ways, but they all have unique roles to play when it comes to planning cremation services, funerals and other death-related matters.  

 

  • Power of Attorney (POA) – A Power of Attorney is not a person. A POA is a legal document in which one person, the principal, gives another person, the attorney-in-fact, the power to act on their behalf in financial and legal matters. Most POA documents are financial, legal, or both and are only applicable when the principal is still alive. If the document is financial, the attorney-in-fact does have the power to preplan and prepay for the principal’s funeral, cremation or other death-related service. However, the attorney-in-fact cannot make any death-related arrangements after the principal has already died. The attorney-in-fact is also not able to make funeral plans for another person on the principal’s behalf, such as a spouse or a child.  
  • Guardians – Guardians are given legal control to make personal and financial decisions for someone else when that person, the ward, is deemed unable or unfit to make such decisions for themselves. Guardians may or may not have control over the final disposition. This is determined case-by-case and depends on the powers given to the guardian in probate court. Guardians are usually the ward’s spouse or adult child, but anyone can be appointed a guardian if the court believes he will act in the ward’s best interests. In some cases, if there is no next of kin, a Public Guardian appointed by the state will make funeral arrangements. 
  • Executor – An executor is the person that has control over a deceased’s assets. Though many people believe executors have control over the details of a deceased’s final disposition, this is not true. In fact, an executor’s main, and often only, role when it comes to disposition is to inform the funeral agent or director of their particular role in the deceased’s will. An executor is mostly intended to deal with more financial matters from locating the deceased’s property and opening an estate checking account to probating the will, paying bills, and filing all necessary tax forms. The executor’s job is over after the estate is divided up and closed.  

Executors, guardians and people holding powers of attorney (POA) are not the same thing, though they have some similarities. Schilling Funeral Home & Cremation is here for you if you want to learn more about Illinois death-related law or your service options at Amboy, IL funeral homes. We are happy to offer you our services in your time of loss or preplanning. Give us a call today.  

 

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