Texas 2019 86th Regular

Texas Senate Bill SB1783 Introduced / Bill

Filed 03/07/2019

                    By: Zaffirini S.B. No. 1783


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to guardianships, alternatives to guardianship, and
 supports and services for incapacitated persons.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Section 1023.001, Estates Code, is amended by
 amending Subsection (a) and adding Subsection (a-1) to read as
 follows:
 (a)  Except as otherwise authorized by this section, a
 proceeding for the appointment of a guardian for the person or
 estate, or both, of an incapacitated person shall be brought in the
 county in which the proposed ward resides or is located on the date
 the application is filed.
 (a-1)  A proceeding for the appointment of a guardian for the
 estate of an incapacitated person may be brought [or] in the county
 in which the principal estate of the proposed ward is located.
 SECTION 2.  Section 1023.005, Estates Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 1023.005.  COURT ACTION. (a)  On hearing an
 application or motion under Section 1023.003, if [good cause is not
 shown to deny the transfer and] it appears that transfer of the
 guardianship is in the best interests of the ward and either the
 ward has resided in the county to which the guardianship is to be
 transferred for at least six months or good cause is not otherwise
 shown to deny the transfer, the court shall enter an order:
 (1)  authorizing the transfer on payment on behalf of
 the estate of all accrued costs; and
 (2)  requiring that any existing bond of the guardian
 must remain in effect until a new bond has been given or a rider has
 been filed in accordance with Section 1023.010.
 (b)  In making a determination that the transfer is in the
 best interests of the ward under Subsection (a), the court may
 consider:
 (1)  the interests of justice;
 (2)  the convenience of the parties; and
 (3)  the preference of the ward, if the ward is 12 years
 of age or older.
 (c)  If the ward resides in the county to which a
 guardianship is transferred under Subsection (a), the county shall
 accept the transfer of the guardianship.
 SECTION 3.  Section 1023.008, Estates Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 1023.008.  CONTINUATION OF GUARDIANSHIP. (a)  When a
 guardianship is transferred from one county to another in
 accordance with this chapter:
 (1)  [,] the guardianship proceeds in the court to
 which it was transferred as if it had been originally commenced in
 that court;
 (2)  the court to which the guardianship is transferred
 becomes the court of continuing, exclusive jurisdiction;
 (3)  a proceeding relating to the guardianship that is
 commenced in the court ordering the transfer continues in the court
 to which the guardianship is transferred as if the proceeding
 commenced in the receiving court;
 (4)  a judgment or order entered in the guardianship
 before the transfer has the same effect and must be enforced as a
 judgment or order entered by the court to which the guardianship is
 transferred; and
 (5)  the court ordering the transfer does not retain:
 (A)  jurisdiction of the ward who is the subject
 of the guardianship; and
 (B)  the authority to enforce an order entered for
 a violation of this title that occurred before or after the
 transfer.
 (b)  It is not necessary to record in the receiving court any
 of the papers in the case that were recorded in the court from which
 the case was transferred.
 SECTION 4.  Chapter 1023, Estates Code, is amended by adding
 Section 1023.011 to read as follows:
 Sec. 1023.011.  NO LIABILITY OF JUDGE. A judge who transfers
 a guardianship to another county shall certify in the transfer
 order that the guardianship is in compliance with the Texas Estates
 Code at the time of transfer.  When a guardianship is transferred
 from one county to another in accordance with this chapter, a judge
 of the court from which the guardianship is transferred may not be
 held civilly liable for any injury, damage, or loss to the ward or
 the ward's estate that occurs after the transfer. A judge of the
 court to which the guardianship is transferred may not be held
 civilly liable for any injury, damage, or loss to the ward or the
 ward's estate that occurred prior to the transfer.
 SECTION 5.  Subchapter D, Chapter 1055, Estates Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 SUBCHAPTER D.  MEDIATION
 Sec. 1055.151.  MEDIATION OF [CONTESTED] GUARDIANSHIP
 PROCEEDING. (a)  [On the written agreement of the parties or on the
 court's own motion, the court may refer a contested guardianship
 proceeding to mediation.] A court upon its own motion may refer a
 matter to mediation at any time after the filing of an application
 for guardianship before a final hearing or jury trial. The court
 shall refer the matter to mediation if such request is made by:
 (1)  the proposed ward;
 (2)  an attorney ad litem appointed for the proposed
 ward under Section 1054.001;
 (3)  a guardian ad litem appointed for the proposed
 ward under Section 1054.051;
 (4)  a family member of the proposed ward who has
 entered an appearance in the matter or that family member's
 attorney;
 (5)  a private professional guardian, friend of the
 proposed ward, or other person who filed the application for
 guardianship and who is not a family member of the proposed ward; or
 (6)  a guardianship program that filed the application
 requesting to be appointed guardian.
 A court may also require named individuals: ward, guardian,
 attorney ad litem, guardian ad litem, family, and others to
 participate in an annual mediation to assist the court in
 determining the need for continuing a guardianship, or use of
 lesser restrictive alternatives.
 (b)  Capacity of the proposed ward shall not be an issue to be
 mediated and must still be proved to the Court in accordance with
 Texas Estates Code Chapter 1101.  Additionally, all parties shall
 evaluate available alternatives to guardianship and supports and
 services at the mediation in accordance with Texas Estates Code
 Sections 1101.010(a)(1)(D) through (a)(1)(E) and whether the
 supports and services and alternatives to guardianship would be
 feasible to avoid the need for a guardianship.
 (c)  All mediations under this Section shall be conducted by
 individuals who:
 (1)  have been approved by the Court and
 (2)  have completed a specialized 24 hour guardianship
 mediation training course conducted by an alternative dispute
 resolution system or an organization approved by the Office of
 Court Administration, in addition to addition to satisfying the
 requirements set forth in Chapter 154.052, Texas Civil Practice and
 Remedies Code.
 (d)  The cost of mediation shall be paid by the parties
 unless otherwise ordered by the Court. If the parties are unable to
 pay the cost of mediation, the cost of mediation shall be borne by
 the ADR fund established under 152.004 or Section 152.006 of the
 Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code.
 Sec. 1055.152.  MEDIATED SETTLEMENT AGREEMENTS. (a)  A
 mediated settlement agreement is binding on the parties if the
 agreement:
 (1)  provides, in a prominently displayed statement
 that is in boldfaced type, in capital letters, or underlined, that
 the agreement is not subject to revocation by the parties and that
 the parties agree the settlement agreement is in the best interest
 of the Ward.
 (2)  is signed by each party to the agreement; and
 (3)  is signed by the party's attorney, if any, who is
 present at the time the agreement is signed.
 (b) [(c)]  If a mediated settlement agreement meets the
 requirements of this section, a party is entitled to judgment on the
 mediated settlement agreement notwithstanding Rule 11, Texas Rules
 of Civil Procedure, or another rule or law.
 (c) [(d)]  Notwithstanding Subsections (a) and (b) [and
 (c)], a court may decline to enter a judgment on a mediated
 settlement agreement if the court finds that the agreement is not in
 the ward's or proposed ward's best interests.
 Sec. 1055.153.  MEDIATION PROJECT. (a)  For the purposes of
 this section, a probate court is considered a mental health court
 under Chapter 125, Government Code.
 (b)  A probate court may:
 (1)  apply for a public or private grant to fund a
 mediation project in connection with a guardianship proceeding; or
 (2)  participate in a national or state mediation
 project to study the effects of mediation on promoting the least
 restrictive alternatives to guardianship for incapacitated
 persons.
 (c)  This section expires September 1, 2021.
 SECTION 6.  Section 1101.001(b), Estates Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (b)  The application must be sworn to by the applicant and
 state:
 (1)  the proposed ward's name, sex, date of birth, and
 address;
 (2)  the name, relationship, and address of the person
 the applicant seeks to have appointed as guardian;
 (3)  whether guardianship of the person or estate, or
 both, is sought;
 (3-a)  whether alternatives to guardianship and
 available supports and services to avoid guardianship were
 considered;
 (3-b)  whether any alternatives to guardianship and
 supports and services available to the proposed ward considered are
 feasible and would avoid the need for a guardianship;
 (3-c)  whether mediation was considered or encouraged
 to avoid the need for guardianship;
 (4)  the nature and degree of the alleged incapacity,
 the specific areas of protection and assistance requested, and the
 limitation or termination of rights requested to be included in the
 court's order of appointment, including a termination of:
 (A)  the right of a proposed ward who is 18 years
 of age or older to vote in a public election;
 (B)  the proposed ward's eligibility to hold or
 obtain a license to operate a motor vehicle under Chapter 521,
 Transportation Code; and
 (C)  the right of a proposed ward to make personal
 decisions regarding residence;
 (5)  the facts requiring the appointment of a guardian;
 (6)  the interest of the applicant in the appointment
 of a guardian;
 (7)  the nature and description of any kind of
 guardianship existing for the proposed ward in any other state;
 (8)  the name and address of any person or institution
 having the care and custody of the proposed ward;
 (9)  the approximate value and description of the
 proposed ward's property, including any compensation, pension,
 insurance, or allowance to which the proposed ward may be entitled;
 (10)  the name and address of any person whom the
 applicant knows to hold a power of attorney signed by the proposed
 ward and a description of the type of power of attorney;
 (11)  for a proposed ward who is a minor, the following
 information if known by the applicant:
 (A)  the name of each of the proposed ward's
 parents and either the parent's address or that the parent is
 deceased;
 (B)  the name and age of each of the proposed
 ward's siblings, if any, and either the sibling's address or that
 the sibling is deceased; and
 (C)  if each of the proposed ward's parents and
 adult siblings are deceased, the names and addresses of the
 proposed ward's other living relatives who are related to the
 proposed ward within the third degree by consanguinity and who are
 adults;
 (12)  for a proposed ward who is a minor, whether the
 minor was the subject of a legal or conservatorship proceeding in
 the preceding two years and, if so:
 (A)  the court involved;
 (B)  the nature of the proceeding; and
 (C)  any final disposition of the proceeding;
 (13)  for a proposed ward who is an adult, the following
 information if known by the applicant:
 (A)  the name of the proposed ward's spouse, if
 any, and either the spouse's address or that the spouse is deceased;
 (B)  the name of each of the proposed ward's
 parents and either the parent's address or that the parent is
 deceased;
 (C)  the name and age of each of the proposed
 ward's siblings, if any, and either the sibling's address or that
 the sibling is deceased;
 (D)  the name and age of each of the proposed
 ward's children, if any, and either the child's address or that the
 child is deceased; and
 (E)  if there is no living spouse, parent, adult
 sibling, or adult child of the proposed ward, the names and
 addresses of the proposed ward's other living relatives who are
 related to the proposed ward within the third degree by
 consanguinity and who are adults;
 (14)  facts showing that the court has venue of the
 proceeding; and
 (15)  if applicable, that the person whom the applicant
 seeks to have appointed as a guardian is a private professional
 guardian who is certified under Subchapter C, Chapter 155,
 Government Code, and has complied with the requirements of
 Subchapter G, Chapter 1104.
 SECTION 7.  The heading to Subchapter B, Chapter 1101,
 Estates Code, is amended to read as follows:
 SUBCHAPTER B. HEARING; JURY TRIAL; MEDIATION
 SECTION 8.  Section 1101.052, Estates Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 1101.052.  JURY TRIAL AND MEDIATION. A proposed ward is
 entitled to a jury trial on request. At any time after the filing of
 an application for guardianship but before the date of the final
 hearing or jury trial for the appointment of a guardian, the court
 may refer a matter to mediation in accordance with Section
 1055.151.
 SECTION 9.  Section 1201.053, Estates Code, is amended by
 adding Subsection (c) to read as follows:
 (c)  In reviewing a guardianship under Section 1201.052, a
 court may require the following persons to participate in a
 mediation in connection with the guardianship matter:
 (1)  the ward;
 (2)  the ward's guardian;
 (3)  an attorney ad litem appointed to represent the
 ward or the ward's interests;
 (4)  a guardian ad litem appointed to represent the
 ward or the ward's interests;
 (5)  a family member of the ward; or
 (6)  any other person interested in the ward's welfare.
 SECTION 10.  Section 1202.001, Estates Code, is amended by
 adding Subsection (b-1) to read as follows:
 (b-1)  A guardianship of the person shall be settled and
 closed when the court finds that the ward's incapacity needs can be
 managed without the necessity for that continued guardianship by an
 alternative to guardianship or with supports and services as
 provided by Subchapter F.
 SECTION 11.  Chapter 1202, Estates Code, is amended by
 adding Subchapter F to read as follows:
 SUBCHAPTER F. TERMINATION OF GUARDIANSHIP OF THE PERSON ON FINDING
 THAT INCAPACITY THE PERSON'S NEEDS CAN BE MANAGED WITHOUT
 GUARDIANSHIP
 Sec. 1202.231.  TERMINATION OF GUARDIANSHIP OF THE PERSON ON
 FINDING THAT WARD'S INCAPACITY NEEDS CAN BE MANAGED WITHOUT
 GUARDIANSHIP. On application by the guardian of the person of a
 ward or another person interested in the ward's welfare, or on the
 court's own motion and subject to Section 1202.232, the court may
 order that the guardianship of the person of the ward terminate and
 be settled and closed if the court makes the findings required under
 Section 1202.233.
 Sec. 1202.232.  PHYSICIAN'S LETTER OR CERTIFICATE REQUIRED.
 (a)  The court may not grant an order terminating a guardianship of
 the person under Section 1202.231 unless the applicant presents to
 the court or the court secures a written letter or certificate from
 a physician licensed in this state that is dated:
 (1)  not earlier than the 120th day before the date the
 application was filed or the date the court enters the court's
 motion; or
 (2)  any time after the date the application was filed
 or the date the court's motion was entered but before the date of
 the hearing.
 (b)  A letter or certificate presented under Subsection (a)
 must:
 (1)  describe the nature and degree of incapacity of
 the ward, including the ward's medical history if reasonably
 available;
 (2)  provide a medical prognosis for the ward
 specifying the estimated severity of any incapacity;
 (3)  state how or in what manner the ward's ability to
 make or communicate responsible decisions concerning the ward is
 affected by the ward's physical or mental health;
 (4)  state whether any current medication affects the
 ward's demeanor or the ward's ability to participate fully in a
 court proceeding;
 (5)  describe the precise physical and mental
 conditions underlying a diagnosis of senility, if applicable;
 (6)  describe feasible alternatives to guardianship
 available to the ward that would avoid the need for the continued
 appointment of a guardian of the person and state whether, in the
 physician's opinion, those alternatives to guardianship meet the
 following needs of the ward without the necessity for a continued
 guardianship of the person:
 (A)  provision of food, clothing, and shelter for
 the ward's own self;
 (B)  care for the ward's own physical health; and
 (C)  management of the ward's financial affairs;
 (7)  describe feasible supports and services available
 to the ward that would avoid the need for the continued appointment
 of a guardian of the person for the ward and state whether, in the
 physician's opinion, the supports and services meet the following
 needs of the ward without the necessity for a continued
 guardianship of the person:
 (A)  provision of food, clothing, and shelter for
 the ward's own self;
 (B)  care for the ward's own physical health; and
 (C)  management of the ward's financial affairs;
 and
 (8)  include any other information required by the
 court.
 (c)  If the court determines it is necessary, the court may
 appoint the necessary physicians to examine the ward.
 Sec. 1202.233.  FINDINGS REQUIRED. Before ordering the
 termination of a guardianship of the person under Section 1202.231,
 the court must find by a preponderance of the evidence that:
 (1)  the ward remains a partially or completely
 incapacitated person;
 (2)  the current nature and degree of the ward's
 incapacity and the ward's needs can be managed without the
 necessity of a continued guardianship of the person by:
 (A)  alternatives to guardianship that are
 available to the ward and that are determined to be feasible; or
 (B)  supports and services that are available to
 the ward and that are determined to be feasible; and
 (3)  termination of the guardianship of the person:
 (A)  is in the ward's best interest; and
 (B)  will encourage the development or
 maintenance of maximum self-reliance and independence in the ward.
 Sec. 1202.234.  GENERAL REQUIREMENTS FOR ORDER. A court
 order that terminates a guardianship of the person under this
 subchapter must:
 (1)  contain the findings required under Section
 1202.233;
 (2)  state the guardian's name;
 (3)  state the ward's name;
 (4)  specify:
 (A)  the supports and services that:
 (i)  will meet the ward's needs without the
 continued necessity for guardianship of the person; and
 (ii)  justify the termination of that
 guardianship; or
 (B)  the alternatives to guardianship that:
 (i)  will meet the ward's needs without the
 continued necessity for guardianship of the person; and
 (ii)  justify the termination of that
 guardianship;
 (5)  identify the persons or entities providing or that
 will provide:
 (A)  the supports and services described by
 Subdivision (4)(A); or
 (B)  alternatives to guardianship described by
 Subdivision (4)(B);
 (6)  state that the guardian is required to:
 (A)  immediately settle the guardianship in
 accordance with this title; and
 (B)  deliver all of the ward's remaining personal
 effects and assets, if any, to the persons or entities identified
 under Subdivision (5)(A) or (B), as applicable; and
 (7)  state that the clerk shall revoke letters of
 guardianship of the person when the guardianship is finally settled
 and closed.
 Sec. 1202.235.  NOTICE; APPOINTMENT OF ATTORNEY AD LITEM OR
 GUARDIAN AD LITEM. A court may, in its discretion, enter additional
 orders in the best interest of the ward, including but not limited
 to:
 (1)  requiring notice to interested parties;;
 (2)  appoint an attorney ad litem and/or guardian ad
 litem.
 SECTION 12.  Chapter 155, Government Code, is amended by
 adding Subchapter G to read as follows:
 SUBCHAPTER G.  GUARDIANSHIP MEDIATION TRAINING
 Sec. 155.301.  TRAINING. The Office of Court Administration
 by rule shall establish a 24 hour training course for use by
 approved dispute resolution training providers for those persons
 appointed to facilitate mediations under Title 3, Estates Code.
 Providers of mediation training shall adhere to the approved
 curriculum.
 SECTION 13.  (a)  Except as otherwise provided by this
 section, the changes in law made by this Act apply to a guardianship
 created before, on, or after the effective date of this Act.
 (b)  Section 1023.001, Estates Code, as amended by this Act,
 applies only to a proceeding commenced on or after the effective
 date of this Act. A proceeding commenced before the effective date
 of this Act is governed by the law applicable to the proceeding
 immediately before the effective date of this Act, and that law is
 continued in effect for that purpose.
 (c)  Section 1101.001(b), Estates Code, as amended by this
 Act, applies only to an application for the appointment of a
 guardian filed on or after the effective date of this Act. An
 application for the appointment of a guardian filed before the
 effective date of this Act is governed by the law in effect on the
 date the application was filed, and the former law is continued in
 effect for that purpose.
 SECTION 14.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2019.