Chapter 2. Periodic Review Of Conservatorship of California Probate Code >> Division 4. >> Part 3. >> Chapter 2.
(a) Except as provided in subdivision (b), each
conservatorship initiated pursuant to this part shall be reviewed by
the court as follows:
(1) At the expiration of six months after the initial appointment
of the conservator, the court investigator shall visit the
conservatee, conduct an investigation in accordance with the
provisions of subdivision (a) of Section 1851, and report to the
court regarding the appropriateness of the conservatorship and
whether the conservator is acting in the best interests of the
conservatee regarding the conservatee's placement, quality of care,
including physical and mental treatment, and finances. The court may,
in response to the investigator's report, take appropriate action
including, but not limited to:
(A) Ordering a review of the conservatorship pursuant to
subdivision (b).
(B) Ordering the conservator to submit an accounting pursuant to
subdivision (a) of Section 2620.
(2) One year after the appointment of the conservator and annually
thereafter. However, at the review that occurs one year after the
appointment of the conservator, and every subsequent review conducted
pursuant to this paragraph, the court may set the next review in two
years if the court determines that the conservator is acting in the
best interest interests of the conservatee. In these cases, the court
shall require the investigator to conduct an investigation pursuant
to subdivision (a) of Section 1851 one year before the next review
and file a status report in the conservatee's court file regarding
whether the conservatorship still appears to be warranted and whether
the conservator is acting in the best interests of the conservatee.
If the investigator determines pursuant to this investigation that
the conservatorship still appears to be warranted and that the
conservator is acting in the best interests of the conservatee
regarding the conservatee's placement, quality of care, including
physical and mental treatment, and finances, no hearing or court
action in response to the investigator's report is required.
(b) The court may, on its own motion or upon request by any
interested person, take appropriate action including, but not limited
to, ordering a review of the conservatorship, including at a noticed
hearing, and ordering the conservator to present an accounting of
the assets of the estate pursuant to Section 2620.
(c) Notice of a hearing pursuant to subdivision (b) shall be
provided to all persons listed in subdivision (b) of Section 1822.
(d) This chapter does not apply to either of the following:
(1) A conservatorship for an absentee as defined in Section 1403.
(2) A conservatorship of the estate for a nonresident of this
state where the conservatee is not present in this state.
(e) The amendments made to this section by the act adding this
subdivision shall become operative on July 1, 2007.
(f) A superior court shall not be required to perform any duties
imposed pursuant to the amendments to this section enacted by Chapter
493 of the Statutes 2006 until the Legislature makes an
appropriation identified for this purpose.
(a) Notwithstanding Section 1850, each limited
conservatorship for a developmentally disabled adult, as defined in
subdivision (d) of Section 1801, shall be reviewed by the court one
year after the appointment of the conservator and biennially
thereafter.
(b) The court may, on its own motion or upon request by any
interested person, take appropriate action, including, but not
limited to, ordering a review of the limited conservatorship,
including at a noticed hearing, at any time.
(c) A superior court shall not be required to perform any duties
imposed by this section until the Legislature makes an appropriation
identified for this purpose.
(a) (1) If court review is required pursuant to Section 1850,
the court investigator shall, without prior notice to the
conservator except as ordered by the court for necessity or to
prevent harm to the conservatee, visit the conservatee. The court
investigator shall inform the conservatee personally that the
conservatee is under a conservatorship and shall give the name of the
conservator to the conservatee. The court investigator shall
determine all of the following:
(A) If the conservatee wishes to petition the court for
termination of the conservatorship.
(B) If the conservatee is still in need of the conservatorship.
(C) If the present conservator is acting in the best interests of
the conservatee. In determining if the conservator is acting in the
best interests of the conservatee, the court investigator's
evaluation shall include an examination of the conservatee's
placement, the quality of care, including physical and mental
treatment, and the conservatee's finances. To the extent practicable,
the investigator shall review the accounting with a conservatee who
has sufficient capacity. To the greatest extent possible, the court
investigator shall interview individuals set forth in paragraph (1)
of subdivision (a) of Section 1826, in order to determine if the
conservator is acting in the best interests of the conservatee.
(D) (i) If the conservatee is incapable of communicating, with or
without reasonable accommodations, a desire to participate in the
voting process and may be disqualified from voting pursuant to
Section 2208 or 2209 of the Elections Code.
(ii) The conservatee shall not be disqualified from voting on the
basis that he or she does, or would need to do, any of the following
to complete an affidavit of voter registration:
(I) Signs the affidavit of voter registration with a mark or a
cross pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 2150 of the Elections
Code.
(II) Signs the affidavit of voter registration by means of a
signature stamp pursuant to Section 354.5 of the Elections Code.
(III) Completes the affidavit of voter registration with the
assistance of another person pursuant to subdivision (d) of Section
2150 of the Elections Code.
(IV) Completes the affidavit of voter registration with reasonable
accommodations.
(2) If the court has made an order under Chapter 4 (commencing
with Section 1870), the court investigator shall determine if the
present condition of the conservatee is such that the terms of the
order should be modified or the order revoked.
(3) Upon request of the court investigator, the conservator shall
make available to the court investigator during the investigation for
inspection and copying all books and records, including receipts and
any expenditures, of the conservatorship.
(b) (1) The findings of the court investigator, including the
facts upon which the findings are based, shall be certified in
writing to the court not less than 15 days before the date of review.
A copy of the report shall be mailed to the conservator and to the
attorneys of record for the conservator and conservatee at the same
time it is certified to the court. A copy of the report, modified as
set forth in paragraph (2), also shall be mailed to the conservatee's
spouse or registered domestic partner, the conservatee's relatives
in the first degree, and if there are no such relatives, to the next
closest relative, unless the court determines that the mailing will
harm the conservatee.
(2) Confidential medical information and confidential information
from the California Law Enforcement Telecommunications System shall
be in a separate attachment to the report and shall not be provided
in copies sent to the conservatee's spouse or registered domestic
partner, the conservatee's relatives in the first degree, and if
there are no such relatives, to the next closest relative.
(c) In the case of a limited conservatee, the court investigator
shall recommend continuing or terminating the limited
conservatorship.
(d) The court investigator may personally visit the conservator
and other persons as may be necessary to determine if the present
conservator is acting in the best interests of the conservatee.
(e) The report required by this section shall be confidential and
shall be made available only to parties, persons described in
subdivision (b), persons given notice of the petition who have
requested the report or who have appeared in the proceeding, their
attorneys, and the court. The court shall have discretion at any
other time to release the report if it would serve the interests of
the conservatee. The clerk of the court shall limit disclosure of the
report exclusively to persons entitled to the report under this
section.
(f) A superior court shall not be required to perform any duties
imposed pursuant to the amendments to this section enacted by Chapter
493 of the Statutes of 2006 until the Legislature makes an
appropriation identified for this purpose.
(a) When a court issues an order provisionally granting a
petition under Section 2002, the investigator appointed under Section
2002 shall promptly commence an investigation under this section.
(b) In conducting an investigation and preparing a report under
this section, the court investigator shall do all of the following:
(1) Comply with the requirements of Section 1851.
(2) Conduct an interview of the conservator.
(3) Conduct an interview of the conservatee's spouse or registered
domestic partner, if any.
(4) Inform the conservatee of the nature, purpose, and effect of
the conservatorship.
(5) Inform the conservatee and all other persons entitled to
notice under subdivision (b) of Section 2002 of the right to seek
termination of the conservatorship.
(6) Determine whether the conservatee objects to the conservator
or prefers another person to act as conservator.
(7) Inform the conservatee of the right to attend the hearing
under subdivision (c).
(8) Determine whether it appears that the conservatee is unable to
attend the hearing and, if able to attend, whether the conservatee
is willing to attend the hearing.
(9) Inform the conservatee of the right to be represented by legal
counsel if the conservatee so chooses, and to have legal counsel
appointed by the court if the conservatee is unable to retain legal
counsel.
(10) Determine whether the conservatee wishes to be represented by
legal counsel and, if so, whether the conservatee has retained legal
counsel and, if not, the name of an attorney the conservatee wishes
to retain.
(11) If the conservatee has not retained legal counsel, determine
whether the conservatee desires the court to appoint legal counsel.
(12) Determine whether the appointment of legal counsel would be
helpful to the resolution of the matter or is necessary to protect
the interests of the conservatee in any case where the conservatee
does not plan to retain legal counsel and has not requested the
appointment of legal counsel by the court.
(13) Consider each of the categories specified in paragraphs (1)
to (5), inclusive, of subdivision (a) of Section 1821.
(14) Consider, to the extent practicable, whether the investigator
believes the conservatee suffers from any of the mental function
deficits listed in subdivision (a) of Section 811 that significantly
impairs the conservatee's ability to understand and appreciate the
consequences of the conservatee's actions in connection with any of
the functions described in subdivision (a) or (b) of Section 1801 and
identify the observations that support that belief.
(c) The court shall review the conservatorship as provided in
Section 2002. The conservatee shall attend the hearing unless the
conservatee's attendance is excused under Section 1825. The court may
take appropriate action in response to the court investigator's
report under this section.
(d) The court investigator's report under this section shall be
confidential as provided in Section 1851.
(e) Except as provided in paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) of
Section 1850, the court shall review the conservatorship again one
year after the review conducted pursuant to subdivision (c), and
annually thereafter, in the manner specified in Section 1850.
(f) The first time that the need for a conservatorship is
challenged by any interested person or raised on the court's own
motion after a transfer under Section 2002, whether in a review
pursuant to this section or in a petition to terminate the
conservatorship under Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 1860), the
court shall presume that there is no need for a conservatorship. This
presumption is rebuttable, but can only be overcome by clear and
convincing evidence. The court shall make an express finding on
whether continuation of the conservatorship is the least restrictive
alternative needed for the protection of the conservatee.
(g) If a duty described in this section is the same as a duty
imposed pursuant to the amendments to Sections 1826, 1850, 1851,
2250, 2253, and 2620 and the addition of Sections 2250.4 and 2250.6
enacted by Chapter 493 of the Statutes of 2006, and the addition of
Section 1051 enacted by Chapter 492 of the Statutes of 2006, a
superior court shall not be required to perform that duty until the
Legislature makes an appropriation identified for this purpose.
Each court shall coordinate investigations with the filing
of accountings, so that investigators may review accountings before
visiting conservatees, if feasible.
Each court shall assess each conservatee in the county for
any investigation or review conducted by a court investigator with
respect to that person. Subject to Section 68631 of the Government
Code, the court may order reimbursement to the court for the amount
of the assessment, unless the court finds that all or any part of the
assessment would impose a hardship on conservatee or the conservatee'
s estate. There shall be a rebuttable presumption that the assessment
would impose a hardship if the conservatee is receiving Medi-Cal
benefits.
If the conservatee wishes to petition the court for
termination of the conservatorship or for removal of the existing
conservator or for the making, modification, or revocation of a court
order under Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 1870) or for
restoration of the right to register to vote, or if, based on
information contained in the court investigator's report or obtained
from any other source, the court determines that a trial or hearing
for termination of the conservatorship or removal of the existing
conservator is in the best interests of the conservatee, the court
shall notify the attorney of record for the conservatee, if any, or
shall appoint the public defender or private counsel under Section
1471, to file the petition and represent the conservatee at the trial
or hearing and, if such appointment is made, Section 1472 applies.
(a) If the court investigator is unable to locate the
conservatee, the court shall order the court investigator to serve
notice upon the conservator of the person, or upon the conservator of
the estate if there is no conservator of the person, in the manner
provided in Section 415.10 or 415.30 of the Code of Civil Procedure
or in such other manner as is ordered by the court, to make the
conservatee available for the purposes of Section 1851 to the court
investigator within 15 days of the receipt of such notice or to show
cause why the conservatorship should not be terminated.
(b) If the conservatee is not made available within the time
prescribed, unless good cause is shown for not doing so, the court
shall make such a finding and shall enter judgment terminating the
conservatorship and, in case of a conservatorship of the estate,
shall order the conservator to file an account and to surrender the
estate to the person legally entitled thereto. At the hearing, or
thereafter on further notice and hearing, the conservator may be
discharged and the bond given by the conservator may be exonerated
upon the settlement and approval of the conservator's final account
by the court.
(c) Termination of the conservatorship under this section does not
preclude institution of new proceedings for the appointment of a
conservator. Nothing in this section limits the power of a court to
appoint a temporary conservator under Chapter 3 (commencing with
Section 2250) of Part 4.