Chapter 2. Duties And Liabilities Of Attorney of California Probate Code >> Division 2. >> Part 15. >> Chapter 2.
If a document is deposited with an attorney, the attorney, and
a successor attorney that accepts transfer of the document, shall
use ordinary care for preservation of the document on and after July
1, 1994, whether or not consideration is given, and shall hold the
document in a safe, vault, safe deposit box, or other secure place
where it will be reasonably protected against loss or destruction.
If a document deposited with an attorney is lost or destroyed,
the attorney shall give notice of the loss or destruction to the
depositor by one of the following methods:
(a) By mailing the notice to the depositor's last known address.
(b) By the method most likely to give the depositor actual notice.
Notwithstanding failure of an attorney to satisfy the standard
of care required by Section 710 or 716, the attorney is not liable
for loss or destruction of the document if the depositor has actual
notice of the loss or destruction and a reasonable opportunity to
replace the document, and the attorney offers without charge either
to assist the depositor in replacing the document, or to prepare a
substantially similar document and assist in its execution.
The acceptance by an attorney of a document for deposit
imposes no duty on the attorney to do either of the following:
(a) Inquire into the content, validity, invalidity, or
completeness of the document, or the correctness of any information
in the document.
(b) Provide continuing legal services to the depositor or to any
beneficiary under the document. This subdivision does not affect the
duty, if any, of the drafter of the document to provide continuing
legal services to any person.
(a) If so provided in a written agreement signed by the
depositor, an attorney may charge the depositor for compensation and
expenses incurred in safekeeping or delivery of a document deposited
with the attorney.
(b) No lien arises for the benefit of an attorney on a document
deposited with the attorney, whether before or after its transfer,
even if provided by agreement.
An attorney may give written notice to a depositor, and obtain
written acknowledgment from the depositor, in the following form:
NOTICE AND
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
To: _____________________
(Name of depositor)
________________________
(City, state, and ZIP)
I have accepted your will or other estate planning document for
safekeeping. I must use ordinary care for preservation of the
document.
You must keep me advised of any change in your address shown
above. If you do not and I cannot return this document to you when
necessary, I will no longer be required to use ordinary care for
preservation of the document, and I may transfer it to another
attorney, or I may transfer it to the clerk of the superior court of
the county of your last known domicile, and give notice of the
transfer to the State Bar of California.
_________________________
(Signature of attorney)
_______________________
(Address of attorney)
____________________
(City, state, ZIP)
My address shown above is correct. I understand that I must keep
you advised of any change in this address.
__________________________
(Signature of depositor)
Notwithstanding Section 710, if an attorney has given written
notice to the depositor, and has obtained written acknowledgment from
the depositor, in substantially the form provided in Section 715,
and the requirements of subdivision (a) of Section 732 are satisfied,
the attorney, and a successor attorney that accepts transfer of a
document, shall use at least slight care for preservation of a
document deposited with the attorney.