Full question:
Good afternoon, I have 2 drug felonies in which I plead no contest to in my pasy, in which I completed Drug Court for for one, and served probation time for in 2002 for the other successfully. If my mother, who naturally has legal guardianship for over my sister, dies suddenly, am I now, with no charges to date at 40 yrs of age, as I was then, an unresponsible 20 year old, able to have custody legally for my severally, developmentally disabled 38 years old sister, so that a group home is not required to care for her? Thank you. Thank you, Stacey Powers
- Category: Guardianship
- Date:
- State: Florida
Answer:
In Florida you would not be allowed to be a Guardian unless the crimes were expunged. Florida is one of only a few states that prohibit this.Please review the specifics below in the Florida Statutes.
Florida Statutes
Title XLIII. DOMESTIC RELATIONS
Chapter 744. GUARDIANSHIP
Part IV. GUARDIANS
Current through Chapter 269 of the 2016 Legislative Session
§ 744.309. Who may be appointed guardian of a resident ward
(1) RESIDENT.--
(b) No judge shall act as guardian after this law becomes effective, except when he or she is related to the ward by blood, marriage, or adoption, or has maintained a close relationship with the ward or the ward's family, and serves without compensation.
(b) A legally adopted child or adoptive parent of the ward;
(c) A spouse, brother, sister, uncle, aunt, niece, or nephew of the ward, or someone related by lineal consanguinity to any such person; or
(d) The spouse of a person otherwise qualified under this section.
(4) TRUST COMPANY, STATE BANK OR SAVINGS ASSOCIATION, OR NATIONAL BANK OR FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION.--A trust company, a state banking corporation or state savings association authorized and qualified to exercise fiduciary powers in this state, or a national banking association or federal savings and loan association authorized and qualified to exercise fiduciary powers in this state may act as guardian of the property of the ward.
(5) NONPROFIT CORPORATE GUARDIAN.--A nonprofit corporation organized for religious or charitable purposes and existing under the laws of this state may be appointed guardian for a ward. If the nonprofit corporate guardian charges fees against the assets or property of the ward for its services, the corporation must employ at least one professional guardian.
(6) HEALTH CARE PROVIDER.--A provider of health care services to the ward, whether direct or indirect, may not be appointed the guardian of the ward, unless the court specifically finds that there is no conflict of interest with the ward's best interests.
(7) FOR-PROFIT CORPORATE GUARDIAN.-A for-profit corporate guardian existing under the laws of this state is qualified to act as guardian of a ward if the entity is qualified to do business in the state, is wholly owned by the person who is the circuit's public guardian in the circuit where the corporate guardian is appointed, has met the registration requirements of s. 744.2002, and posts and maintains a bond or insurance policy under paragraph (a).
2. Maintain a liability insurance policy that covers any losses sustained by the guardianship caused by errors, omissions, or any intentional misconduct committed by the corporation's officers or agents. The policy must cover all wards for whom the corporation is acting as a guardian for losses up to $250,000. The terms of the policy must cover acts or omissions of each agent or employee of the corporation who has direct contact with the ward or access to the assets of the guardianship. The corporate guardian shall provide proof of the policy to the clerk of each circuit court in which he or she is serving as a guardian.
History. Amended by 2016 Fla. Laws, ch. 40, s 36, eff. 3/10/2016.
Amended by 2015 Fla. Laws, ch. 83, s 7, eff. 7/1/2015, and applicable to all proceedings pending on 7/1/2015.
s. 1, ch. 74-106; s. 8, ch. 75-222; s. 4, ch. 79-221; s. 7, ch. 81-27; s. 2, ch. 83-139; s. 26, ch. 89-96; s. 14, ch. 90-271; s. 1, ch. 96-184; s. 5, ch. 96-354; s.1781, ch. 97-102; s.48, ch. 98-280; s.159, ch. 98-403; s.8, ch. 2000-135; s.110, ch. 2000-349; s.4, ch. 2002-195; s.31, ch. 2004-267; s.53, ch. 2010-114.
Note:
Created from former s. 744.27.
This content is for informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Legal statutes mentioned reflect the law at the time the content was written and may no longer be current. Always verify the latest version of the law before relying on it.