Call
Our Blog

Planning for Incapacity Not Just Death

Planning for Incapacity Not Just Death

Most people think estate planning is only about what happens after they pass away. The truth is, planning for incapacity, not just death, may be even more urgent because a health crisis can leave you unable to speak for yourself while still very much alive. The right documents put someone you trust in charge of your finances, your medical care, and your daily life when you cannot manage those things on your own. 

Why Plan for Incapacity Now?

Incapacity does not send a warning. A stroke, a car accident, or an unexpected diagnosis can change everything in a single afternoon. Without a plan, your family may be left scrambling to figure out who pays the bills, who talks to the doctors, and who makes the decisions that shape the rest of your life.

Planning for incapacity gives you a voice even when you cannot physically use it. A solid incapacity plan removes the guesswork during some of the most stressful moments a loved one can face. Here are the reasons to act before a crisis forces your hand:

  • Asset protection: Without legal documents in place, your savings, property, and investments could be mismanaged or frozen while a court sorts out who has authority over your affairs.
  • Business continuity: If you own a business, incapacity without a plan can leave operations paralyzed, employees uncertain, and partners without a clear path forward.
  • Control over care: You get to decide the kind of medical treatment you receive and who oversees it, rather than leaving those deeply personal choices to a judge or hospital administrator.
  • Avoid guardianship: A court-appointed guardian is expensive, time-consuming, and strips you of your autonomy. Proper planning lets you sidestep that process entirely by naming the people you trust in advance.

Incapacity Planning Documents That Everyone Needs

Several legal documents work together to cover the financial, medical, and personal decisions that arise when someone becomes incapacitated. No single form handles everything, which is why Houston estate planning lawyers will typically recommend a combination of tools tailored to your circumstances and family situation.

Durable Power of Attorney

Under the Texas Estates Code, Chapter 751, a durable power of attorney allows you to name an agent who can handle your financial affairs if you become unable to do so yourself. The word “durable” means the document stays in effect even after you lose capacity.

Without that specific language, a standard power of attorney becomes useless at the exact moment you need it most. Your agent can be authorized to handle a range of responsibilities:

  • Managing bank accounts and paying bills
  • Filing tax returns
  • Buying, selling, or managing real estate
  • Handling investment accounts
  • Conducting business transactions on your behalf
  • Applying for government benefits

Choosing the right agent matters just as much as creating the document itself. Estate planning lawyers recommend selecting someone who is both trustworthy and organized enough to manage financial responsibilities under pressure.

Medical Power of Attorney

Texas law requires this document to be signed before a notary public or in the presence of two qualified adult witnesses. Witnesses are subject to specific disqualifications under Texas Health and Safety Code § 166.154, including the named agent, relatives by blood or marriage, and anyone with a financial interest in the principal’s estate.

Your medical agent steps in only when a physician certifies that you lack the capacity to make your own treatment decisions. Until that point, you retain full authority over your own care.

Living Will

A living will, also called an advance directive, spells out your preferences for end-of-life medical treatment. The Texas Advance Directives Act (codified in Chapter 166 of the Texas Health and Safety Code) governs the creation and enforcement of these documents across the state. A properly drafted living will addresses situations like:

  • Whether you want life-sustaining treatment if you have a terminal condition
  • Your preferences regarding artificial nutrition and hydration
  • Pain management instructions
  • Organ and tissue donation wishes

An advance directive takes the burden of impossible decisions off your family’s shoulders. Without one, loved ones may disagree about what you would have wanted, adding conflict to an already painful time.

Declaration of Guardian

A declaration of guardian lets you name, in advance, the person you want appointed as your guardian if a court ever determines you need one. It also allows you to disqualify specific individuals from serving in that role. While proper incapacity planning should help you avoid guardianship litigation altogether, having this declaration on file provides an extra layer of protection and peace of mind.

Revocable Living Trust

A revocable living trust allows you to transfer assets into a trust during your lifetime while keeping full control as the trustee. If you become incapacitated, the successor trustee you have already chosen takes over management without any court involvement. When you pass away, those assets transfer directly to your named beneficiaries without going through probate, saving your family both time and expense.

How a Houston Incapacity Planning Attorney Can Help

An attorney looks at your full picture, including your assets, your family dynamics, your health considerations, and your long-term goals, and then builds a plan that actually holds up when it matters. Putting together an incapacity plan involves more than downloading forms online. The process typically involves:

  • Reviewing your current estate planning documents for gaps
  • Drafting durable powers of attorney for finances
  • Preparing medical powers of attorney and advance directives
  • Creating or updating a revocable living trust
  • Drafting a declaration of your choice of guardian
  • Coordinating beneficiary designations with your overall plan
  • Advising on asset protection strategies

Contact Our Houston Estate Planning Attorneys

What would happen to your family tomorrow if you suddenly could not make decisions for yourself? The time to answer that question is now, while you still have the ability to choose who speaks on your behalf and how your affairs are handled.

Call Hensley & Krueger, PLLC at (713) 850-9700 or contact us online to schedule a consultation with our Houston estate planning legal team. Our team builds comprehensive incapacity plans that keep your wishes front and center.

 

We proudly serve Houston & all throughout Texas.

 

Hensley & Krueger, PLLC

5615 Kirby Dr Suite 720,
Houston, TX 77005, United States

Phone: (713) 850 9700

 

Our firm is located near you. We have an office in Houston.

Find us with our GeoCoordinates: 29.722090938865474, -95.41771629072745

Archives
Categories
Our Location

location

5615 Kirby Drive
Suite 720
Houston, TX 77005
Get Directions

Call Now

713-850-9700

 

Qualifying Contested Will Cases With No Upfront Fees
or Cost To The Client

top-ftr-img
Contact Us Now
Request A Consultation

Field Marks With An “*” Are Required

Disclaimer: The use of the internet or this form for communication with the firm or any individual member of the firm does not establish an attorney-client relationship. Confidential or time-sensitive information should not be sent through this form.
checkbox(Required)
Location

5615 Kirby Drive
Suite 720
Houston, TX 77005

Contact