Rowe & Walton PC
Rowe & Walton PC
Quick Answer: In Utah, a conservatorship becomes legally necessary when an adult loses the capacity to manage their finances or property and does not have a valid Power of Attorney in place. If a loved one is facing severe dementia, a coma, or extreme vulnerability to financial exploitation, a family member must petition the Utah district court to be appointed as their conservator to freeze assets, pay bills, and manage their estate.
Realizing a parent or aging relative can no longer safely manage their own life is an incredibly heavy burden. It rarely happens overnight. Usually, families start noticing small slips—a forgotten bill here, confusion over a bank statement there. Then, a crisis hits.
Suddenly, you need to step in to talk to their bank, sell their home to pay for memory care, or stop a scammer from draining their accounts. But when you try, the bank turns you away. Why? Because without legal authority, you are effectively a stranger to their accounts.
If your loved one didn’t set up a comprehensive estate plan with a Power of Attorney before their cognitive decline, your only remaining option in Utah is to petition the court for a Conservatorship and/or Guardianship.
Here is exactly what these protective proceedings entail, the red flags that indicate it’s time to act, and how the process works in Utah.
While people often use these terms interchangeably, Utah law distinguishes between control over a person’s body and control over their money.
In cases of advanced Alzheimer’s or severe strokes, families usually petition the court for both roles simultaneously.
Judges do not easily strip an adult of their legal rights. To grant a conservatorship, a Utah court requires clear and convincing evidence that the individual is incapacitated and that their assets will be wasted or exploited without intervention.
If you are on the fence about whether to get lawyers involved, look for these defining warning signs:
1. The “Past Due” Notices Are Piling Up. This is frequently the first tangible proof of cognitive decline. If someone who was historically meticulous with their checkbook suddenly has utilities shut off, property taxes in default, or uncashed checks sitting on the kitchen counter, they are losing the ability to manage basic financial realities.
2. Sudden Vulnerability to Scams and Exploitation Cognitive decline makes seniors massive targets for financial abuse. Are they suddenly donating large sums to suspicious phone charities? Is a “new friend,” caregiver, or estranged relative suddenly taking them to the bank? A conservator has the legal authority to freeze accounts and shield those assets from predators instantly.
3. Inability to Grasp Basic Financial Realities. If your loved one cannot tell you what a dollar is worth, what property they own, or what happens if they spend all their money, they lack legal capacity.
4. Unsafe Living Conditions Requiring Paid Care. If a parent is wandering, leaving the stove on, or neglecting hygiene, they need immediate intervention. Paying for that necessary at-home nursing or memory care requires access to their funds, which a conservator can provide.
5. Refusal of Critical Medical Treatment When mental illness or dementia causes someone to refuse life-saving care because they lack the capacity to understand their diagnosis, legal authority is required to bypass their refusal and get them the help they need.
The most frequent question families ask in our office is: “Can we just print out a Power of Attorney and have them sign it?”
The hard truth is that if your loved one has already lost cognitive capacity, it is legally too late for a Power of Attorney. To sign any binding legal document in Utah, an individual must have what is called “testamentary capacity.” They must completely understand the document they are signing and the powers they are handing over. If they have advanced dementia, any signature they provide is legally invalid and can be contested. At that point, the court system is your only path forward.
Filing for protective proceedings is formal and strict to ensure no one’s rights are taken away without just cause. While having an attorney navigate this is highly recommended, the general roadmap looks like this:
Realizing you have to take over your parents’ or spouse’s life is emotionally exhausting. Adding a rigid, public, and time-consuming court process on top of that grief can feel overwhelming.
You don’t have to figure it out alone.
At Rowe & Walton, we help families across the Wasatch Front step in to protect their vulnerable loved ones with efficiency and deep compassion. Whether you are in the middle of a crisis and need to establish a conservatorship immediately, or you want to proactively create an estate plan to ensure your family never has to go to court, we are here to help.
Protect your family’s future today. Contact our office to schedule a consultation and let us guide you through your next steps.