(1) A guardianship terminates upon the death of the ward or upon order of the court.
On petition of a ward, a guardian, or another person interested in the ward's welfare,the court shall terminate a guardianship if the ward no longer meets the standard for establishing the guardianship. The court may modify the type of appointment or powers granted to the guardian if the extent of protection or assistance previously granted is currently excessive or insufficient or the ward's capacity to provide for support, care, education, health, and welfare has so changed as to warrant that action.
Except as otherwise ordered by the court for good cause, the court, before terminating a guardianship, shall follow the same procedures to safeguard the rights of the ward as apply to a petition for guardianship.
(3.5) The following provisions apply in a termination proceeding that is initiated by the ward:
(a) The guardian may file a written report to the court regarding any matter relevant to the termination proceeding, and the guardian may file a motion for instructions regarding any relevant matter including, but not limited to, the following:
Whether an attorney, guardian ad litem, or visitor should be appointed for the ward;
Whether any further investigation or professional evaluation of the ward should beconducted, the scope of the investigation or professional evaluation, and when the investigation or professional evaluation should be completed; and
Whether the guardian is to be involved in the termination proceedings and, if so, towhat extent.
If the guardian elects to file a written report or a motion for instructions, the guardianshall file such initial pleadings within twenty-one days after the petition to terminate has been filed. Any interested person shall then have fourteen days to file a response. If a response is filed, the guardian shall have seven days to file a reply. If a motion for instructions is filed by the guardian as his or her initial pleading, the court shall rule on the motion before the petition for termination of the guardianship is set for hearing. Unless a hearing on the motion for instructions is requested by the court, the court may rule on the pleadings without a hearing after the time period for the filing of the last responsive pleading has expired. After the filing of the guardian's initial motion for instructions, the guardian may file subsequent motions for instruction as appropriate.
Except for the actions authorized in paragraphs (a), (b), and (e) of this subsection
(3.5), or as otherwise ordered by the court, the guardian may not take any action to oppose or interfere in the termination proceeding. The filing of the initial or subsequent motion for instructions by the guardian shall not, in and of itself, be deemed opposition or interference.
Unless ordered by the court, the guardian shall have no duty to participate in thetermination proceeding, and the guardian shall incur no liability for filing the report or motion for instruction or for failing to participate in the proceeding.
Nothing in this subsection (3.5) shall prevent:
The court, on its own motion and regardless of whether the guardian has filed a reportor request for instructions, from ordering the guardian to take any action that the court deems appropriate or from appointing an attorney, guardian ad litem, visitor, or professional evaluator;
The court from ordering the guardian to appear at the termination proceeding andgive testimony; or
Any interested person from calling the guardian as a witness in the terminationproceeding.
Any individual who has been appointed as a guardian, and is an interested person inhis or her individual capacity, and wants to participate in the termination proceeding in his or her individual capacity and not in his or her fiduciary capacity may do so without restriction or limitation. The payment of any fees and costs to that individual, related to his or her decision to participate in the termination proceeding, shall be governed by section 15-10-602 (7) and not by section 15-10-602 (1).
The court may remove a guardian pursuant to section 15-10-503 or permit the guardian to resign as set forth in section 15-14-112.
Issues of liability as between an estate and the estate's guardian individually may bedetermined:
In a proceeding pursuant to section 15-10-504;
In a proceeding for accounting, surcharge, indemnification, sanctions, or removal; or(c) In other appropriate proceedings.
(6) When a ward dies, all fees, costs, and expenses of the administration of the guardianship, including any unpaid guardian fees and costs and those of his or her counsel, may be submitted to the court for court approval in conjunction with the termination of the guardianship. Thereafter, all court-approved fees, costs, and expenses of administration arising from the guardianship shall be paid as court-approved claims for costs and expenses of administration in the decedent's estate. In the event that there are insufficient moneys to pay all claims in the decedent's estate in full, the fees, costs, and expenses of administration arising from the guardianship shall retain their classification as "costs and expenses of administration" in the decedent's estate and shall be paid pursuant to section 15-12-805.
Source: L. 2000: Entire part R&RE, p. 1801, § 1, effective January 1, 2001 (see § 15-17103). L. 2008: (4) amended and (5) added, p. 484, § 11, effective July 1. L. 2011: (3.5) and (6) added, (SB 11-083), ch. 101, p. 307, § 15, effective August 10. L. 2012: (3.5)(b) amended, (SB 12-175), ch. 208, p. 840, § 52, effective July 1.
Editor's note: This section is similar to former § 15-14-306 as it existed prior to 2001.