Legal Question in Wills and Trusts in Connecticut

power of attorney

what is the difference between '' power of attorney'' and ''general power of attorney'' ?


Asked on 5/22/05, 1:58 pm

1 Answer from Attorneys

John Heffernan Heffernan Legal Group, LLP

Re: power of attorney

A general POA lets the person to whom you gave the power (called your attorney-in-fact) act on your behalf in virtually all situations. A POA can also be for a limited purpose. For example, maybe you're selling your house, but you're going to be out of town. You might give a power of attorney to the lawyer to sign all the papers on your behalf and to deposit the check in your account, but for no other purpose. That's a limited or special POA. A common special power is a Health Care POA. There you give someone the poweer to make medical decisions for you.

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Answered on 5/23/05, 6:30 am


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