Matters
of probate include trusts, which are governed by Article 1 of Title 15
of the Colorado Revised Statutes, and powers of appointment, which are
governed by Article 2 of Title 15 of the Colorado Revised Statutes. Cases
relating to trusts can involve claims for improper investments, distributions
to beneficiaries and complex litigation involving trustees' duties and
obligations to trust beneficiaries. The Probate Court is called upon to
create trusts for protected persons or to make transfers to or from trusts
on behalf of persons unable to act for themselves due to disability.
The settlement of estates of deceased persons is governed by Articles
10 through 13 of Title 15 of the Colorado Revised Statutes. Probate
filings include informal administration of decedents' estates initiated
through the Court registrar. Informal probates frequently proceed through
closing with limited judicial involvement. Some estates are administered
in formal proceedings involving limited or extensive Court supervision.
The personal representative of a decedent's estate or any interested
person may request instructions from the Court or use the Court to resolve
conflict among parties. Each year numerous estates require litigation
to determine the validity of wills, the identity of the decedent's heirs,
paternity, common law or putative spouse claims, creditors' claims against
the decedent or the estate, disputes over payment and amount of the
fee payable to fiduciaries, attorneys, accountants, and the like. Many
of these conflicts are complex and involve multiple parties, lengthy
pre-trial and trial time, and can involve jury questions.
The appointment of guardians and conservators is governed by Article
14 of Title 15 of the Colorado Revised Statutes. A conservator is an
individual or institution appointed to supervise the financial affairs
of an impaired person. While most conservatorships involve adult protected
persons, some involve children, most often where a parent seeks to settle
a minor child's personal injury claim. Like many matters that fall under
the jurisdiction of the Probate Court, conservatorships require long-term
Court supervision. The Court may require regular accountings or other
types of reports. Frequently, the Court adds a layer of protection by
prohibiting withdrawals from the protected person's accounts or sale
of the protected person's property without Court approval.
Increasingly, the Probate Court confronts issues of physical or mental
disability and is called upon to appoint a guardian for individuals,
who, because of illness, accident, or other circumstances, have lost
the ability to make responsible decisions about their own living arrangements
and medical needs. As with protective proceedings, these cases can generate
family conflict and focus the Court's attention on the balance between
the desire for individual liberty and the best interests of a person
at risk.
Although the Probate Court no longer adjudicates persons as mentally
ill, the Court does review requests to terminate Certification for Treatment
by a mental health professional. Article 10 of Title 27 of the Colorado
Revised Statutes governs these and other related matters. Mental health
cases involve the short-term and long-term certification of persons
claimed to be so mentally ill as to represent a danger to themselves
or to others or who are found by the Court to be gravely disabled. While
certified, a mentally ill person may be treated, involuntarily if necessary,
at a state approved facility. The Respondent may be treated in a hospital
setting or as an outpatient. The Court may be called upon to determine
whether medications or electro-convulsive therapy should be administered
to a certified mentally ill person. In addition to reviewing the treatment
of mentally ill persons, the Court also considers requests to commit
persons for involuntary alcohol or drug treatment.