Seniors experiencing a loss of autonomy
Steps to homologate a protection mandate
If a person close to you has appointed you as mandatary in their protection mandate and you'd like to get it homologated to exercise the powers conferred on you, here's an overview of what to do. The following presents the steps needed to homologate a protection mandate, which used to be called a "mandate in case of incapacity".
A notary can help
You can ask a notary to assist you with the homologation of your loved one's protection mandate. In addition to helping you with the process and completing some of the steps on your behalf, the notary can even replace the judge or the special clerk in several steps of the process.
1) Assessment by a doctor and a social worker
To begin the homologation of a protection mandate, a medical assessment report and a psychosocial assessment report must confirm that your loved one is incapable of taking care of himself or herself or of administering his or her property.
Contact the person's family doctor or social worker to obtain these assessment reports. If they don't have a doctor or a social worker, contact your local CISSS or CIUSSS for help.
2) Find the most recent protection mandate
Before homologating a protection mandate, the court will want to ensure that the mandate presented best reflects the person's wishes.
Therefore, judges usually require that you provide the person's most recent protection mandate.
To ensure that you have the most recent protection mandate, you can:
- Ask the person if they have prepared one before
- Request a search in the Register of Protection Mandates of the Chambre des notaires du Québec
- Request a search in the Register of Wills and Mandates of the Barreau du Québec
Searches conducted in these two registers take between two and three weeks.
3) Open a file at the courthouse
To open a file at the courthouse, you need to prepare a written application called an "Application for homologation" and file it at the courthouse.
You must also file all the documents needed to homologate a protection mandate, namely:
- The protection mandate (preferably the original document)
- The medical assessment report
- The psychosocial assessment report
In most cases, you also have to provide:
- An affadavit from one of the witnesses of the signing of the protection mandate
- A search certificate from the Register of Protection Mandates of the Chambre des notaires du Québec
- A search certificate from the Register of Wills and Mandates of the Barreau du Québec
- The person's act of birth
- A copy of the person's identification documents
4) Inform the people concerned
The application for homologation must be sent to specific people.
It must be sent with a document called "notice of presentation," specifying the date the application will be presented to the court, among other things. This date must be between 10 days and 2 months after the notice was sent.
You must “notify” the application and the notice to the following persons:
- The Public Curator
- Two people close to the senior who is the subject of the protection mandate
- The replacement mandatary, if any
- The persons designated to receive the rendering of account , if any
The application for homologation, the notice of presentation, and a notice informing the person who is the subject of the mandate of their rights must be served on that person. That means you must ask a bailiff to personally hand these documents to the person.
5) The court analyzes your application
If no one contests your application for homologation, you don't have to do anything else at this stage.
On the date indicated on your notice of presentation, a judge or a special clerk will take your file in charge and ensure that:
- the person is truly incapacitated
- The protection mandate is valid
- You have the capacity to exercise your role, and you’re not in a conflict of interest
- The person's wishes and preferences are respected as much as possible
To do so, the judge or special clerk will speak with the person and invite the people who received the application to present their observations. The judge or special clerk might also contact other people, such as the doctor or social worker who evaluated the person.
At this stage, a judge may take additional measures if he or she considers it necessary. For example, the judge might:
- order that documents be notified to other persons
- call a meeting of relatives, persons connected by marriage or a civil union, or friends
- require complementary opinions, reports or expert reports
6) The court renders its decision
After analyzing the application for homologation, the judge or special clerk will render a decision. He or she can either accept or refuse to homologate the protection mandate.
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ANG - L’information présente sur cette page ne constitue pas un avis ou un conseil juridique. Nous vous indiquons ce que dit la loi au Québec de manière générale. Pour obtenir un avis ou un conseil juridique concernant votre situation personnelle, consultez un professionnel du droit.