Archives for January 2018

New Power of Attorney Law in Effect

Clients in need of a new power of attorney for estate planning purposes, or for real estate transactions, should be aware that their lawyers will need to comply with a new law that became effective on January 1, 2018.

As Janice Davies, an attorney at Davies Law PLLC in Charlotte wrote in a recent article published online by Lawyers Mutual,

“The North Carolina Uniform Power of Attorney Act is effective January 1, 2018. Governor Cooper signed Senate Bill 569, “An Act to Adopt the Uniform Power of Attorney Act in this State,” into law as Session Law 2017-153 on July 20, 2017. Session Law 2017-153 has no effect on health care powers of attorney and consents to health care for minors in Articles 3 and 4 of Chapter 32A of the North Carolina General Statutes. Chapter 32A is repealed by Session Law 2017-153 except for Articles 3 and 4 of Chapter 32A.

“A power of attorney is a common form of surrogate decision making that requires familiarity with agency law and the [new] Act . . . Chapter 32C of the North Carolina General Statutes is the new North Carolina Uniform Power of Attorney Act. There is a new “North Carolina Statutory Short Form Power of Attorney” in Chapter 32C effective on or after January 1, 2018. . . . North Carolina powers of attorney must be executed in accordance with Chapter 32C on or after January 1, 2018. . . .

“Powers of attorney executed before January 1, 2018 that are valid under Chapter 32A are still valid on or after January 1, 2018. However, the statutory short form general power of attorney in G.S. 32A-1 should not be executed on or after January 1, 2018. Chapter 32C does retain the powers conferred in G.S. 32A-2 for the former statutory short form set out in G.S. 32A-1 for application of the description of those powers to those statutory short forms executed before January 1, 2018.”

See the entire article at http://www.lawyersmutualnc.com/risk-management-resources/articles/are-you-aware-of-the-new-north-carolina-power-of-attorney-statute-effective-january-1-2018?

Ellinger Carr lawyers are keeping up with changes in the laws affecting our clients’ legal matters, and we can assist clients with a power of attorney (POA) suitable to their specific needs, including a new short-form POA, and a new limited POA for real estate transactions. Other changes in the new Act include automatic durability of POAs under the new form, and provide for the ability to appoint a guardian in the POA document if the principal becomes incompetent in the future.

Ellinger Carr is a business law and commercial real estate law firm based in Raleigh, North Carolina. Ellinger Carr lawyers are experienced and knowledgeable counselors, transaction leaders, and business problem solvers, admitted to practice in North Carolina, South Carolina, Florida, Louisiana, Virginia and New York. For assistance in commercial real estate, corporate law and business development matters, please call 919-785-9998 or email Susan Ellinger at sellinger@ellingercarr.com, Steven Carr at scarr@ellingercarr.com, Heather McDowell at hmcdowell@ellingercarr.com, and Sarah Goodin at sgoodin@ellingercarr.com.

Ellinger & Carr PLLC

Good fences don’t always make good neighbors

Although Robert Frost’s neighbor insists in the poem, Mending Wall, that “Good fences make good neighbors,” fences don’t always prevent boundary disputes and protracted litigation between neighbors, as the parties learned in a recent North Carolina Court of Appeals decision handed down on January 2, 2018. And even good surveys don’t always prevent or resolve boundary disputes.

In Parker v. DeSherbinin, Case Number COA 17-377-2 the Court determined that one of the neighbors laying claim to a disputed area on both sides of a chain link fence separating the properties may be entitled to the disputed area on the basis of adverse possession and the doctrine of “lappage” if the claimant can show that a metes-and-bounds description and incorporated reference in the survey contained in his deed can be located on the ground sufficient to establish possession of color of title to the disputed area.

In this case, the claimant was a prior owner who acquired his property a number of years before the neighbors came along. Claimant, Mr. Parker, acquired his property and recorded a deed in 1984, and his property was described in a 1982 survey which was referenced in the deed. In 2013, the neighbors acquired the adjacent vacant lot and hired a surveyor to prepare a plat to submit with their plan to build a residence. The new survey made no reference to the 1982 survey and established a boundary between their property and Mr. Parker’s property approximately 5 feet south of the line established in Mr. Parker’s 1982 survey.

A chain link fence was shown on the 2013 survey. The fence was installed by Mr. Parker, to the north of the boundary line between the parties’ properties and within the disputed area. After attempts to resolve the dispute informally, a complaint by Mr. Parker objecting to his new neighbors’ building permit, and after at least two more surveys were performed and prepared, the litigation ensued and the case was ultimately tried in New Hanover County in 2016, and then appealed to the Court of Appeals, which reheard the case after a prior opinion issued in October of 2017, to seek to establish the true boundary line and to resolve the dispute.

And the case isn’t over yet. The Court of Appeals remanded the matter to the trial court and ordered one of the four surveyors already employed by the parties to do another survey and to physically locate, fit and describe the location of the chain link fence in the disputed area in order to quiet title once and for all.

Ellinger Carr lawyers handle commercial real estate transactions, sometimes involving boundary disputes, chain link fences and other types of fences, and many other legal issues arising in real estate transactions, including legal descriptions, leases and lease negotiations, conditions, covenants and restrictions, title, title insurance and survey matters.

Ellinger Carr is a business law and commercial real estate law firm based in Raleigh, North Carolina. Ellinger Carr lawyers are experienced and knowledgeable counselors, transaction leaders, and business problem solvers, admitted to practice in North Carolina, South Carolina, Florida, Louisiana, Virginia and New York. For assistance in commercial real estate, corporate law and business development matters, please call 919-785-9998 or email Susan Ellinger at sellinger@ellingercarr.com, Steven Carr at scarr@ellingercarr.com, Heather McDowell at hmcdowell@ellingercarr.com, and Sarah Goodin at sgoodin@ellingercarr.com.