By: Hartnett (Senate Sponsor - Harris) H.B. No. 230
(In the Senate - Received from the House March 29, 2005;
March 30, 2005, read first time and referred to Committee on
Jurisprudence; May 5, 2005, reported favorably by the following
vote: Yeas 7, Nays 0; May 5, 2005, sent to printer.)
A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
AN ACT
relating to grounds for removal of a guardian.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
SECTION 1. Sections 761(a) and (c), Texas Probate Code, are
amended to read as follows:
(a) The court, on its own motion or on motion of any
interested person, including the ward, and without notice, may
remove any guardian, appointed under this chapter, who:
(1) neglects to qualify in the manner and time
required by law;
(2) fails to return within 90 days after
qualification, unless the time is extended by order of the court, an
inventory of the property of the guardianship estate and list of
claims that have come to the guardian's knowledge;
(3) having been required to give a new bond, fails to
do so within the time prescribed;
(4) absents himself from the state for a period of
three months at one time without permission of the court, or removes
from the state;
(5) cannot be served with notices or other processes
because of the fact that:
(A) the guardian's whereabouts are unknown;
(B) the guardian is eluding service; or
(C) the guardian is a nonresident of this state
who does not have a resident agent to accept service of process in
any guardianship proceeding or other matter relating to the
guardianship;
(6) has misapplied, embezzled, or removed from the
state, or is about to misapply, embezzle, or remove from the state,
all or any part of the property committed to the guardian's care;
[or]
(7) has neglected or cruelly treated a ward; [,] or
(8) has neglected to educate or maintain the ward as
liberally as the means of the ward and the condition of the ward's
estate permit.
(c) The court may remove a guardian on its own motion, or on
the complaint of an interested person, after the guardian has been
cited by personal service to answer at a time and place set in the
notice, when:
(1) sufficient grounds appear to support belief that
the guardian has misapplied, embezzled, or removed from the state,
or that the guardian is about to misapply, embezzle, or remove from
the state, all or any part of the property committed to the care of
the guardian;
(2) the guardian fails to return any account or report
that is required by law to be made;
(3) the guardian fails to obey any proper order of the
court having jurisdiction with respect to the performance of the
guardian's duties;
(4) the guardian is proved to have been guilty of gross
misconduct or mismanagement in the performance of the duties of the
guardian;
(5) the guardian becomes incapacitated, or is
sentenced to the penitentiary, or from any other cause becomes
incapable of properly performing the duties of the guardian's
trust;
(6) [as guardian of the person,] the guardian neglects
or cruelly treats the ward;
(6-a) the guardian [, or] neglects to educate or
maintain the ward as liberally as the means of the ward's estate and
the ward's ability or condition permit;
(7) the guardian interferes with the ward's progress
or participation in programs in the community;
(8) the guardian fails to comply with the requirements
of Section 697 of this code; or
(9) the court determines that, because of the
dissolution of the joint guardians' marriage, the termination of
the guardians' joint appointment and the continuation of only one
of the joint guardians as the sole guardian is in the best interest
of the ward.
SECTION 2. The changes in law made by this Act to Sections
761(a) and (c), Texas Probate Code, apply only to a motion for the
removal of a guardian made or filed on or after the effective date
of this Act. A motion for the removal of a guardian made or filed
before the effective date of this Act is governed by the law in
effect on the date the motion was made or filed, and the former law
is continued in effect for that purpose.
SECTION 3. This Act takes effect September 1, 2005.
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