Colorado Code § 15-14-411

Required court approval
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(1) After notice to interested persons and upon
express authorization of the court, a conservator may:
(a) Make gifts, except as otherwise provided in section 15-14-427 (2);
(b) Convey, release, or disclaim contingent and expectant interests in property, including
marital property rights and any right of survivorship incident to joint tenancy or tenancy by the
entireties;
(c) Exercise or release a power of appointment;
(d) Create a revocable or irrevocable trust of property of the estate, whether or not the
trust extends beyond the duration of the conservatorship, or revoke or amend a trust revocable by
the protected person;
(e) Exercise rights to elect options and change beneficiaries under retirement plans,
insurance policies, and annuities or surrender the plans, policies, and annuities for their cash
value;
(f) Exercise any right to an elective share in the estate of the protected person's deceased
spouse and to renounce or disclaim any interest by testate or intestate succession or by transfer
inter vivos; and
(g) Make, amend, or revoke the protected person's will.
(2) A conservator, in making, amending, or revoking the protected person's will, shall
comply with section 15-11-502 or 15-11-507.
(3) The court, in exercising or in approving a conservator's exercise of the powers listed
in subsection (1) of this section, shall consider primarily the decision that the protected person
would have made, to the extent that the decision can be ascertained. To the extent the decision
cannot be ascertained, the court shall consider the best interest of the protected person. The court
shall also consider:
(a) The financial needs of the protected person and the needs of individuals who are in
fact dependent on the protected person for support and the interest of creditors;
(b) Possible reduction of income, estate, inheritance, or other tax liabilities;
(c) Eligibility for governmental assistance;
(d) The protected person's previous pattern of giving or level of support;
(e) The existing estate plan;
(f) The protected person's life expectancy and the probability that the conservatorship
will terminate before the protected person's death; and
(g) Any other factors the court considers relevant, including the best interest of the
protected person.

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