Wisconsin Code § 54.40

Guardian ad litem; appointment; duties; termination
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
(1) APPOINTMENT. The court shall appoint a guardian
ad litem when a petition for appointment of a guardian is brought
under s. 54.34 (1), when a petition for receipt and acceptance of a
foreign guardianship is brought under s. 54.34 (3), to review the
scope of a guardianship, to provide protective placement to an individual or order protective services under ch. 55, to review any
protective placement under s. 55.18, to terminate a protective
placement under s. 55.17, to expand an order of guardianship under s. 54.63, to review incompetency and terminate a guardianship under s. 54.64, to review the conduct of a guardian under s.
54.68, or at any other time that the court determines it is
necessary.
(2) QUALIFICATIONS. The guardian ad litem shall be an attorney admitted to practice in this state and in compliance with SCR
chapter 36. No one who is an interested person in a proceeding,
appears as counsel in a proceeding on behalf of any party, or is a
relative or representative of an interested person may be appointed guardian ad litem in that proceeding or in any other proceeding that involves the same proposed ward or ward.
(3) RESPONSIBILITIES. The guardian ad litem shall be an advocate for the best interests of the proposed ward or ward as to
guardianship, protective placement, and protective services. The
guardian ad litem shall function independently, in the same manner as an attorney for a party to the action, and shall consider, but
is not bound by, the wishes of the proposed ward or ward or the
positions of others as to the best interests of the proposed ward or
ward. The guardian ad litem has none of the rights or duties of a
guardian.
(4) GENERAL DUTIES. A guardian ad litem shall do all of the
following:
(a) Interview the proposed ward or ward and explain the contents of the petition, the applicable hearing procedure, the right to
counsel, and the right to request or continue a limited
guardianship.
(b) Advise the proposed ward or ward, both orally and in writing, of that person’s rights to be present at the hearing, to a jury
trial, to an appeal, to counsel, and to an independent medical or
psychological examination on the issue of competency, at county
expense if the person is indigent.
(c) Interview the proposed guardian, the proposed standby
guardian, if any, and any other person seeking appointment as
guardian and report to the court concerning the suitability of each
individual interviewed to serve as guardian and concerning the
statement under s. 54.15 (8).
(d) 1. Review any power of attorney for health care under ch.
155, any durable power of attorney under ch. 244 executed by the
proposed ward, and any other advance planning for financial and
health care decision making in which the proposed ward had
engaged.
2. Interview any agent appointed by the proposed ward under
any document specified in subd. 1.
3. Report to the court concerning whether or not the proposed ward’s advance planning is adequate to preclude the need
for guardianship.
(ds) Notify the guardian of the right to be present at and participate in the hearing, to present and cross-examine witnesses, to
receive a copy of any evaluation under s. 55.11 (1) (intro.) or (2),
and to secure and present a report on an independent evaluation
under s. 54.42 (3).
(e) Request that the court order additional medical, psychological, or other evaluation, if necessary.
(f) If applicable, inform the court and petitioner’s attorney or,
if none, the petitioner that the proposed ward or ward objects to a
finding of incompetency, the present or proposed placement, or
the recommendation of the guardian ad litem as to the proposed
ward’s or ward’s best interests or that the proposed ward’s or
ward’s position on these matters is ambiguous. If the guardian ad
litem recommends that the hearing be held in a place other than a
courtroom, the guardian ad litem shall provide the information
under this paragraph as soon as possible.
(g) If the proposed ward or ward requests representation by
counsel, inform the court and the petitioner or the petitioner’s
counsel, if any.
(h) Attend all court proceedings related to the guardianship.
(i) Present evidence concerning the best interests of the proposed ward or ward, if necessary.
(j) Report to the court on any matter that the court requests.
(5) COMMUNICATION TO A JURY. In jury trials under this
chapter or ch. 55, the court or guardian ad litem may tell the jury
that the guardian ad litem represents the best interests of the proposed ward or ward.
(6) TERMINATION AND EXTENSION OF APPOINTMENT. The
appointment of a guardian ad litem under sub. (1) terminates
upon the entry of the court’s final order or upon the termination
of any appeal in which the guardian ad litem participates, even if
counsel has been appointed for the proposed ward or ward. The
court may extend that appointment, or reappoint a guardian ad
litem whose appointment under this section has terminated, by an
order specifying the scope of responsibilities of the guardian ad
litem. At any time, the guardian ad litem, any party, or the individual for whom the appointment is made may request that the
court terminate any extension or reappointment. The guardian ad
litem may appeal or may participate in an appeal. If an appeal is
taken by any party and the guardian ad litem chooses not to participate in that appeal, he or she shall file with the appellate court
a statement of reasons for not participating. Irrespective of the
guardian ad litem’s decision not to participate in an appeal, the
appellate court may order the guardian ad litem to participate in
the appeal.

‹ Prev All Wisconsin sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.