Wisconsin Code § 54.852

United States uniform veterans guardianship act
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(1) DEFINITIONS. As used in this section:
(a) “Administrator” means the secretary of the U.S. department of veterans affairs or his or her successor.
(b) “Benefits” means all moneys paid or payable by the
United States through the U.S. department of veterans affairs.
(c) “Estate” means income on hand and assets acquired partially or wholly with “income.”
(d) Notwithstanding s. 54.01 (10) , “guardian” means any
fiduciary for the person or estate of a ward.
(e) “Income” means moneys received from the U.S. department of veterans affairs and revenue or profit from any property
wholly or partially acquired therewith.
(f) “U.S. department of veterans affairs” means the U.S. department of veterans affairs, its predecessors or successors.
(g) Notwithstanding s. 54.01 (37), “ward” means an individual who receives benefits from the U.S. department of veterans
affairs.
(2) ADMINISTRATOR AS PARTY IN INTEREST. (a) The administrator shall be a party in interest in any proceeding for the appointment or removal of a guardian or for the removal of the disability of minority or mental incapacity of a ward, and in any suit
or other proceeding affecting in any manner the administration by
the guardian of the estate of any present or former ward whose estate includes assets derived in whole or in part from benefits
heretofore or hereafter paid by the U.S. department of veterans
affairs.
(b) Not less than 15 days prior to a hearing in a suit or proceeding described in par. (a), notice in writing of the time and
place of the hearing shall be given by mail, unless notice is
waived in writing, to the office of the U.S. department of veterans
affairs having jurisdiction over the area in which the suit or proceeding is pending.
(3) APPLICATION. Whenever, pursuant to any law of the
United States or regulation of the U.S. department of veterans affairs, it is necessary, prior to payment of benefits, that a guardian
be appointed, the appointment may be made in the manner hereinafter provided.
(4) LIMITATION ON NUMBER OF WARDS. No person or corporate entity other than a county having a population of 100,000 or
more or a bank or trust company shall be guardian of more than 5
wards at one time, unless all the wards are members of one family. A county shall act only for patients in its county hospital or
mental hospital and for residents of its county home or infirmary,
and shall serve without fee. Upon presentation of a petition by an
attorney of the U.S. department of veterans affairs or other interested person, alleging that a guardian is acting in a fiduciary capacity for more than 5 wards and requesting the guardian’s discharge for that reason, the court, upon proof substantiating the
petition, shall require a final accounting from the guardian and
shall discharge the guardian from guardianship in excess of 5 and
appoint a successor.
(5) APPOINTMENT OF GUARDIANS. (a) A petition for the appointment of a guardian may be filed by any relative or friend of
the ward or by any person who is authorized by law to file such a
petition. If there is no person so authorized or if the person so authorized refuses or fails to file such a petition within 30 days after
mailing of notice by the U.S. department of veterans affairs to the
last-known address of the person, if any, indicating the necessity
for the same, a petition for appointment may be filed by any resident of the state.
(b) The petition for appointment shall set forth the name, age,
place of residence of the ward, the name and place of residence of
the nearest relative, if known, and the fact that the ward is entitled
to receive benefits payable by or through the U.S. department of
veterans affairs and shall set forth the amount of moneys then due
and the amount of probable future payments.
(c) The petition shall also set forth the name and address of
the person or institution, if any, having actual custody of the ward
and the name, age, relationship, if any, occupation and address of
the proposed guardian and if the nominee is a natural person, the
number of wards for whom the nominee is presently acting as
guardian. Notwithstanding any law as to priority of persons entitled to appointment, or the nomination in the petition, the court
may appoint some other individual or a bank or trust company as
guardian, if the court determines it is for the best interest of the
ward.
(d) In the case of a mentally incompetent ward the petition
shall show that such ward has been rated incompetent by the U.S.
department of veterans affairs on examination in accordance with
the laws and regulations governing the U.S. department of veterans affairs.
(6) EVIDENCE OF NECESSITY FOR GUARDIAN OF INFANT.
Where a petition is filed for the appointment of a guardian for a
minor, a certificate of the administrator or the administrator’s authorized representative, setting forth the age of such minor as
shown by the records of the U.S. department of veterans affairs
and the fact that the appointment of a guardian is a condition
precedent to the payment of any moneys due the minor by the
U.S. department of veterans affairs shall be prima facie evidence
of the necessity for such appointment.
(7) EVIDENCE OF NECESSITY FOR GUARDIAN FOR INCOMPETENT. Where a petition is filed for the appointment of a guardian
for a mentally incompetent ward, a certificate of the administrator or the administrator’s duly authorized representative, that
such person has been rated incompetent by the U.S. department
of veterans affairs on examination in accordance with the laws
and regulations governing such U.S. department of veterans affairs and that the appointment of a guardian is a condition precedent to the payment of any moneys due such ward by the U.S. department of veterans affairs, shall be prima facie evidence of the
necessity for such appointment.
(8) NOTICE. Upon the filing of a petition for the appointment
of a guardian under this section, notice shall be given to the ward,
to such other persons, and in such manner as is provided by
statute, and also to the U.S. department of veterans affairs as provided by this section.
(9) BOND. (a) Upon the appointment of a guardian, the
guardian shall execute and file a bond to be approved by the court
in an amount not less than the estimated value of the personal es-

tate and anticipated income of the ward during the ensuing year.
The bond shall be in the form and be conditioned as required of
guardians appointed under the general guardianship law. The
court may from time to time require the guardian to file an additional bond.
(b) Where a bond is tendered by a guardian with personal
sureties, there shall be at least 2 such sureties and they shall file
with the court a certificate under oath which shall describe the
property owned, both real and personal, and shall state that each
is worth the sum named in the bond as the penalty thereof over
and above all the surety’s debts and liabilities and the aggregate
of other bonds on which the surety is principal or surety and exclusive of property exempt from execution. The court may require additional security or may require a corporate surety bond,
the premium thereon to be paid from the ward’s estate.
(10) PETITIONS AND ACCOUNTS, NOTICES AND HEARINGS. (a)
Every guardian shall file his or her accounts as required by this
chapter and shall be excused from filing accounts in the case as
provided by s. 54.66 (2).
(b) The guardian, at the time of filing any account, shall exhibit all securities or investments held by the guardian to an officer of the bank or other depository wherein said securities or investments are held for safekeeping or to an authorized representative of the corporation which is surety on the guardian’s bond, or
to the judge or clerk of a court of record, or, upon request of the
guardian or other interested party, to any other reputable person
designated by the court, who shall certify in writing that he or she
has examined the securities or investments and identified them
with those described in the account, and shall note any omissions
or discrepancies. If the depository is the guardian, the certifying
officer shall not be the officer verifying the account. The
guardian may exhibit the securities or investments to the judge of
the court, who shall endorse on the account and copy thereof a
certificate that the securities or investments shown therein as held
by the guardian were each in fact exhibited to the judge and that
those exhibited to the judge were the same as those shown in the
account, and noting any omission or discrepancy. That certificate
and the certificate of an official of the bank in which are deposited any funds for which the guardian is accountable, showing
the amount on deposit, shall be prepared and signed in duplicate
and one of each be filed by the guardian with the guardian’s
account.
(c) At the time of filing in the court any account, a certified
copy thereof shall be sent by the guardian to the office of the U.S.
department of veterans affairs having jurisdiction over the area in
which the court is located. A signed duplicate or a certified copy
of any petition, motion or other pleading pertaining to an account, or to any matter other than an account, and which is filed
in the guardianship proceedings or in any proceeding for the purpose of removing the disability of minority or mental incapacity,
shall be furnished by the person filing the same to the proper office of the U.S. department of veterans affairs. Unless waived in
writing, written notice of the time and place of any hearing shall
be given to the office of U.S. department of veterans affairs concerned and to the guardian and any others entitled to notice not
less than 15 days prior to the date fixed for the hearing. The notice may be given by mail in which event it shall be deposited in
the mails not less than 15 days prior to said date. The court, or
clerk thereof, shall mail to said office of the U.S. department of
veterans affairs a copy of each order entered in any guardianship
proceeding wherein the administrator is an interested party.
(d) If the guardian is accountable for property derived from
sources other than the U.S. department of veterans affairs, the
guardian shall be accountable as required under the applicable
law of this state pertaining to the property of minors or persons of
unsound mind who are not beneficiaries of the U.S. department
of veterans affairs, and as to such other property shall be entitled
to the compensation provided by such law. The account for other
property may be combined with the account filed in accordance
with this section.
(11) PENALTY FOR FAILURE TO ACCOUNT. If any guardian
shall fail to file with the court any account as required by this section, or by an order of the court, when any account is due or
within 30 days after citation issues as provided by law, or shall
fail to furnish the U.S. department of veterans affairs a true copy
of any account, petition or pleading as required by this section,
such failure may in the discretion of the court be ground for
removal.
(12) COMPENSATION OF GUARDIANS. Guardians shall be
compensated as provided in s. 54.72.
(13) INVESTMENTS. Every guardian shall invest the surplus
funds of the ward’s estate in such securities or property as authorized under the laws of this state but only upon prior order of the
court; except that the funds may be invested, without prior court
authorization, in direct unconditional interest-bearing obligations
of the United States and in obligations the interest and principal
of which are unconditionally guaranteed by the United States. A
signed duplicate or certified copy of the petition for authority to
invest shall be furnished the proper office of the U.S. department
of veterans affairs, and notice of hearing thereon shall be given
said office as provided in the case of hearing on a guardian’s
account.
(14) MAINTENANCE AND SUPPORT. A guardian shall not apply any portion of the income or the estate for the support or
maintenance of any person other than the ward, the spouse and
the minor children of the ward, except upon petition to and prior
order of the court after a hearing. A signed duplicate or certified
copy of said petition shall be furnished the proper office of the
U.S. department of veterans affairs and notice of hearing thereon
shall be given said office as provided in the case of hearing on a
guardian’s account or other pleading.
(15) PURCHASE OF HOME FOR WARD. (a) The court may authorize the purchase of the entire fee simple title to real estate in
this state in which the guardian has no interest, but only as a
home for the ward, or to protect the ward’s interest, or, if the ward
is not a minor as a home for the ward’s dependent family. Such
purchase of real estate shall not be made except upon the entry of
an order of the court after hearing upon verified petition. A copy
of the petition shall be furnished the proper office of the U.S. department of veterans affairs and notice of hearing thereon shall be
given said office as provided in the case of hearing on a
guardian’s account.
(b) Before authorizing such investment the court shall require
written evidence of value and of title and of the advisability of acquiring such real estate. Title shall be taken in the ward’s name.
This subsection does not limit the right of the guardian on behalf
of the guardian’s ward to bid and to become the purchaser of real
estate at a sale thereof pursuant to decree of foreclosure of lien
held by the ward, or at a trustee’s sale, to protect the ward’s right
in the property so foreclosed or sold; nor does it limit the right of
the guardian, if such be necessary to protect the ward’s interest
and upon prior order of the court in which the guardianship is
pending, to agree with cotenants of the ward for a partition in
kind, or to purchase from cotenants the entire undivided interests
held by them, or to bid and purchase the same at a sale under a
partition decree, or to compromise adverse claims of title to the
ward’s realty.
(16) COPIES OF PUBLIC RECORDS TO BE FURNISHED. When a
copy of any public record is required by the U.S. department of
veterans affairs to be used in determining the eligibility of any
person to participate in benefits made available by the U.S. de-

partment of veterans affairs, the official custodian of such public
record shall without charge provide the applicant for such benefits or any person acting on the applicant’s behalf or the authorized representative of the U.S. department of veterans affairs
with a certified copy of such record.
(17) DISCHARGE OF GUARDIAN AND RELEASE OF SURETIES.
In addition to any other provisions of law relating to judicial
restoration and discharge of guardian, a certificate by the U.S. department of veterans affairs showing that a minor ward has attained majority, or that an incompetent ward has been rated competent by the U.S. department of veterans affairs upon examination in accordance with law shall be prima facie evidence that the
ward has attained majority, or has recovered competency. Upon
hearing after notice as provided by this section and the determination by the court that the ward has attained majority or has recovered competency, an order shall be entered to that effect, and
the guardian shall file a final account. Upon hearing after notice
to the former ward and to the U.S. department of veterans affairs
as in case of other accounts, upon approval of the final account,
and upon delivery to the ward of the assets due from the guardian,
the guardian shall be discharged and the sureties released.
(18) LIBERAL CONSTRUCTION. This section shall be so construed to make uniform the law of those states which enact it.
(19) SHORT TITLE. This section may be cited as the “Uniform
Veterans Guardianship Act.”
(20) MODIFICATION OF OTHER STATUTES. Except where inconsistent with this section, the statutes relating to guardian and
ward and the judicial practice relating thereto, including the right
to trial by jury and the right of appeal, shall be applicable to beneficiaries and their estates.
(21) APPLICATION OF SECTION. The provisions of this section relating to surety bonds and the administration of estates of
wards shall apply to all “income” and “estate” as defined in sub.
(1) whether the guardian shall have been appointed under this
section or under any other law of this state, special or general,
prior or subsequent to June 5, 1947.

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