Proposed ReformNot current law
Closest-relative transparency

Do you agree with this conservatorship filing? Why or why not?

The proposal requires each reasonably available closest relative to disclose a position and factual basis. It does not give relatives authority to decide whether a conservatorship is established.

Open printable concept form
Legal status:

This is a policy proposal and concept form. It is not represented as an existing Tennessee requirement or an approved court form.

Proposed rule

Before entry of a final conservatorship order, the record should disclose the position of each reasonably available closest relative.

Each relative should receive the petition, the rights requested for transfer, hearing notice, a standardized response form, instructions for submitting records, and notice that silence will not be treated as agreement.

Available positions

A simple yes-or-no answer is insufficient.

Support as requested

The relative agrees that the conservatorship and requested scope are necessary.

Support narrower relief

The relative believes assistance is necessary but the requested transfer of rights is excessive.

Support less restrictive alternatives

The relative supports assistance without a conservatorship or before a broader restriction is imposed.

Oppose the filing

The relative disputes the need, factual basis, requested scope, proposed fiduciary, or other material part of the petition.

Insufficient knowledge

The relative lacks current contact, records, or direct knowledge sufficient to form a responsible position.

Conflict disclosed

The relative identifies a financial, personal, litigation, caregiving, inheritance, or other conflict affecting the position.

Petitioner’s duty

Identify and serve.

  • Identify the closest relatives.
  • Serve the full petition and form.
  • File proof of service.
  • Disclose unsuccessful location efforts.
  • File every response without alteration.
  • Never characterize nonresponse as agreement.
Relative’s statement

Position and basis.

  • Frequency and date of contact.
  • Facts personally observed.
  • Information received from others.
  • Medical and financial records reviewed.
  • Rights that should remain or transfer.
  • Alternatives and conflicts.
Court’s duty

State what the record contains.

  • Relatives identified and served.
  • Responses received.
  • Positions and knowledge limits.
  • Contrary records identified.
  • Whether claimed consensus exists.
  • Whether narrower alternatives were presented.
Critical limitation

Relatives do not receive veto power.

A unanimous family can be wrong. A divided family does not automatically defeat necessary protection. The respondent’s rights, admissible evidence, applicable burden, and least restrictive alternative remain controlling.

The form’s purpose is transparency: it prevents one petitioner from implying that the entire family agrees and identifies relatives who possess contrary evidence, limited knowledge, or conflicts.

Emergency cases

Emergency action does not justify permanent silence.

A court must retain authority to act when a legally sufficient emergency exists. The relative-position process can follow promptly after emergency action and before permanent adjudication.

Required record label for silence: “No response received. Position unknown.”