Montana Code Annotated 2017

TITLE 72. ESTATES, TRUSTS, AND FIDUCIARY RELATIONSHIPS

CHAPTER 3. UPC -- PROBATE AND ADMINISTRATION

Part 1. General Provisions

Acknowledgment Of Fiduciary Relationship And Obligations -- Personal Representative, Guardian, Or Conservator

72-3-109. Acknowledgment of fiduciary relationship and obligations -- personal representative, guardian, or conservator. (1) Every applicant for appointment as the personal representative of a decedent's estate, as a guardian, or as a conservator shall sign and verify before a notary public or under penalty of perjury the following statement:

"By signing, accepting, or acting under this appointment, I acknowledge that I will assume the duties and responsibilities of a fiduciary and that I must work exclusively for the benefit of the decedent's estate and its beneficiaries, the ward under any guardianship, or the protected person under any conservatorship. I also acknowledge that the primary duty of a personal representative, guardian, or conservator is the duty of loyalty to and protection of the best interests of the estate, ward, or protected person. Therefore, I acknowledge that:

I may not use any of the property or other assets of the decedent's estate, ward, or protected person for my own personal benefit;

I must direct any benefit derived from this appointment to the decedent's estate, ward, or protected person; and

I must avoid conflicts of interest and must use ordinary skill and prudence in carrying out the duties of this appointment."

(2) The statement in subsection (1) must be sworn before a notary public or executed under penalty of perjury in the following format:

"I declare under penalty of perjury under the laws of the state of Montana that the foregoing is true and correct.

Signed this ... day of ............., 20....

............................

Signature of applicant"

(3) This section applies to all applications for appointment as a personal representative or as a special administrator under Title 72, chapter 3, parts 2, 3, 4, and 7.

History: En. Sec. 8, Ch. 238, L. 2011.