If an elderly person is appointed a guardian to manage their affairs, does this mean that they automatically lose their legal ability to make or change a will?
No! Under the Legal Capacity and Guardianship Act it is possible for someone who is unable to look after some or all of his/her affairs to have a guardian appointed by court to do so- without necessarily affecting his/her legal capacity. In other words,appointment of a guardian for an elderly person does not automatically mean that they lack legal capacity. In August 2007 Haifa Family Court emphasized this point when it rejected opposition to an application to probate a handwritten will made in 2001 by a 97 year old lady several weeks after a guardian had been appointed to manage her affairs. The testator , who was a childless widow with no family, was in the independent section of an old age home. She had requested the appointment of a guardian to minimize the role given to respondents , whom she had added as partners to her bank account, following an argument with them. In her previous will , made before witnesses in 1999, she had left her estate to the respondents. Rejecting opposition to the will, the court referred to binding Supreme Court precedent , and held that the evidence brought by the respondents had not proved that the testator lacked legal capacity to write a new will, although she had been appointed a guardian. It granted probate to the will, which was made in the testator's native language, German, and left all her property to the State of Israel.