Most websites treat a Power of Attorney as a form to be printed. At Morgan Legal Group, we treat it as a fiduciary instrument — one that creates binding legal obligations on the agent and meaningful risks for the principal if those obligations are not clearly defined, enforced, and documented.
Attorney Russel Morgan, Esq. has focused his New York practice on the full legal lifecycle of the POA: drafting that conforms to GOL §5-1513, counseling agents on their duties, and protecting principals when those duties are breached. Our clients span every region of the state — New York City, Long Island, Westchester, the Hudson Valley, and Upstate New York.
What Sets a Fiduciary-Grade Approach Apart
A conforming NY POA does more than satisfy a bank’s safe-harbor review. It structures authority so that the agent understands — in unambiguous terms — what they may do, what they must record, and what exposes them to personal liability.
The 2021 Reforms Changed the Standard
The amendments to GOL §5-1513 that took effect June 13, 2021 rewrote the execution and gift-authority requirements. Key practical changes include:
| Issue | Pre-2021 | Post-2021 (Current) |
|---|---|---|
| Exact statutory wording | Required verbatim | Substantial conformance sufficient |
| Third-party safe harbor | Inconsistently applied | Codified — banks must honor a conforming POA |
| Gift authority vehicle | Separate Statutory Gifts Rider | Incorporated into Modifications section |
| Gifts to agent | Rarely explicit | Must be expressly granted in Modifications |
| Witness requirement | One witness in some forms | Two disinterested witnesses (notary may serve as one) |
The notary must acknowledge the principal’s signature in the same manner required for a real-property conveyance — a higher standard than a simple acknowledgment. Neither witness may be the named agent or a permissible gift recipient.
What We Draft — and What We Distinguish
New York offers several distinct instruments, and confusing them is one of the most common — and costly — mistakes.
- Durable POA — Takes effect immediately upon signing; survives the principal’s subsequent incapacity unless the document expressly provides otherwise. This is the default under GOL §5-1513 and the right choice for most estate plans.
- Springing POA — Becomes effective only on a stated future event (typically certified incapacity). Operationally harder because the triggering condition must be proven to every third party before they will act on it.
- Statutory Short Form POA — The §5-1513 template itself. Substantial conformance — not exact replication — is now the standard. See our NY POA Law Guide for a line-by-line breakdown.
- Health Care Proxy — A separate legal document for medical decisions. A financial POA under GOL §5-1513 does not cover health care decisions; conflating them leaves a dangerous gap in any incapacity plan.
The Gift Authority Rule Every Agent Must Know
Under the current statute, an agent may make gifts of up to $5,000 in the aggregate per calendar year without any special grant. Gifts above that threshold — or any gift to the agent personally — require an express written grant in the Modifications section of the POA. The old Statutory Gifts Rider no longer exists.
Agents who make unauthorized gifts face personal liability for breach of fiduciary duty. We counsel agents on recordkeeping practices that document every transaction, protect them professionally, and protect the principal’s estate.
Revoking a POA or Responding to Abuse
A POA can be revoked in writing at any time while the principal has capacity. Revocation must be communicated to the agent and any third parties already relying on the document. If you suspect an agent has exceeded authority or misappropriated assets, New York’s Adult Protective Services and the courts provide enforcement mechanisms — and early legal intervention is critical. Contact us to discuss your situation.
Schedule a Consultation
Russel Morgan, Esq. offers direct consultations for principals drafting a POA, agents seeking guidance on their fiduciary duties, and families concerned about POA misuse across all of New York State.
Book a 30-Minute Consultation →
Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: power of attorney in New York.