Opinion 92-1
Acting as administrator of estate (for deceased ward.)
January 8, 1992
Opinion 92-1
Dear Clerk:
You
wrote the Committee on Ethical Opinions on November
19, 1991; your letter requested an advisory opinion
on whether you could be grandfathered under the provisions
of Canon 5(d)(2 to act in the capacity as Administrator
of the estate of , a person for whom you had been guardian.
In general, Canon
5 (D ) restricts the fiduciary activities of those covered by the Code to fiduciary
duties undertaken for those with whom a Clerk-Magistrate has a familial relationship
as defined by the Code. Canon 5 (D )(2 ) allows a Clerk-Magistrate to serve as
a fiduciary for a person who is not a member of his family "provided that the
Clerk-Magistrate wasacting in the fiduciary position prior to April 1, 1990,
or that, in the case of a will designating the testator or testatrix died prior
to April 1, 1990. . . . [emphasis added].
Although
your service as guardian was permitted under Canon
5(D)(2)'s grandfather clause, as we had previously
advised you, we do not believe that service as an administrator
constitutes a mere continuation of a guardianship.
This conclusion is strengthened by the fact that normally
an administrator reviews the account of a guardian.
It is therefore the Committee's opinion that Canon
5(D)(2) prohibits you from serving as administrator
in this instance.