Probate Q&A Series

What remedies are available if I suspect financial exploitation by a trustee or agent under power of attorney? – North Carolina

Short Answer

In North Carolina, you can move fast in the Clerk of Superior Court to compel an accounting, suspend or remove a trustee or an agent under a power of attorney, and secure interim orders to protect assets. If you want money damages for breach of fiduciary duty, you must file a separate civil action in Superior Court. Courts can also appoint a special fiduciary, void improper transfers, and impose liens or constructive trusts to recover assets.

Understanding the Problem

You are asking whether, in North Carolina, you can force your sibling (who is both the trustee and your parent’s agent under a power of attorney) to account and face consequences for suspected misuse of funds. Here, the trustee has not complied with prior requests for trust documents and an accounting.

Apply the Law

North Carolina law gives the Clerk of Superior Court original authority over many trust administration issues and specific power-of-attorney proceedings. Beneficiaries and other interested persons can petition the Clerk to compel accountings, limit or suspend authority, remove fiduciaries, and order safeguards. Claims for monetary damages for breach of fiduciary duty must be brought as a civil action in Superior Court, and the two matters can be coordinated or consolidated when appropriate.

Key Requirements

  • Standing: A beneficiary or other interested person may petition to compel a trustee or agent to account and to seek protective orders.
  • Correct forum: File trust administration relief (e.g., removal, accounting, fee review) with the Clerk of Superior Court; file claims for monetary damages in Superior Court.
  • Trigger for relief: A reasonable concern of breach (e.g., refusal to provide information, self-dealing, unexplained transfers) supports requests for accountings and protective orders.
  • Available remedies: Accounting, suspension or removal, appointment of a special fiduciary, reduction of compensation, voiding acts, liens/constructive trusts, and other orders to protect assets.
  • Venue and timing: Trust venue generally where administered or a beneficiary resides; power-of-attorney venue where the principal or agent lives or where the principal’s property is located. Emergency relief is available when needed; deadlines for damages claims vary by issue.

What the Statutes Say

Analysis

Apply the Rule to the Facts: Because the trustee ignored prior demands, you have standing as an interested person to petition the Clerk to compel a trustee accounting and to seek suspension or removal if the facts show breach or persistent failure to administer properly. As your parent’s agent under a power of attorney, your sibling can be ordered to account and can be suspended or removed if misuse is shown. If losses occurred, you would add a separate Superior Court lawsuit for money damages and recovery.

Process & Timing

  1. Who files: Beneficiary or other interested person. Where: Clerk of Superior Court in the county where the trust is administered or a beneficiary resides (trust), or where the principal resides, the agent resides, or the principal’s property is located (power of attorney). What: Verified petition(s) to compel accounting, for suspension/removal, appointment of a special fiduciary, and other protective relief; if seeking damages, a separate civil complaint in Superior Court. When: File immediately if assets are at risk; emergency orders (including temporary restraints) can be requested.
  2. After filing, the Clerk sets a hearing. The Clerk can order an accounting by a date certain, require supporting records, and enter interim protections (e.g., suspension, special fiduciary). Timelines vary by county and docket.
  3. Final relief may include removal of the trustee/agent, appointment of a successor or special fiduciary, fee adjustments, and orders to unwind or trace transactions. Any damages claim proceeds in Superior Court, which can be coordinated or consolidated with the trust/POA proceeding.

Exceptions & Pitfalls

  • The Clerk cannot award money damages for breach of fiduciary duty; damages claims must be filed in Superior Court. Consider consolidating related matters to avoid conflicting orders.
  • Even if a trust document purports to waive reports, trustees still owe core duties of good faith and to provide sufficient information for beneficiaries to protect their interests. Do not accept a blanket refusal to account.
  • For power-of-attorney issues, the Clerk can compel accountings and limit or suspend authority; claims seeking damages against the agent must go to Superior Court.
  • Banks that deal in good faith with a trustee or agent are often protected; do not rely on informal bank complaints alone. Seek a court order if you need accounts frozen or records produced.
  • If the principal lacks capacity or is being neglected, a guardianship proceeding can also limit or revoke the agent’s authority and provide oversight for finances.

Conclusion

In North Carolina, you can ask the Clerk of Superior Court to compel accountings, suspend or remove a trustee or an agent under a power of attorney, and put immediate protections in place. If you also need money damages for breach of fiduciary duty, file a separate civil action in Superior Court. Next step: file a verified petition with the Clerk to compel an accounting and request interim protective relief to safeguard your parent’s assets.

Talk to a Probate Attorney

If you’re dealing with suspected financial exploitation by a trustee or power-of-attorney agent, our firm has experienced attorneys who can help you understand your options and timelines. Call us today at 919-341-7055.

Disclaimer: This article provides general information about North Carolina law based on the single question stated above. It is not legal advice for your specific situation and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Laws, procedures, and local practice can change and may vary by county. If you have a deadline, act promptly and speak with a licensed North Carolina attorney.