Guardianship is a court-supervised relationship where one person (the guardian) is given legal authority to make decisions for another person (the protected person) who cannot make those decisions themselves. It’s a significant legal step, one the courts don’t grant lightly, and one that often comes at difficult moments in a family’s life.
Ford Law represents families seeking, contesting, or administering guardianships in Clark County for minor children, incapacitated adults, aging parents, and individuals with special needs.
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Guardianship is a court-supervised relationship where one person (the guardian) is given legal authority to make decisions for another person (the protected person) who cannot make those decisions themselves. It’s a significant legal step, one the courts don’t grant lightly, and one that often comes at difficult moments in a family’s life.
Ford Law represents families seeking, contesting, or administering guardianships in Clark County for minor children, incapacitated adults, aging parents, and individuals with special needs.
Nevada recognizes several distinct guardianship categories, governed by NRS Chapter 159 (adults) and NRS Chapter 159A (minors):
Guardianship of a minor. Legal authority over a child when parents are unable, unfit, or unavailable. Commonly sought by grandparents, aunts, uncles, or close family friends.
Guardianship of an adult (general). Authority to manage the person and/or estate of an adult who has been found incapacitated.
Guardianship of an adult with limited capacity. Narrower authority is limited to specific decisions and is often preferred when the protected person retains capacity in some domains.
Special guardianship for individuals with intellectual disabilities. A distinct framework for adults whose incapacity stems from intellectual or developmental disability.
Guardian of the person. Authority over personal and medical decisions.
Guardian of the estate. Authority over financial and property matters.
General guardian. Authority over both person and estate.
Courts often distinguish between these to preserve the protected person’s autonomy where possible.
Most minor guardianships arise when biological parents are:
Common guardianship petitioners are grandparents raising grandchildren, a family member stepping in after a crisis, or an adult caring for a child whose parents are absent.
Minor guardianship does not terminate parental rights; it suspends them. Parents retain the legal relationship but lose custodial authority during the guardianship. If circumstances change, parents can petition to terminate the guardianship and resume custody.
Expedited procedures exist in Nevada for certain situations, for example, where immediate placement is needed due to parental incarceration, hospitalization, or death.
Adult guardianship is often the most emotionally difficult area of our practice. Families typically arrive at this point after months of watching a parent, spouse, or loved one lose the ability to manage their own affairs due to dementia, stroke, brain injury, or degenerative illness.
Before seeking guardianship, we always evaluate less restrictive alternatives:
Guardianship is appropriate only when these less restrictive alternatives cannot address the need.
The process involves:
Guardianship is not a one-time appointment. Guardians in Nevada are fiduciaries, accountable to the court for their management of the protected person’s affairs. Ongoing responsibilities include:
Failure to comply with these requirements can result in removal and, in extreme cases, personal liability.
Advocate in contested matters. When guardianship is disputed, we prepare for evidentiary hearings with the same rigor we’d apply to any contested family law trial.
Uncontested guardianships can be completed in 60–120 days. Contested matters or those involving complex estate issues can extend substantially longer.
Generally, yes. Nevada requires the presence of the proposed protected person at the hearing absent exceptional circumstances (confirmed by physician’s affidavit).
Often the protected person’s estate pays, subject to court approval. When the estate is limited or the petition is denied, costs typically fall to the petitioner.
Yes. Minor guardianships terminate when the child reaches majority or when a parent successfully petitions for termination. Adult guardianships can be modified or terminated when capacity is restored or circumstances change.
Nevada uses “guardianship” for both person and estate; California and some other states use “conservatorship.” The concepts are largely analogous.
If the person still has the capacity to execute one, yes, and it’s usually preferable. A validly executed power of attorney can often avoid the need for guardianship altogether.
Whether you’re considering guardianship for an aging parent, a minor child in your care, or a family member facing incapacity, we’ll help you understand what guardianship does and whether a less restrictive option might serve better.
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