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Bill > A962


NJ A962

NJ A962
Allows complaint for guardianship of minor to be filed six months before minor reaches age 18 under certain circumstances; establishes certain standards for filing guardianship complaints.


summary

Introduced
01/13/2026
In Committee
01/13/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
01/13/2026
Dead
Signed/Enacted/Adopted
01/13/2026

Introduced Session

2026-2027 Regular Session

Bill Summary

This bill allows a complaint for guardianship of a minor who is anticipated to require a guardian upon attaining the age of 18 to be filed six months before the minor attains the age of 18. The bill also establishes certain standards for filing guardianship complaints in general. Under current law, once a child reaches age 18, a parent or other appropriate person may file a complaint for guardianship. However, if proceedings are delayed and a guardian is not yet appointed, the young person is left without the legal protection of a parent, other appropriate person, or appointed guardian, until such time as the guardian is actually appointed. Allowing guardianship proceedings to be initiated in advance will help avoid potential administrative or procedural delays and ensure a seamless transition as the minor turns age 18. Under the bill, an order of guardianship entered before a minor is 18 would not take effect until the day the minor turns 18. The bill additionally specifies that a complaint for adjudication of incapacity and appointment of a guardian shall not be withdrawn absent a showing that the alleged incapacitated person is deceased or has capacity. The showing of capacity does not require medical evidence but may, in the court's discretion, be satisfied by testimony of a witness with knowledge of the alleged incapacitated person's condition and circumstances.

AI Summary

This bill allows a complaint for guardianship, which is a legal process to appoint someone to manage the affairs of a person deemed unable to do so themselves, to be filed up to six months before a minor turns 18, provided it's anticipated they will need a guardian upon reaching adulthood. This change aims to prevent delays and ensure a smooth transition of legal protection for young adults. The bill also establishes that any guardianship order granted before a minor's 18th birthday will only become effective on that birthday. Furthermore, it specifies that a complaint seeking to declare someone incapacitated and appoint a guardian cannot be withdrawn unless it's proven the person is deceased or has regained capacity, with capacity being demonstrable through witness testimony rather than solely medical evidence.

Committee Categories

Justice

Sponsors (7)

Last Action

Withdrawn Because Approved P.L.2025, c.179. (on 01/13/2026)

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