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§ 15-2-5-314 — Colorado Law | CourtGPT
  1. Home/
  2. Laws/
  3. Colorado/
  4. Title 15 - Probate, Trusts, and Fiduciaries Fiduciary (§§ 15-1-101 — 15-1.5-122)/
  5. Powers of Appointment/
  6. Article 2.5 - Uniform Powers of Appointment Act Law Reviews: for Article, "Powers of Appointment Primer-/
  7. Part 3 - Exercise of Power of Appointment/
  8. § 15-2-5-314
Colorado Legal Code

§ 15-2-5-314

(1) A powerholder may revoke or amend an exercise of a power of appointment only to the extent that:(a) The powerholder reserves a power of revocation or amendment in the instrument exercising the power of appointment and, if the power is nongeneral, the terms of the instrument creating the power of appointment do not prohibit the reservation; or(b) The terms of the instrument creating the power of appointment provide that the exercise is revocable or amendable.Added by 2014 Ch. 209, § 1, eff. 7/1/2015.L. 2014: Entire article added, (HB 14-1353), ch. 209, p. 779, § 1, effective 7/1/2015.OFFICIAL COMMENTThis section recognizes that a powerholder lacks the authority to revoke or amend an exercise of the power of appointment, except to the extent (1) the powerholder reserved a power of revocation or amendment in the instrument exercising the power of appointment and the terms of the instrument creating the power of appointment do not effectively prohibit the reservation, or (2) the donor provided that the exercise is revocable or amendable.A powerholder who exercises a power of appointment is like any other transferor of property in regard to authority to revoke or amend the

he donor provided that the exercise is revocable or amendable.A powerholder who exercises a power of appointment is like any other transferor of property in regard to authority to revoke or amend the transfer. Hence, unless the powerholder (or the donor) in some appropriate manner manifests an intent that an appointment is revocable or amendable, the appointment is irrevocable.The ability of an agent or guardian to revoke or amend the exercise of a power of appointment on behalf of a principal or ward is determined by other law, such as the Uniform Power of Attorney Act or the Uniform Guardianship and Protective Proceedings Act.Other law of the state may permit the reformation of an otherwise irrevocable instrument. See, for example, Uniform Probate Code § 2-805; Uniform Trust Code § 415.The rule of this section is essentially consistent with, and this Comment draws on, Restatement Third of Property: Wills and Other Donative Transfers § 19.7 and the accompanying Commentary.
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