Welsh & McGough, PLLC

Welsh & McGough, PLLC  ·  2727 E 21st St #600, Tulsa, OK 74114

Tulsa Guardianship Attorneys

Tulsa Guardianship Attorney, Welsh & McGough, PLLC

Protective Oklahoma guardianship and conservatorship counsel. Adult guardianship, minor guardianship, limited and full guardianship, and conservatorship of the estate handled with care for Tulsa families.

TL;DR

Welsh & McGough helps Tulsa families establish, contest, and administer guardianships and conservatorships under Oklahoma law.

  • Adult and minor guardianship
  • Limited and full guardianship
  • Conservatorship of the estate
  • Guardianship disputes and modifications
  • Free initial consultation

Tulsa’s Trusted Guardianship Law Firm

Guardianship is the legal procedure by which an Oklahoma court appoints one person to make personal, medical, or financial decisions on behalf of another person who is unable to make those decisions safely. It is one of the most significant orders an Oklahoma court can enter, because it transfers fundamental legal rights from the protected person to the guardian. For that reason, Oklahoma guardianship law requires careful procedure, clear evidence, and ongoing court supervision throughout the life of the guardianship.

Welsh & McGough, PLLC has represented Tulsa families in Oklahoma guardianship matters since 1994. Our guardianship practice covers the full range of cases recognised under Oklahoma law. We help families establish guardianships for incapacitated adults, minor children, and adults with disabilities. We represent proposed wards who object to a petition. We modify, terminate, and defend existing guardianships. And we advise guardians on the practical demands of their fiduciary role.

Oklahoma guardianship is governed primarily by Title 30 of the Oklahoma Statutes, the Oklahoma Guardianship and Conservatorship Act. Tulsa County District Court hears guardianship cases under careful procedural rules that require sworn petitions, notice to the proposed ward and family members, court-appointed counsel for the proposed ward when warranted, evidentiary hearings, and detailed orders. Welsh & McGough attorneys know these rules, prepare the right pleadings and evidence, and present cases that judges can rule on confidently.

A guardianship is not always the right answer. Less restrictive alternatives, including powers of attorney, advance directives, supported decision-making arrangements, and trusts, can sometimes solve the underlying problem without the loss of legal rights that guardianship involves. Our attorneys help families evaluate the alternatives at the outset and choose the most protective option that still respects the autonomy of the person at the centre of the case.

A Guardianship Firm That Treats Every Case With the Care It Deserves

01
Three Decades of Oklahoma Guardianship Experience

We have handled Oklahoma guardianships of every kind since 1994, including the contested cases that less experienced firms struggle with.

02
Less Restrictive Alternatives First

Guardianship transfers fundamental rights. We always ask whether a less restrictive alternative could meet the family’s needs before recommending a guardianship petition.

03
Sensitive to the Family Dynamics

Guardianship cases are personal. We handle every case with the discretion, patience, and respect the situation demands.

04
Litigators When Cases Are Contested

Some guardianships are disputed. When a family member contests the petition or the appointment, we have the trial experience to protect our client’s position.

05
Ongoing Support for Guardians

The job does not end with the appointment. We advise guardians on their fiduciary duties, prepare required reports and accountings, and seek court approval for major decisions when required.

06
Free Initial Consultation

Every new guardianship matter begins with a free consultation. We explain the procedure, the alternatives, the timeline, and the cost before you decide to proceed.

How Welsh & McGough Handles Your Guardianship Matter

01
Free Consultation

We meet, understand the situation, and identify whether a guardianship petition is the right step or whether a less restrictive alternative will fit.

02
Petition and Evidence

We prepare the petition, the supporting affidavits, and the medical and other evidence Oklahoma law requires for the court to act.

03
Notice and Hearing

We provide statutory notice to the proposed ward and family members, work with any court-appointed counsel for the ward, and present the case at hearing.

04
Order and Letters

We obtain the order of appointment and the letters of guardianship, and we make sure the order includes the right scope of authority for the case.

05
Ongoing Compliance

We help the guardian comply with annual reporting, accounting, and any court-approval requirements that follow appointment.

Oklahoma Guardianship Categories We Handle

Guardianship of an Incapacitated Adult. When an adult is unable, due to a physical or mental condition, to make safe decisions about their personal care, healthcare, or property, Oklahoma law allows a court to appoint a guardian to make those decisions on the adult’s behalf. Common scenarios include advanced dementia, severe mental illness, traumatic brain injury, and significant developmental disability.

Guardianship of a Minor. When a minor child’s parents are unable, unavailable, or unfit to care for the child, Oklahoma law allows a court to appoint a guardian to step into the parental role. Minor guardianship is sometimes a long-term arrangement and sometimes a bridge to reunification with a parent or to adoption.

Limited Guardianship. Oklahoma encourages limited guardianship when the ward retains some capacity. A limited guardianship transfers only those specific rights the ward cannot exercise safely, leaving the rest with the ward. Welsh & McGough drafts limited guardianship petitions and orders that fit the ward’s actual abilities.

Conservatorship of the Estate. When the issue is the management of property rather than personal care, a conservatorship of the estate may be the right remedy. We prepare petitions and inventories, draft management plans, and advise conservators on their fiduciary duties.

Emergency and Special Guardianship. Oklahoma law allows for emergency guardianship when immediate court action is required to prevent harm. We move quickly when the situation calls for it, and we make sure the emergency procedure preserves due process for the proposed ward.

Adult Guardianship for Persons With Developmental Disabilities. Families with an adult child or sibling who has a developmental disability often face the question of guardianship at the eighteenth birthday or when independent living becomes unsustainable. Welsh & McGough helps these families choose the right level of guardianship and coordinate with special needs trusts and government benefits planning.

Guardianship Disputes and Modifications. Guardianships can be contested, modified, or terminated as circumstances change. We represent petitioners, proposed wards, family members, and existing guardians in disputed cases.

Tulsa Guardianship FAQ

When is guardianship necessary in Oklahoma?

Guardianship is appropriate when the proposed ward is unable, due to a recognised condition, to make safe decisions about their care, healthcare, or property, and when no less restrictive alternative will solve the problem. Common situations include advanced dementia, serious mental illness, significant developmental disability, traumatic brain injury, and the protection of minor children when parents are unavailable. Welsh & McGough evaluates each case against this standard.

What is a less restrictive alternative?

Oklahoma law expects courts and families to consider whether the underlying problem can be solved without removing legal rights from the proposed ward. Less restrictive alternatives include durable powers of attorney, healthcare powers of attorney, advance directives, supported decision-making arrangements, representative payee designations for government benefits, and revocable trusts. When one of these tools fits, it is often a better solution than guardianship.

How long does a guardianship case take?

Uncontested guardianships in Tulsa County typically take a few months from filing to appointment. Emergency guardianships can move faster when the situation requires it. Contested cases take longer because of the evidentiary hearings, court-appointed counsel for the ward, and potential medical evaluations involved. Welsh & McGough gives you a realistic timeline based on your specific case at the free consultation.

Does a guardian get paid?

Oklahoma law allows guardians to receive reasonable compensation from the ward’s estate for their services, subject to court approval. Many family-member guardians choose not to seek compensation. Welsh & McGough explains the rules and helps the guardian make the right decision for their case.

What ongoing duties does a guardian have?

A guardian must act in the best interests of the ward, respect any retained rights the ward has, make required reports to the court, and seek court approval for major decisions when the order requires it. A conservator or guardian of the estate must file annual accountings. Welsh & McGough helps every guardian meet these ongoing duties on time.

Need to Protect a Loved One? Schedule Your Free Guardianship Consultation Today.

Welsh & McGough’s guardianship attorneys are ready to help you protect the person who needs it. Your free consultation gives you a clear path forward, with the right level of protection and the right amount of process for your family’s situation.