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Revocation of Power of Attorney Colombia (Revocacion de Poder Notarial)

Revocation of Power of Attorney Colombia (Revocación de Poder Notarial)

Código Civil Arts. 2189-2199 — Decreto 960 de 1970 (Estatuto del Notariado)

REVOCACIÓN DE PODER NOTARIAL

Código Civil colombiano Arts. 2189–2199 — Decreto 960 de 1970 (Estatuto del Notariado)

I. PODERDANTE / REVOCANTE

[Grantor Name], identificado/a con [Grantor CC], domiciliado/a en [Grantor Address], en ejercicio del derecho de revocación conferido por el artículo 2189 del Código Civil colombiano, procede a revocar el poder descrito a continuación.

II. APODERADO REVOCADO

[Attorney Name], identificado/a con [Attorney CC], domiciliado/a en [Attorney Address].

III. PODER QUE SE REVOCA

Tipo de poder: [Original Power Type] Escritura de origen: [Original Deed Number] Fecha del poder original: [Original Power Date] Objeto del poder original: [Original Power Scope]

IV. DECLARACIÓN DE REVOCACIÓN

Por medio del presente documento y con efectos a partir del [Effective Date], [Grantor Name] REVOCA expresamente el poder descrito en la cláusula anterior en los siguientes términos:

Alcance: [Revocation Scope]

Motivo: [Revocation Reason]

A partir de la presente revocación, el apoderado [Attorney Name] queda SIN FACULTAD para actuar en nombre del poderdante en los actos y negocios comprendidos en el poder revocado. Se solicita a todas las personas, entidades públicas y privadas, notarías y registros públicos tener por no válida cualquier actuación que el ex apoderado pretenda realizar en nombre del revocante con fundamento en el poder revocado.

V. EFECTOS FRENTE A TERCEROS

Conforme al artículo 2191 del Código Civil, la revocación surte efectos frente a terceros una vez que éstos hayan tenido conocimiento de la misma. El revocante procederá a notificar esta revocación al apoderado y a las entidades pertinentes mediante comunicación escrita.

Otorgada ante [Notary Info], en [City], el [Revocation Date].

Poderdante / Revocante

[Grantor Name]

Signature

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What Is a Revocation of Power of Attorney Colombia (Revocacion de Poder Notarial)?

A Revocation of Power of Attorney Colombia (Escritura o Acta de Revocacion de Poder Notarial) is the formal legal instrument through which a grantor (poderdante or mandante) unilaterally terminates a previously granted power of attorney — whether notarial (escritura publica de poder) or private (poder privado) — effectively withdrawing the authority previously conferred on the attorney-in-fact (apoderado or mandatario). The revocation is governed by the Codigo Civil colombiano (Ley 57 de 1887) Articles 2189 through 2199 and, when the original power was executed as a public deed, by Decreto 960 de 1970 (Estatuto del Notariado).

Codigo Civil Article 2189 establishes that a mandate terminates, among other causes, by revocation (revocacion) of the mandate by the mandante. This revocation right is generally unilateral and unilaterally exercisable — the mandante does not need the consent of the mandatario to revoke the mandate, and no judicial proceeding is required. Article 2190 establishes that the revocation may be express (expresa) — communicated directly to the mandatario — or tacit (tacita), which occurs when the mandante grants a new mandate for the same matter to a different mandatario or personally undertakes the same acts covered by the mandate.

The critical principle under Article 2189 is that revocation is effective against the mandatario from the moment it is communicated to them — the mandatary who acts after receiving notice of revocation incurs personal liability for acts done without authority. However, Article 2191 establishes an important exception for third parties acting in good faith (terceros de buena fe): acts performed by the mandatario before they had notice of the revocation remain valid and binding on the mandante vis-a-vis bona fide third parties, even after the revocation was communicated to the mandatario. This creates the critical need to publicly register the revocation or otherwise notify relevant third parties.

For powers executed as public deeds (escrituras publicas) before a Colombian notary, Decreto 960 de 1970 Articles 1 through 10 establish that the revocation should itself be executed as a public deed before a notary — whether the same notary who executed the original power or a different one — and that the revocacion should reference the original escritura by its number, notary, and date. The Superintendencia de Notariado y Registro has issued circulars establishing that for revocations of powers that were registered with the Oficina de Registro de Instrumentos Publicos (ORIP) under Ley 1579 de 2012, the revocation deed must also be registered with the ORIP to be effective against third parties dealing with real property included in the original power.

The Consejo de Estado and the Corte Suprema de Justicia Sala de Casacion Civil have both established through multiple sentencias that a mandatary who continues to act after receiving notice of revocation is personally liable to the mandante for any resulting damages under Codigo Civil Article 2341. Moreover, third parties who deal with the former mandatario with actual knowledge of the revocation cannot claim bona fide status and the mandante is not bound by post-revocation acts.

In practice, the revocation of a power of attorney is needed not only when the mandante is dissatisfied with the mandatary but also in routine circumstances: when a Colombian living abroad returns permanently to Colombia; when a company changes its external legal representatives; when a property is sold and the property management power becomes unnecessary; upon the death of the mandatary; or when the professional relationship that gave rise to the power ends.

When Do You Need a Revocation of Power of Attorney Colombia (Revocacion de Poder Notarial)?

A Revocation of Power of Attorney Colombia is needed whenever a previously granted power of attorney must be terminated before its natural expiration, whether due to loss of confidence in the mandatary, changes in circumstances, completion of the mandated tasks, or other reasons.

The revocation is needed when a property owner who previously granted a power of attorney for asset management decides to return to Colombia and personally manage their property, or decides to appoint a different administrator. The revocation effectively terminates the previous administrator's authority and prevents them from continuing to act on the owner's behalf — a particularly important document when the relationship with the former administrator has deteriorated.

The document is required when a company changes its external legal representatives or tax advisors and a previous poder especial para tramites DIAN or poder judicial was granted to the former firm. Without a formal revocation filed with the DIAN and relevant courts, the former representative may technically retain authority to act on the company's behalf, creating legal exposure.

The revocation is needed when a formerly trusted family member or friend who held a general power of attorney abuses or exceeds their authority, engages in unauthorized transactions, or fails to account for managed assets. A prompt formal revocation limits the grantor's exposure for further unauthorized acts after the revocation notice is served and registered.

The document is necessary when an original power of attorney is executed with a defined term that has expired but the underlying registry (ORIP) or third parties (banks, government agencies) have not been notified of the expiration. A formal revocation deed provides the clearest documentary evidence of termination for registry and institutional purposes.

The revocation is also needed in succession planning contexts — when a power of attorney granted to a mandatary needs to be replaced with new authority granted to a different person, or when the circumstances giving rise to the original power (such as a planned absence or medical procedure) have concluded and the grantor wishes to resume full personal control of their affairs.

Parties in Colombia should prepare a Revocation of Power of Attorney Colombia (Revocacion de Poder Notarial) proactively rather than waiting for a dispute to arise. Courts interpret agreements based on the written terms rather than oral representations. Under the Codigo Civil Articles 1008-1226, Colombian succession law applies the legitima system (forced heirship). The Decreto 960 de 1970 governs testamentary forms before Notaria. The Impuesto de Sucesiones applies to inheritances. The Juzgados de Familia have jurisdiction over succession disputes. The Codigo General del Proceso (CGP, Ley 1564 de 2012) governs succession proceedings. Where the transaction involves regulated activities, prior approval from the relevant authority may be required before execution.

What to Include in Your Revocation of Power of Attorney Colombia (Revocacion de Poder Notarial)

A valid Revocation of Power of Attorney Colombia under Codigo Civil Articles 2189 through 2199 must contain the following essential elements to be effective against the mandatary and third parties.

Identification of the Revoking Grantor (Poderdante Revocante): Full legal name, cedula de ciudadania or NIT, domicile, and capacity of the grantor executing the revocation. For companies, the legal representative's name, cedula, and authority (certificado de existencia y representacion legal from the Camara de Comercio) must be included. The revocation must be executed by the same person or entity — or their duly authorized successor in interest — who originally granted the power.

Identification of the Original Power Being Revoked: Precise reference to the original power of attorney, including: date of execution; notary name and circle (for notarial powers) or date and witnesses (for private powers); escritura publica number and protocol number (for public deeds); and ORIP registration data (folio de matricula number, ORIP name, and date of registration) if the power was registered. Without this reference, third parties cannot identify which specific power is being revoked.

Identification of the Former Mandatary: Full name and cedula of the attorney-in-fact whose authority is being revoked. If the power covered multiple mandataries or permitted substitution, the revocation should specify whether it revokes authority for all mandataries or only specific ones.

Effective Date: The date from which the revocation takes effect — typically the date of execution of the revocation document. Under Codigo Civil Article 2189, the revocation is effective against the mandatary from the date of communication, and against bona fide third parties from the date they have actual or constructive notice.

Scope of Revocation: Whether the revocation terminates all authority under the original power or only specific delegated acts. A partial revocation (revocacion parcial) that removes specific powers while retaining others is permitted under Colombian law but must be drafted with precision to avoid ambiguity.

Notification Method: How the revocation will be communicated to the former mandatary — personal delivery (entrega personal) with signed acknowledgment (acuse de recibo); certified mail (correo certificado) to the mandatary's last known address; or notarial notification (notificacion notarial) where the notary delivers and certifies the delivery. Prompt, documented notification is critical to limit the mandante's liability under CC Article 2191.

Registration Requirements: For revocations of powers registered with the ORIP (Oficina de Registro de Instrumentos Publicos), the revocation deed must be presented to the same ORIP office for registration. For revocations of powers used before the DIAN, the revocation must be filed with the relevant Direccion Seccional and the DIAN Virtual system must be updated. For revocations of judicial powers, notice must be filed with the relevant court secretary (secretaria del juzgado).

Forms-legal.com provides this Revocation of Power of Attorney Colombia template as a practical tool for terminating mandates. Revocations of notarial powers should be executed as public deeds (escrituras publicas) before a notario publico and registered with the ORIP if the original power was registered. Prompt notification to all relevant third parties — DIAN, ORIP, banks, courts, counterparties — is essential to limit the mandante's exposure after revocation.

Additional compliance elements for a Revocation of Power of Attorney Colombia (Revocacion de Poder Notarial) used in Colombia include: Under the Codigo Civil Articles 1008-1226, Colombian succession law applies the legitima system (forced heirship). The Decreto 960 de 1970 governs testamentary forms before Notaria. The Impuesto de Sucesiones applies to inheritances. The Juzgados de Familia have jurisdiction over succession disputes. The Codigo General del Proceso (CGP, Ley 1564 de 2012) governs succession proceedings. Forms-legal.com provides this template as a starting point for Colombia-compliant documentation.

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Forms Legal. (2026). Revocation of Power of Attorney Colombia (Revocacion de Poder Notarial) (Colombia) [Legal document template]. Forms Legal. https://forms-legal.com/colombia/estate-planning/power-of-attorney/revocation-power-of-attorney-colombia

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"Revocation of Power of Attorney Colombia (Revocacion de Poder Notarial) (Colombia)." Forms Legal, 2026, https://forms-legal.com/colombia/estate-planning/power-of-attorney/revocation-power-of-attorney-colombia.

BibTeX
@misc{formslegal-revocation-power-of-attorney-colombia,
  author       = {{Forms Legal}},
  title        = {Revocation of Power of Attorney Colombia (Revocacion de Poder Notarial) (Colombia)},
  year         = {2026},
  howpublished = {\url{https://forms-legal.com/colombia/estate-planning/power-of-attorney/revocation-power-of-attorney-colombia}},
  note         = {Free legal document template}
}

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