Life Estate Calculation

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Oct 182012
 

The third full paragraph on page 40 of Medicaid Financial Eligibilty Rules for Nursing Home Care in New York State describes how to calculate the value of a life estate for Medicaid purposes.  At the time the book was published, 96 ADM-8, at 20, and Medicaid Reference Guide, at 353, stated that Social Service Districts may, but are not required to, use the life estate and remainder interest table attached to 96 ADM-8 when calculating the value of life estates and remainder interests.

Effective September 26, 2011, a different method must be used when calculating the value of a life estate or a remainder interest for Medicaid purposes.  11 OHIP/ADM-8, at 7; GIS 12 MA/001.  The Internal Revenue Service tables must now be used.  11 OHIP/ADM-8, at 7; GIS 12 MA/001.

In order to do the calculation, you must know the age of the life estate holder on the date of the transaction.

STEP ONE

When doing the calculation, the first step is to find the IRS code 7520 interest rate for the appropriate month and year.  11 OHIP/ADM-8, at 7.

The ADM contained a link which was supposed to take you to the 7520 interest rate table.  The link in the ADM was http://www.irs.gov/businesses/small/article/0,,id=112482,00.html

Unfortunately, if you use that link, you get the following error message from the IRS website: “We have redesigned the IRS.gov website to make it easier and faster to find the information you need.  If you have reached this page by selecting a bookmark that worked previously, it is likely the URL has changed.  To navigate to the new redesigned IRS website click on the homepage link.  You may also Search the site for specific information.  Once you have arrived at the desired page, please update your bookmark.”

To find the 7520 interest rate table, go to www.irs.gov

In the search box, type in: 7520

Click on SEARCH

Click on the link for 7520 interest rates.

You will be taken to a table which shows Section 7520 interest rates for the current year.

If you need the Section 7520 interest rates for a prior year, you will see “For prior years’ rates, please refer to Section 7520 Interest Rates for Prior Years” directly beneath the table for the current year.

However, this link does not work, either.

If you click on the link, it will take you to a list of years.  If you click on the year that you need, you will get a message telling you that you will be leaving the IRS website.  If you click on LEAVE IRS WEBSITE, you will be taken to a blank page.

Several non-IRS websites contain the Section 7520 rate tables for prior years.  To find one, google a search term such as: 7520 Rates 2011.

Once you get to a Section 7520 table that you are able to use, make a note of the interest rate for the month and year that you need.

STEP TWO

11 OHIP/ADM-8, at 7, says that the next step is to find Table S.

11 OHIP/ADM-8, at 7 stated that a direct link could be found at http://www.irs.gov/retirement/article/0,,id=206601,00.html

However, if you try this link, you will get the same error message from the IRS website that is shown in Step One, above.

To find Table S, go to www.irs.gov

In the search box, type in: Section 7520 Actuarial Table

Click on SEARCH

Click on the link for Actuarial Tables.

You will be taken to the Table of Contents for Publication 1457: Annuities, Life Estates & Remainders.

Click on TABLE S, which is in Section 1.

Note that this is an Excel spreadsheet.  If you do not have the Excel application on your computer, you might not be able to open this document.

You will see a table with headings Age, Annuity, Life Estate, Remainder and then Age, Annuity, Life Estate and Remainder again.  Above those headings, you will see that it says Interest at 0.2 Percent.  If you scroll down, it will say Interest at 0.4 Percent above the next table.  Keep scrolling down until you find the interest rate that you were told to use in Step One.

When you find the correct interest rate, scroll down until you find the row for the age of the person for whom you are calculating the life estate value.

Use the Life Estate column for that row.

EXAMPLE FROM 11 OHIP/ADM-8, AT 7

Calculate the value of a life estate owned by a 76-year old in July of 2011.  The fair market value of the property is $270,000.

Step One: find the IRS Code 7520 interest rate for the appropriate month and year.

For July 2011, it is: 2.4%.

Step Two: Find Table S.

Find the Interest at 2.4% heading.

Find the Life Estate column for a 76-year old: it is 0.21231.

$270,000 x 0.21231 = $57,323.70.  That is the value of the 76-year-old’s life estate.

Irrevocable Funeral Agreements

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Jun 092012
 

IRREVOCABLE FUND FOR THE EXCLUSIVE PURPOSE OF FUNERAL & BURIAL

Delete this section on page 18 of Medicaid Financial Eligibility Rules for Nursing Home Care in New York State and replace it with the following:

A Medicaid recipient may establish an irrevocable fund for the exclusive purpose of his funeral and burial.  N.Y. Social Services Law section 209 (6)(a); Medicaid Reference Guide, at 365; N.Y. General Business Law Section 453 (1)(d).

An irrevocable pre-need funeral agreement for the Medicaid recipient’s funeral and burial is an exempt resource.  11 OHIP/ADM-4, at 5; Medicaid Reference Guide, at 365 and 366.1

A pre-need funeral agreement is created by paying a funeral parlor, cemetery, or other business for specified merchandise and services which will be provided when the person dies.  11 OHIP/ADM-4, at 2.

Payment may be made with the applicant/recipient’s money, or with the money of a legally responsible relative.  Medicaid Reference Guide, at 365.

The assets of a Medicaid applicant/recipient and the assets of his legally responsible relatives also can be used to create pre-need funeral agreements for family members of the applicant/recipient.  N.Y. Social Services Law section 209 (6)(a); 11 OHIP/ADM-4, at 3.

“Family members” are defined as the applicant/recipient’s spouse, minor children, adult children, step-children, brothers, sisters, parents, and the spouses of those people.  11 OHIP/ADM-4, at 3.

Pre-need funeral agreements for family members of the applicant/recipient had to be revocable, rather than irrevocable, until the New York State Legislature’s passage of the Laws of 2010, chapter 109, sections 15 through 18, on June 8, 2010.  It became effective January 1, 2011.  It added language to include family members under the rules for irrevocable funds.  The changes were made to:
– N.Y. General Business Law section 453 (1)(d)
– N.Y. General Business Law section 453 (3)(f)
– N.Y. Social Services Law section 209 (6) (a), (b), (c) and (d)
– N.Y. Social Services Law section 141 (6).

11 OHIP/ADM-4, pages 2, 3 and 6, and page 365 of the Medicaid Reference Guide advise that effective January 1, 2011, pre-need funeral agreements for a Medicaid applicant/recipient’s family members must be irrevocable if they are established with assets of the applicant/recipient or of his legally responsible relative.

A spouse is a legally responsible relative.  N.Y. Social Services Law section 366 (2)(b)(1); Medicaid Reference Guide at 550.

The irrevocable pre-need funeral agreement for the Medicaid recipient’s family members is an exempt resource.  11 OHIP/ADM-4, at 7; Medicaid Reference Guide, at 365 and 366.1.

If the applicant/recipient’s family member has a revocable pre-paid funeral agreement which was purchased before the applicant/recipient applied for Medicaid, it must be converted to an irrevocable agreement in order to have it treated as an exempt resource.  11 OHIP/ADM-4, at 7; Medicaid Reference Guide at 365, 366 and 366.1.  If the Department of Social Services notifies the applicant/recipient about converting the family member’s revocable agreement to an irrevocable agreement, he has ten days from receipt of the notification to have the account converted; the ten-day period may be extended if more time is needed.  Medicaid Reference Guide, at 366 and 366.1.  If it is not converted to an irrevocable agreement, only the portions of it which are for non-burial space items will be treated as an exempt resource, and only up to $1,500.  11 OHIP/ADM-4, page 7.

If the applicant/recipient himself has a funeral agreement which is revocable, because it was purchased before he applied for Medicaid, he must have the funeral parlor convert it to an irrevocable agreement if he wants the entire amount to be treated as an exempt resource.  Medicaid Reference Guide, at 366.  If he does not have it converted to an irrevocable agreement, then the rules for burial funds for non-burial space items apply rather than the rules for irrevocable accounts.  Medicaid Reference Guide, at 366.  If he files a Medicaid application and has a revocable agreement, and the Department of Social Services notifies him about converting it to an irrevocable agreement, he has ten days from receipt of the notification to have the account converted; the ten-day period may be extended if more time is needed.  Medicaid Reference Guide, at 366.

If any money remains in the irrevocable account after payment of funeral expenses, that money goes to the Department of Social Services.  N.Y. Social Services Law section 141 (6)(c), N.Y. General Business Law section 453 (3)(f).  N.Y. Social Services Law section 141 (6), 11 OHIP/ADM-4, at 6, and Medicaid Reference Guide, at 365, specify that the remaining money must be paid to the Department of Social Services official responsible for arranging indigent burials in the district where the person resided.

There is no dollar limit on the goods and services which may be purchased.  GIS 96 MA/044, at 2; 11 OHIP/ADM-4, Attachment.

However, the applicant/recipient must pay fair market value for the goods and services to be provided, so that payment is not subject to a penalty period for transferring assets.  Medicaid Reference Guide, at 365.  Payment to a funeral director is not an uncompensated transfer, which would result in a penalty period, as long as the applicant/recipient is paying fair market value for customary non-burial space items and burial space items.  11 OHIP/ADM-4, at 6.

The irrevocable pre-need funeral agreement should NOT include food, lodging or transportation expenses for family, friends or guests; if it does, payment for these items will be treated as an uncompensated transfer subject to a penalty period, if made during the look-back period.  11 OHIP/ADM-4, at 6.

Funds are to be placed in an interest-bearing account.  N.Y. Social Services Law section 209 (6); N.Y. General Business Law section 453 (1)(a).  Accumulated interest is not countable income.  N.Y. Social Services Law section 209 (6); 11 OHIP/ADM-4, at 9.

Note that Chapter 557 of the Laws of 2001 amended the following:
– N.Y. General Business Law section 453 (1)
– N.Y. General Business Law section 453 (3)(c)
– N.Y. General Business Law section 453 (3)(e)(iii)
N.Y. General Business Law section 453 (1) provides, among other things, that money for a pre-paid agreement shall be held in trust for the benefit of the funeral parlor, and shall not be comingled with the funeral parlor’s other money until the merchandise is delivered and the services are rendered.  It also discusses requirements for notification and statements.

N.Y. General Business Law section 453 (1)(d) specifies that money paid for a Medicaid applicant/recipient or family member shall be placed in an irrevocable trust.

N.Y. General Business Law section 453 (3)(c) addresses notification requirements for accounts which are not irrevocable.

N.Y. General Business Law section 453 (3)(e)(iii) addresses the issue of the refund of excess money for revocable accounts.

Note that Chapter 78 of the Laws of 2007 amended Chapter 557 of the Laws of 2001 to provide that Chapter 557 expired on June 1, 2012.

Posted 06/09/2012

Substantial Home Equity Limit for 2012

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Jun 032012
 

The Substantial Home Equity Rule is described on pages 13-14 of Medicaid Financial Eligibility Rules for Nursing Home Care in New York State.  For 2012, the Substantial Home Equity Limit was increased to $786,000.  See GIS 12 MA/002; Medicaid Reference Guide at 782.

Posted 06/03/2012

Resource Levels for 2012

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May 282012
 

Medicaid Financial Eligibility Rules for Nursing Home Care in New York State should be updated as follows:

RESOURCE LEVEL FOR THE MEDICAID APPLICANT FOR 2012

The resource level for the Medicaid applicant is $14,250 for the year 2012.  GIS 11 MA/027; GIS 12 MA/009 Attachment.

 

COMMUNITY SPOUSE RESOURCE ALLOWANCE FOR 2012

For 2012, the minimum is $74,820 and the maximum is $113,640.  If the community spouse’s half is $113,640 or more, the community spouse can keep $113,640.  GIS 11 MA 027 and GIS 12 MA/009 Attachment.  Note that Medicaid Reference Guide, at 779 says $133,640.  I assume that is a typographical error.

Posted 05/28/2012