Follow
Share

My mothers only income is $800 per month in Social Security. She receives the following public benefits in the state of Pennsylvania...food stamps, subsidized section 8 housing, Medicaid, and Medicare Part-B premium free. I am afraid that this inheritance (about 70k) will actually make her financial situation worse than improve it if she loses her benefits. Can you make any sugggestions? She is 65.

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Find Care & Housing
Elmo - imo annuities bad idea if medicaid involved for an individual.
A SPIA - single premium immediate annuity - work for community spouse situations only imo as the SPIA pays out income to the CS and for LTC NH Medicaid the CS income doesn’t count for the NH residents eligibility. That’s not at all your mom’s situation.

Your mom has Medicaid and also other low income benefits, so getting an annuity that pays her an income is going to always, always pose problems or questions for determining if she’s still “at need”. I’d be really concerned that if she has mental health issues that she either fails to spend her income so goes over in assets allowed, or her state changes the income levels like in 3 years and she’s over the limit or she goes on a rant & decides to call in the annnuity like in 4 years.
To me, she needs a Special Needs Trust with you as the Trustee perhaps with atty oversight so it can be monitored and controlled outside of her whims, Trust for her benefit but not under her control.

Just ask your Aunt if probate opened and what the PC # is.
Aunt said “no formal estate”, well that means just what??
There imo has there has to be a legal mechanism set up to transfer assets of the deceased unless all banking stuff was set up to go POD (pay on death) to an individual as per bank records OR she already moved everything into her ownership / her name in the 10 years she was his caretaker OR everything was in a Trust.

Right now you do not definitely know $ guaranteed.
CD and the extra 20k for your mom is just a promise from Auntie.
Your auntie knows your mom’s history, right? So tell her your trying to put the $ into a SnT and you need probate # for your mom’s attorney to reference. Probate is not secret, it’s open records in my experience except for children’s guardianship issues.

Yes it’s safe to assume that if there was a will, once it’s filed to probate court, it will get a PC#, the Executor as named in the Will gets Letters Testamentary to give her authority to deal with the estate and a Docket report gets done every time documents are filed and then what the disposition are of the documents. If he died in June, probate may not yet be opened. Could be but usually families wait 6 mos to open it to see what bills / debts look like, if anything is POD.

If atty is NAELA or CELA level that’s the gold standard. They will have this in their business cards and be registered with state bar for this credentials. If not, find another.
If their that then next question is are they experienced with setting up Medicaid & low income program compliant SNT. I’d suggest you stress that your mom is NOT the typical elderly 85 yr old NH resident, that she’s just 65 and has mental health issues. At 65 and $70k, she is likely to outlive the $ so planning super long term is pretty critical. It may be that she does an irrevocable SNT but nothing drawn from it by you for years. Atty may suggest that your mom / you instead spend the $ to get guardianship over mom and the use rest of $ for a SNT. $5-10k for legal sounds reasonable.

You cant DIY this; and you need to definitively find out what the terms of the will are or if it’s instead gifting by your Aunt to her sister. The “no formal estate” sounds totally sketch. If your young, like in your 30s, it could be that Auntie thinks of you as being too young to understand what an Estate is......... If your Aunt isn’t forthcoming in info to you, then Your atty can do this.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report
ElmoHongZito Dec 2018
I didn’t respond to this earlier because I wanted to talk to talk to my aunt first and get more details. At the beginning of all this I did not ask her detailed questions because I did not think I would need to get this involved. Here is the 411...

At one point in time my grandfather did handwrite a will however it was never notarized so it hold no legal ground. My aunt managed to have him put her as co-owner and beneficiary on all of his accounts. For this reason, at his time of death she became sole owner of all is assets. Legally everything that was his is now by default hers and if she chose to, she can hold on to all of it and thats that. He did not own any property so its just savings account and CD’s.

She has decided to do what she deems is fair and give my mother 70k. She says my grandfather “chose” to leave my mother 50k and she is adding another 20k because she thinks that is fair. She claims that one of the other 4 sisters got “her share” when she needed financial help while he was alive and that was about 70k.

That being said, nothing is going through probate and as I understand it, my aunt would simply be wiring money from what is now her bank account.

So I was thinking...since it is not a formal inheritance (just my aunt gifting money) couldn’t my aunt (with my mothers consent of course) simply wire the money to me and I immediately pay off my moms car loan and a $1200 dental bill she has and then instead of me sending her money every month she can use her $800/month social security now that she wouldn’t have a monthly car payment and dental bill and when she needs to buy something outside of her monthly expenses (airline ticket, emergencies, etc) I can simply buy it for her?

If I have to report that wire transfer as income and pay taxes on it I can just deduct that from the amount that is being wired.

What are your thoughts? Given the above details, is there any reason why I would not do it this way? Any other suggested strategy? Do I still need an elderly law attorney?
(0)
Report
A sensible social security department would be used to things like this happening, and would be willing to suspend your mother's benefits for the time during which her legacy could theoretically support her; rather than putting *everybody* through the whole miserable process again. It would certainly be worth giving your mother's office(s) a call and asking them what to do.

But reapplying is the worst case scenario. Your mother can't be worse off financially - what she loses in benefits, she has in cash in her little hand.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report
ElmoHongZito Dec 2018
70k put in a SPIA is $300 and change per month. She would still be below poverty level and forfeiting benefits. In summary she could definitely be worse off financially.
(0)
Report
If it were me, I’d find an attorney and ask how you can handle this legally without affecting Mom's benefits. Medicaid knows all and sees all. People who think they can hide money and put one over on the Government are sadly mistaken. The attorney may suggest setting up a trust for Mom to pay her expenses, even including long-term care insurance, funeral pre-planning, etc. I’m no legal expert, but when the money is gone, you may need to reapply for her benefits. If you don’t already have e POA, it might be a good idea to get it now, if you aren’t on her financial accounts, you should go to her bank and have yourself added. This made things much easier for me when I took over my mom’s finances.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

I have researched the annuity route however I have to see how to structure it because even if the monthly income from the annuity is still below the threshold, if not done correctly she can still be disqualified from certain public benefits she recieves.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report
JoAnn29 Dec 2018
Then you need to talk to a lawyer versed in Medicaid law.
(0)
Report
See 1 more reply
Do you know the Executor and can you call them? Like today.

I’m assuming the $ is coming from a distribution done via probate. The Executor should - if it’s an independent administration - have a great deal of discretion as to when & how exactly the distribution is to be done. Lots of states don’t put a “close by” date as to probate having to be wrapped up by. So the distribution can be delayed or it’s done in groups by some sort of priority.

To do a distribution, there should be paperwork sent out, like they need your SS #, W-9, etc done. Has your mom gotten documents like that yet? If so, you don’t have time to waste. Contact the Executor and ask for distribution to wait 60 days. And within this period of time, you & your mom’s meet with elder law atty to come up with a Medicaid compliant plan, like a SNT (special needs Trust) and update her legal. If really she’s only 65, she likely will outlive the SNT totally.

Timing super important, she needs to start her month ok for low income and end her month ok for low income. So like she gets the $ on the 3rd of the month and the trust ready for it so all set up and clears banking before EOM. An experienced NAELA or CELA level of atty will know how to make this happen so that everything is Medicaid compliant.

NOT Medicaid allowed but Medicaid compliant.

Imo annuities bad, bad idea, they will likely NOT be Medicaid compliant unless it’s a SPIA type of annuity for a community spouse and SPIAs are allowed specifically in your state. Annuities are insurance products sold with hefty commissions
Helpful Answer (2)
Report
ElmoHongZito Dec 2018
Thank you for the detailed feedback. Its very obvious that you know the subject well.

The executor is my aunt however I do know she is working with some sort of attorney on carrying out my grandfathers will. Not sure if there is a “close by” date however my aunt told me that the money is coming from a CD that expires in a few days and she would like to dispurse the money before the end of the month.

Any advice on how I should go about getting a NAELA or CELA level of attorney asap to assist us without paying through the nose?
(0)
Report
Yes, maybe the money can be put in an annuity and she can draw so much a month but keep under the level she needs for benefits.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

Countrymouse, things don't work like that here. Benefits would not be conveniently suspended for a while, they get terminated. And when you run out of money and reapply the government wants an explanation of what you did with the funds you had.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report
Countrymouse Dec 2018
I don't know that they do here, either (I don't know that they don't!) - it's just it would save everyone such a lot of time = money, and in this computer age it can't be beyond the wit of public servant, surely..?
(0)
Report
See 1 more reply
Elmo has a later thread that covers the same thing. He pretty much has gotten what info this forum can give him. He now needs to see a lawyer or the appropriate people to help solve his question. We really can no longer help.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

Living an honest life is harder, but less complicated, and leaves one with nothing to fear!
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

Speak to an elder law attorney first. Also some of this money should be used to prepay for her funeral expenses and headstone before Medicaid makes her spend it down
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

See All Answers
This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter