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Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Negative Results of Disclaimer by Nursing Home Resident

Although a disclaimer may have estate planning benefits, such an action would be treated as a transfer under the Medicaid rules (see Federal Statute 42 U.S.C. Section 1396p(c) and (e)). The first Statute treats a transfer as any disposition and the second statute requires an affirmative act.

Since a disclaimer is an affirmative act, the period of ineligibility from the disclaimer would run not from the date of the disclaimer but from the date the individual was in the nursing home and down to the appropriate amount ($2,000 or $4,000).

Pursuant to Medicaid Communication 10-02 and 10-06 , reverse half-a-loaf planning will not work in New Jersey. Therefore, the only choice is not to disclaim and to spend the monies on the nursing home. The appropriate planning would be to transfer monies to the appropriate donees who would then use the monies for the benefit of the nursing home resident. Should any monies remain after the 5 year look back period, such funds would be saved for the donees.

Disclaimer: This article does not constitute legal advice and each person may have unique facts for which legal consultation may be necessary.
© May 2011, Post 145

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