Dad is 92, can barely hear, can't walk far, and definitely has cognitive issues (per doctor). He is currently living in CA with my brother but he loves his house back in Michigan and won't give us permission to sell it or even start cleaning it out. He thinks he's going back but he hasn't been back in 2 years and it's a tri-level, in a rural area where he would have to drive. There is no family there...we are all on the West Coast. Now with Covid I have nothing on my plate and feel I could drive to MI and shelter in place there, going through stuff and getting it ready to sell. My sibs agree it should be sold but not if dad says no. THEY aren't the ones taking responsibility for ensuring lawn care happens and asking favors of neighbors... for whatever reason they leave it to me. I have the time to do it this summer. I have POA and also am trustee of his trust and deal with all his bills and he never asks anything about it. He would never know if I did sell or at least clear out the garage and basement which are worthy of a Hoarders show. I'm feeling really guilty but my time is also valuable and usually in the summer we travel and who wants to deal with this in Michigan winter? It's not his principal residence anymore and if it isn't sold by Dec 2021 he will have capital gains. It may take two summers to clear it out (90 years of stuff, seriously). Has anyone just done this and not told their parent or even their sibs (because they will end up telling him). He still has a huge temper and they are afraid of his wrath and would rather I take on the blame I think. By the way, before this he was only living there for 1/2 the year anyway for the last 12 years... always saying he would sell it "soon".. it was too overwhelming for him and it's going to be really overwhelming for me too.
Dad would still have his house even if he can't return and a lot of the hard work would have been started when the time comes to actually sell out.
FROM https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p523.pdf
Eligibility Step 2—Ownership Determine whether you meet the ownership requirement. If you owned the home for at least 24 months (2 years) out of the last 5 years leading up to the date of sale (date of the closing), you meet the ownership requirement. For a married couple filing jointly, only one spouse has to meet the ownership requirement.
Eligibility Step 3—Residence Determine whether you meet the residence requirement. If you owned the home and used it as your residence for at least 24 months of the previous 5 years, you meet the residence requirement. The 24 months of residence can fall anywhere within the 5-year period, and it doesn't have to be a single block of time. All that is required is a total of 24 months (730 days) of residence during the 5-year period. Unlike the ownership requirement, each spouse must meet the residence requirement individually for a married couple filing jointly to get the full exclusion. If you were ever away from home, you need to determine whether that time counts towards your residence requirement. A vacation or other short absence counts as time you lived at home (even if you rented out your home while you were gone).
However, my comments still might help anyone who has to deal with a Life Estate. Although we had set it all up years ago, I didn't fully understand all of it, nor was I aware of the tax implications, until we sold her place.
It never hurts to have MORE information than you really need! Also, see that link for more info - it does have more information, regarding things like being away for part of the time and physical/cognitive issues.
"I'm still not understanding your logic (I've never heard of "life estate" and "remainderman" ) so maybe you are from Canada and we are talking about Michigan and California?"
No, I am not in Canada, nor Michigan or California. Where you live most likely will play no part in the sale (other than you need to travel to clean it out/fix it.) I had moved to the next state over from where mom's condo was, and it had NO impact as far as selling the place. One brother lives in my state, the other is about 1500 miles away (all 3 trustees.)
Before addressing the question about Life Estate, please either carefully read the POA doc or consult the atty who drew it up. Mom's didn't specify needing any "proof" although we could have gotten it. I used the POA to take over her finances, set up the trust account (she did have to see the EC atty and sign paperwork for the legal part of the trust and the Life Estate, but she was in very early stage and he determined she was capable of signing. The other docs, like POAs, had been set up years before and were sufficient.) Yours may indicate needing this, and it certainly can't hurt to have it in hand to use the POA. I was never asked for any "proof." Her POAs also did not say anyone could get paid for their "services", but when I said this to the atty, he said it also doesn't say I can't. You are the trustee, so unless any doc says no, you can pay yourself "reasonable" recompense. Consult the atty. Lastly, the EC atty told me I could sign ALL paperwork for the sale of the condo EXCEPT the deed. Despite her living in MC, having by then already forgotten about her condo and not knowing what she was signing, I HAD to have her sign that deed.
Perhaps you can explain what the whole "must be sold by x date" is in your situation. What you said usually falls under the Life Estate we had set up for our mother. What this does is put the house in trust (you indicate there is a trust), but allows her to live there for the rest of her life. Had we been able to keep her there until she passed, it would have stepped up the value and we would have had little or no cap gains to pay. Given her dementia and refusal to allow aides in, we had to move her. Hanging on to the place was costing too much money and although we considered rental, between hassle of being landlord (or cost of property management), RE taxes and condo fees, it wasn't worth it. In order to avoid cap gains for HER share, we had to ensure she was there at least 2 of the last 5 years, hence why I suspected his trust was a Life Estate.
When you said he had to live there for at least 2 of the last 5 years, THAT was the stipulation on the Life Estate. In your case, I don't know if this applies, but it does sound like it. The Life Estate IS a kind of trust. You need to find out if it is, because in that case only your father would get the break on cap gains. He could also get taxed on the net amount that went to him, depending on his income. Remaindermen are those listed on the trust who would "inherit" the place should your dad pass away. It could also impact his Medicare cost, one year only.
We went through this several years ago, and again, that stipulation of 2 out of 5 years really sounds like this is a Life Estate. You should, at the very least, contact the attorney who drew up the documents to check. If it is, the IRS has tables based on expected life expectancy, and it determines what % he and the "Remaindermen" get. Although we put ALL the net funds paid out by check to us back into the regular trust fund (separate from the house trust), it still resulted in cap gains for us. His share, even if the place were worth more than the exclusion amount, will be low enough that he won't have any cap gains, but anyone else on the trust will.
IF you find out it isn't a Life Estate, please post something so that others will know what this is and perhaps can benefit from the knowledge!
Please scroll through, she has posted updates about everything.
It has nothing to do with a trust, unless it is written in to cover something.
That's what I did to sell my dads property in another state.
The title agency should be able to provide the form.
(Sorry for so many responses, I can't edit my posts for some reason.)
Your siblings don't have a clue about what your responsibility is. It doesn't mean that you have to do slave labor to preserve their inheritance. Make this as easy as you can for you. That attorney could probably draw it up in no time and make it legal to protect you.
Great big warm hug! You don't deserve their hatefulness, but you are lucky to know where they stand now so you can be prepared for the ugliness to ramp up and have your ducks in a row to be as insulated and protected as possible. Don't be their doormat!
Dismantling a life is hard work. Makes you really respect someone who organized their life. My mom is not one of those people.
My mom knows nothing about what I just shared.
Have you actually applied? My understanding is that you can own a house, you just can't pay for anything.
Get a loan in place from you to mom so that you can recover your money from the sale.
Find an elder law attorney (www.nelf.org) and get this dealt with right away. You should not be financing her care from your retirement.
That's your bum cover for selling.
Can I ask, does the subject keep coming up with dad or is something else bringing it up? When he says yes, leave it at that.
Or remind him that he said to sell and it is to late to stop the process at this point. Whether it is or not he needs a little help to stop going in circles.
Well done talking with the attorney and finding out what the documents say. Starting point established, time to get those letters.
I put a few calls out to property managers and set a date to have the place cleared out before the end of the summer, and the rest is history. I’ve been pulling in nearly 30 grand a year in rental income, and the house is now worth over half a million, no mortgage. I inherited the house two years ago when my mother passed away, and will side step inheritance taxes by “living “ in the house for the next two years and renting out rooms.
Clean it up, rent it out, then cash out in a few years after all the pandemic chatter calms down. Perfect compromise. I have taken over landlord responsibilities, but you can start out with a property manager to hold your hand for the first few years.
Filing a fraudulent homestead has serious consequences. The details on the discrepancy will surface eventually. Your tax assessment is based on that fraudulent filing and will be significantly less because it’s your home/ homestead / primary residence. Once the info surfaces the fines, penalties and interest will be placed on the property. If it’s assessed at 500k+, it will be a huge amount placed. And it gets retro’d, probably back to the date it was transferred to you via probate. Could take a while for it to surface but it will. Assessors office usually don’t do this on their own but either have a independent appraisal district that does tracings & appeals (Texas does it this way) or An outside contractor gets hired (basically its doxxing) and they get a % of the fines, penalties placed on the property from the assessors office.
You are filing taxes on that rental income, correct?
https://www.elderneedslaw.com/blog/life-estate-deed-income-tax-issues
Of interest was the section "What are the income tax consequences on sale of real property subject to a life estate?"
When you mentioned living there 2 of the last 5 years, it triggered a memory, hence why I thought the home was in a life estate in another comment I made. From the section above, what it would do is negate HIS cap gains, but does nothing for the remaindermen:
"However, the IRS provides an exemption amount (currently $250,000 for single and $500,000 for married owners of real property). This personal residency tax exemption is available if the owner(s) have lived in the subject real property for 2 of the last 5 years. It essentially means that no capital gains is paid on the first $250,000 of gains for a property owned by a single individual."
So, understand that even if you manage to sell it within the time frame, the bulk of the gain will be taxed to the remaindermen. The share for your dad is calculated based on IRS tables, and will likely be pretty minimal (and per another comment I made, it will likely impact his Medicare cost in 2 years time.)
Getting it sold by then will NOT eliminate the cap gains owed on the rest. Mom was about 94 at the time of the sale, and her share was about 9-10% of the total net. So, the other 90% or so WAS subject to cap gains. If you do like we did and put all the funds into the trust for his future care, DO keep enough to cover the cap gains you will have to pay. I was stupid and put all the money in, then had to distribute to us from the trust to cover the taxes, then had to claim that the next year (if done same year, only one time, but I made a second distribution after the end of year - DUH!) I would expect his share to be about the same %age (lower life expectancy for males and he's just a tad younger than mom was.) So, how much would his cap gains be, if you drifted beyond the 2 years? Good question for an IRS Enrolled Agent. He's likely pretty low income, so you might not "save" as much as you think. It's more important to get the unoccupied insurance, fix/clean the places and prep it for sale.
Meanwhile, I do highly recommend seeking both legal advice to ensure everything is A-OK for the sale AND find an IRS Enrolled Agent to handle the taxes after the sale. Some POAs require proof that your dad isn't competent before you can step in. Even before selling the condo, the 20+ pages that came from the trust fund for tax prep glazed my eyes! I let the Agent do it. Not any more expensive really for this service AND you know they have to stay up-to-date with IRS rules. I had him take over mom's taxes, as her MC is fully deductible (AL is not - only certain medical needs, but MC is) and I didn't want to mess with it!
My parents told me, in no uncertain terms to NOT to hire home health aides and NOT to sign up for the service provided at the retirement community that would ensure they got their meds. I was scared of my dad's temper too, but the truth is that your dad is very old and frail and you are a full-grown adult who knows what is best for him. Trust yourself.
See my video on YouTube about role reversal with parents. Enter Kathleen Vallee Stein.
Good luck!
Good luck. Even 2 summers may not be enough, so the sooner you begin, the better. His end can't be that far off.
Once the house is bare, have it cleaned professionally, then list it with the best realtor. In six months it should sell. When it does-- go to the closing and collect the check. Then deduct expenses including travel, and give the balance to your father and tell him all his "good stuff" is in storage. In the mean time, go through the stored stuff, and pear it down to a small 10 x10 storage room hopefully at a reputable place.
IF he is mad at you, tell him you love him and you know he is not going back to Michigan. Does he have any dementia ? if so then he will eventually forget after you take him out to eat as many times as it takes. --- I had to do all this in Heidelberg, Germany. I never asked a soul what to do-- I just did it. And I did it all with a very small European car the size of a Mini-cooper. Just do it. Good luck, God bless.
After my Uncle passed away in October, I became my Aunts POA.
I knew she was not safe at home alone. Couldn't drive, forgot to eat etc...
I had no choice but to sell her home. She needed the money to afford assisted living. She's been told hundreds of times that her home has been sold, but still doesn't remember.
Does Dad need the money for his expenses?
I think it's totally reasonable to take your time sorting the contents of his home and get it ready to sell.
He will never appreciate the capital gains savings, but if he truly is never going to return to his home then you would be doing him a favor in the long term.
Don't feel quilty!! It will have to be done sooner or later. Sounds like sooner maybe financially beneficial to him.
Hang in there!
God bless!!
Since you have all the appropriate paperwork and legal authority, if you can tolerate the siblings storm that I would expect in my family... I would go forward with the summer cleaning and sale of the house... as you see fit. Then, just insure that all the legal paperwork for the estate is in order as the trustee. Good luck.
I debated, and made Ben Franklin 'balance sheets' and asked people and fretted over my dilemma so much that it made me sick and I felt guilty every time I looked at my mother because I was going to do this behind her back.
I should have done what she always taught me to do first: pray about it. So I sat down and put myself in HER shoes. I tried to imagine the reasons she wanted to keep a house she would probably never return to, retain belongings that she wouldn't ever get to use, and property that would require money to maintain.
It boiled down to a number of undisputed facts that none of us are keen to admit: (1) that she was going to die in the not-to-distant future; (2) the house represented all her memories, and without them, she would forget her life and become a 'non-entity' with dementia; and (3) it represented 'security' - the kind that we, who have never lived through a depression (maybe until now), can't possibly understand.
The anger and resentment she displayed stemmed from losing control of... everything. And so I decided to call in a friend who was a realtor and have the three of us sit down and discuss the options. I stressed to Mom that we were not going to sign anything that day. We were just getting information and a professional opinion from someone who had experience with lots of other families who were facing similar decisions. She relaxed and almost looked forward to the meeting.
Donna spoke to HER - NOT to me - as if she was a functioning adult who 'knew how many beans made five' as Mom was fond of saying. She talked about the market, the real estate taxes, the maintenance costs, the condition of the roof, etc. and the dollar amount that Mom could realistically expect to glean from a sale. She told her that storage garages were a great option to use for belongings she wanted to keep, and she had several names of reputable people who would clear out anything that she didn't want anymore. Additionally, Donna told her that the house could be sold "where is, as is," a phase I had never heard before. Mom wouldn't have to have anything updated or repaired, and could leave the heavy hope chest in the attic and the piano she never played in the dining room if she so chose.
With the assurance from me that I would never place her in a nursing facility, etc., but could use some of the equity to help with her care at home, as well as the cost of the storage unit that housed her keepsakes, she relaxed. Mom accepted all this information from Donna, but you can be sure she wouldn't have listened to a word if it had come out of my mouth! By the end of the day, Mom was anxious to have Donna come back so she could sign the papers.
After it was done, I often asked her if she wanted to go to the house or drive by it, and she always said no. It was as though that phase of her life was over, and she was free to start living the new one! A burden had been lifted from off HER shoulders. Who would have known? She lived several more years with me and passed peacefully in my arms.
All situations are different. You have to do what is right for you and your family, but I just wanted to give you a little different perspective.
The "step up" may not apply if they retain the place until he dies - all depends on the rules regarding life estate for Michigan, but I think these are federal rules, so it should be the same for them as it was for us (mom is still living, but the place was costing so much to sit and meant more work for me, decision to rent or sell was made to SELL! being a condo I didn't have to do any outside maintenance, but still, 3 hour round trip, even with "vacant" insurance they require someone checking on the place, etc, and in addition to clearing it out, cleaning it up, we found a lot of work needing to be done. took over 1.5 years from me!)
In this case, not being local to the house in question I would NOT recommend considering this option.
IF they were able to sell it before the required time (in order to maintain a LE, the person must live there at least 2 of the previous 5 years), only dad's share would avoid cap gains. He'd might still end up paying more tax that year, as his share would be considered income (been there, done that too - and it could also impact his Medicare cost 2 years later. IRS EA assures me that mom's will revert back to the minimum after this year.)
The bigger impact with cap gains will be for the remaindermen - those who are named in the trust. If sold now, given similar ages, etc, it would likely be about 10% for dad and 90% to the others, with the 90% being subject to the cap gains. If dad were to live out his years there, then they would get the "step up" and when sold, cap gains would be based on sale price - value of the home at the TOD. This is one of the benefits of having a LE. The downside is if they can't remain there until TOD or it is sold before TOD.
After spending more than 1.5 years clearing, cleaning and managing repairs needed to mom's condo, I was done. The cost of RE taxes plus condo fees would negate any benefit from renting it (and that would be dicey anyway, with condo mgmt rules) and I had NO interest in playing landlord. Yes, there are places that will "manage" it for you, but again, between the Taxes, condo fees and management fees, it wouldn't be worth it - then repairs might have to be done again later. Nope. Done with that - little to no help from brothers, 3 hour round trip to go there,
Hugs 🤗