Hello, I have been renting my grandmother's home since August 2015. She was placed in nursing home care in June 2015. She passed away in October 2015. I was told by my father I would be able to keep renting with no changes, although there will be a lien placed against the home for the medicaid expenses paid for her stay in the nursing home. He also told me I could change the rental agreement to a land contract and buy it if I decided to do that. I am wondering if Medicaid will really let me continue to pay the rent or proposed land contract payment, provided IF it goes directly to them and my life here with my daughter will go on unchanged, or is there any chances I am going to receive some notice the home must be put up for sale and purchased outright to pay off this lien. I am not in a situation to be able to get a home loan. Thank you for your advice
What is the house worth? Like what's the tax assessor value? Some states have MERP such that there needs to be a recoverable minimum of 10k to meet the cost benefit analysis for MERP to be done if estate goes through probate. Ask the attorney what cost benefit schedule MERP uses for your state.
Are you the direct heir? It could be an issue if you are not the heir as it may need for the direct heir to be low income to qualify for this exemption. Your state Medicaid program should have a FAQ on what MERP is and how exemptions & exclusions are to be done. Google this before the atty visit.
Also try to find out what types of probate are required for your state. Full probate has set time frames & requirements, I'd say 2-5K to start. But some states allow for small estates affidavit which is less costly. And other states allow for a muniment of title which is under 1k and could possibly work if all grannie had was the house & no debt and you can get a MERP release to enter with the muniment to get the house transferred to the heir.
Good luck & let us know what comes out of the meetings.
A lot depends on the State and their own rules for Medicaid.
Grannie died with an estate who has her home as an asset. This asset is subject to either a claim or lien against the estate by MERP. MERP is required to do an attempt to get the costs paid by Medicaid for grannies care reinbursed. How MERP is done will very much be interdependent on how MERP is done in your state (state employees do it or done by an outside contractor), what exemptions and exclusions and cost benefit analysis schedules are, and if probate is opened.
Your dad probably does not have the legal ability to guarantee selling the house to you. The house will have a claim or a lien on it that will have to be lifted to ever transfer legally to a new owner. House right now cannot be sold via a warranty deed & it is only by a WD that you can be secure in ownership. If dad tells you he will do a Quit Claim deed to you, well......he doesnt own the house, the estate owns it and if he is executor will need to go through some sort of probate process to be transferred. QCD only conveys what an individual thinks they own; which may or may not be full true & guaranteed ownership. Because of this, most banks will not do a mortgage or any equity lending on houses or land transferred by a QCD. Plus add in that the individual who owned the house is dead.The MERP claim or lien is still there on the property with interest which will keep you from ever owning it till that lien or claim is gone. The MERP claim or lein will come up in title search.
Now it is possible that you all can settle with MERP to get a release of its claim or lein. You need to find out what the MERP tally is and the value of the house as the basics in this process. If grannie was on a Medicaid program before she went into a NH, the costs paid by the state for that can be included in the MERP tally as well, so the final lein could be quite alot of $$$. NH medicaid reinbursement rates vary by state but average cost is $ 8,000.00 a month.
So:
- Did dad notify Medicaid that the house was rented & was the rental income properly used to either offset property cost or be paid towards grannies required copay or SOC ( share of cost ) to the NH? Your rent paid will also need to be included in the listing of estate assets for probate filing as well.
-Did grannie die with a valid will & is dad named executor?
If so, Has dad opened probate? If not, when does he plan to?
If no will, this is a a whole different sticky situation on dealing with the estate.
- Has dad or another family member received MERP's "letter of intent"? It will have the amount supposedly due to the state by the estate. If so, have they responded to its questionnairre? And have they filed any exclusions, exemptions or other interest in the property to MERP? The renting of the property is probably one of the ?'s in the packet from MERP.
- find the current tax assessor value of the property. Most places have tax assessor bills going out between now & december for a January due date. If value seems incorrect, then the executor probably should get a house inspection ($300/500) & an appraisal ($300/700) done as part of the probate process. if house has structural issues maybe an engineering report (1K) as well. these 3 need to be done by a registered, valid professional too. The value & comps done by a Realtor won't work to enter in probate (although these a terrific to have for an ideal of what house could sell for).
There are a whole lot of pieces that need to happen for you to legally own grannies house. I'd try to find out the answers to some of these before you get too into planning how your going to paint the house or in spending on any repairs.. States vary on length probate can run. Your living in the home during probate should not be an issue as an empty house can have its own problems.
There are a couple of folks on this site who deal with rental property & another is a Realtor who hopefully can provide details on how they've approached this.