My husband was donated a house from an uncle (whom never had kids) in 2014 in La. Husband sold house in 2015. Uncle was in nursing home with Medicaid from 2014 - 2017 (died 3/17). Medicaid sent a letter addressed to me (I have nothing to do with it, my name isn't on anything) saying I owe 52,000 for estate recovery. There is no estate and my name wasn't on anything. The family lawyer in La. said do nothing with this letter, they shouldn't have sent it to me. Is this correct?
your husband in good faith did not know that Medicaid was involved - but that does not matter for MERP recovery.
Hubs Uncle does have an Estate. By Uncle Boudreaux’s dying it creates an “estate of”. Estate could have zero assets, so nothing happens. For hubs, Aunts Estate should have gone through a legal process to distribute her assets. How her will reads is very important and distribution needed to follow her valid will and dealt with in probate or surviving spouse affidavit. His ownership % of the assets after death will be very important. Something did not happen correctly for her estate OR the records state or its Medicaid contractor is looking at are not complete. You need to find out what the issue is as it’s not going to just vaporize.
The letter you’ve gotten is it from LA DeptHHS or from HMS?
Is it a NOI (notice of intent) or collection letter? I kinda doubt it’s an NOI as just too much time has lapsed since transfer or death. But if so, NOI must be responded to & there will be a tight timeframe for this. If purely a collection letter, then someone was sent NOI & the followup MERP Letters in the past and ignored it, so debt is considered valid. Who would have gotten the NOI? What has likely happened is State or its outside contractor has assigned debt to hubs & as it’s a community property state, to you!
- So, is it actually to you - not just sent to you like “attention or C/O Jane Guidry Boudreaux”? Reread the letter very carefully. Was it sent to you but actually the notice is to the estate of hubs uncle Boudreaux, so your just a c/o?
It makes a difference but whichever it is, still has to be dealt with. That “family lawyer” who told you to ignore it is flat out wrong..... perchance did this very same ”family lawyer” deal with Uncles property “donation” in 2014? If so, & knew Medicaid was involved, very bad advice given & that’s another issue...
-So back in 2014, who did Uncle Boudreaux’s Medicaid application?
-Whose name did state of LA Medicaid have on file for contact for Uncle?
-Who did Uncle Boudreauxs Medicaid renewals?
-Who got NOI?
-Property “donation” LOL - it’s gifting of an asset no matter what it’s called - so what’s the backstory...... who was Uncle Boudreauxs DPOA? Again was the “family atty” involved? Who signed off paperwork on gifting of house? Who filed documents at courthouse? Was it hubs? So he gifted to himself? Then did Hubs sell house FMV via Realtor with MLS listing & title insurance by buyers OR did hubs do sale within family/friend type of special sale so pretty casual paperwork? Was it done via Warranty Deed or QCD? All are details mucho importante.
-Sale $$$ went where?
State of LA is terrible financially due to the Jindal years. (I’m in NOLA & mil was on Medicaid, Medicaid in LA is slow but reviews deep). State must look for $ from all sources. Outside contractor if at that point will act like traditional debt collectors.
No matter how you spin this......The facts are that actions inappropriate were done with Uncle Boudreaux assets under the terms of State of Louisiana Medicaid compliance rules. State views that Uncle Boudreaux had his full or partial share owned house -an asset - gifted and all done within the same year 2014 that Medicaid applied for. Louisiana medicaid application is pretty clear on asset disposition and MERP. State can affix responsibility onto others and has more than likely been slogging along this process since 2015 renewal review. Now state has found you -as wife- to possibly be responsible for debt. This stuff snowballs as once it’s going, the state can attach tax refund, APS asked to do “vulnerable adult” review, etc. Honey, my suggestion is that you asap after Mardi Gras meet with an atty that specializes in Medicaid and probably a firm that has guys that actually do litigation. Sher Cahill in NOLA does speciality estate, Medicaid & Medicare work, they are a top notch firm imo. I’m sure there’s others in the state.
Also have ❤️ to 💜 with hubs as to what exactly done. Trust but verify. Good luck.
By his application for Medicaid, state has ability to place lien on assets. How it’s done depends on state laws for property rights. By however done upon death lien becomes a claim against the estate. The amount would be for whatever State of LA has a the Medicaid tally for uncle but based on % ownership of asset. So if $110k medicaid total, & if hubs owned 50% share, it’s $55k. With Interest too,
By the state having lien placement ability, the property - In theory- cannot be sold with clear title. But if will / transfer / sale / medicaid application all together with short time frame, something fell though a crack. But property details eventually will surface. State, I’d bet, is viewing house as Uncle Boudreaux’s with the sale hubs did as totally invalid transfer as lien was not cleared and that property still owned by Uncle as that is what will stated.
Please tell me it was sold via Warranty Deed & with title insurance....
I hope there was a probate atty involved in all this & they have insurance. MERP is nothing new. Probate attys know about Recovery.
This type of ? has come up on this site before. Usually it’s that a maiden Auntie or batchelor Brother has died. And within their will have left $ or assets to their now living in a NH and on Medicaid elderly sibling. The now on Medicaid sibling cannot refuse the value of the asset as it’s legally their asset so if they decline their giving / gifting it away to whomever is next on the estates distribution list. Gifting not allowed by Medicaid. How to deal with it & be compliant for Medicaid is complicated but can be done if before distribution if planned imo.
But for you all, it’s way way after the fact. I’m sticking with you need to find your own experienced with MERP atty to deal with this. Hopefully they can get it settled with you & hubs “hold harmless” agreement & equitably for all (including whomever bought house). Good luck and let us know what happens. We all learn from each other.
2. Based on the dates you provided (mostly just the year) it sounds like perhaps uncle filed for and got Medicaid before the aunt's death,in which case Medicaid would not know about the house/ownership. It also takes time for wills to process through probate, so again, delay.
As others have noted, Medicaid is really not well-funded and will seek any reimbursement it can get, and this is just. Since you say the will left the house to uncle, but he "gave" it to your husband, as others said this is considered "gifting" and that is not allowed - there is a 5 year look-back initially for any gifting, and that can delay or negate Medicaid funds. In this case it sounds like the "gifting" slipped through the cracks because uncle was already in the system, however they can do this look-back AND require the funds be paid back. Any assets (there are rules for current spouses so as not to leave them destitute) are to be used BEFORE Medicaid pays their share. In the case of a house with no living spouse, if they know about it typically they will put a lien on it and recover the funds when it is sold.
As comments suggest - find a well-versed attorney!!
Or, perhaps you can call your accountant for advice - sometimes you just have to show papers - like Probate or something similar.
But definitely call an expert. This is not the time to post here - this is the time to find someone truly competent in these matters. You can even call Medicaid for advice and ask them what they need to prove you haven't stolen anything from them.
I saw the name and said huh? But like you, I just figured it was used to ID the uncle and.. being from Louisiana... for all we know his name was Ichabod!
There are also acronyms sometimes used that I am not familiar with. Some I can figure it out from the context, some I can look it up, other ones... don't know what it is, but it didn't seem to be important to the question at hand or the answer needed! If it is, ask - someone will give us a hint or tell us!
I've notice the federal government likes to put everything into three or four words, and then use the abbreviation or preferably an acronym. This is a way to make the simple things more complicated and abstruse. I was once mentioning this to a few people in my lab, and pointed to a fan and said "this wouldn't be called a fan but an 'air recirculating device' or 'ARD' " to make it sound official and thus more important (and then justify being more expensive!).
1. A house/property is protected under certain instances (spouse, disabled child, etc) but after the conditions are removed (death of spouse, person(s) move out, etc, that house becomes fair game. Other assets may also be protected, until death of the principle.
2. While Medicaid is a Federally provided service, states manage it and EVERY state has DIFFERENT rules
3. Sometimes recovery is waived, when it is not fiscally prudent to attempt (cost to recover exceeds yielded result)
4. Inheritance by a Medicaid recipient IS fair game.
5. Medicaid cannot ask for survivors to pay from their OWN assets (exception is based on #4)
Number 4 fits into this scenario asked about. The uncle was named as beneficiary of the aunt's home. If he waived this inheritance, it WILL be viewed as "gifting" and Medicaid can and likely will attempt recovery as generally a home has some wealth associated with it. There are rules about who recovers first (any mortgage, RE taxes, other debts, liens, etc), but after those are met, if there is any residual value left, Medicaid will likely attempt recovery. Don't discount them - this is not social services, Medicaid is a different animal! As I mentioned in a previous post, this may have initially slipped through the cracks, depending on when he applied/was approved for Medicaid and when the aunt passed away, as well as when the probate on the home was completed (it can take a year or more, depending on how complicated things are.) However, they can and do continue to monitor assets and income beyond the initial application and approval process. Despite the fact that the "assets" (money left over after the sale of the home) are now in OP's family, by law those assets *should* have been used for uncle first, so in this case I think Medicaid has the right to request reimbursement. I cannot say why the wife, not the husband, was contacted, however as others said, community property might apply, and any debt or windfall a person receives can be considered owned by a spouse as well (not so much an ex-spouse.) Skip-tracing uses methods to locate someone who has defaulted on payments, and I have been called about medical payments incurred by a former DIL - haven't seen her or talked to her in years, don't know where she is and this is NOT my problem!!! Medicaid probably uses similar methods to track down assets like these, and somewhere along the line the wife's name was used OR she was located by association.
The following is very long and detailed but it does discuss some of this. aspe.hhs.gov/basic-report/medicaid-estate-recovery
Note it is a Federal website: U.S. Department of Health & Human Services so it does cover a lot of the legal issues (but again, states have their OWN rules based on the Federal guidelines.)
What I did read in this and other legal websites makes perfect sense - let's make a hypothetical case:
* parent becomes unable to care for him/herself and must go to a nursing home (or other Medicaid covered facility, such as AL)
* parent has NO assets (no home, very little savings, relies on SS and possibly a small pension)
* parent applies for/is accepted under Medicaid rules. SS and pension, if applicable, MUST be used to pay for a portion of the cost
* Medicaid pays for the remainder of costs
* long lost cousin of parent dies and leaves assets to parent (does not matter what kind of assets or who left them)
Based on the reading, these assets MUST be used to pay for the current month, and possibly more - one needs LEGAL assistance at this point! In the case of property, like a house, it will take some time to wind through probate and sale, but in the meantime Medicaid can put a lien on the property, to recover funds after all the legal issues are completed. If this transfer of the house, as I noted here and previously, happened at a certain time when Medicaid would not "see" it, does not make it impervious to recovery. Medicaid will monitor the situation and will likely eventually see transactions like these. It is within their legal right to recovery.
This makes perfect sense to me. If parent was destitute, but suddenly receives a windfall (it could even be the surviving spouse's protected assets, if the spouse dies first), THOSE assets should be used to cover the costs of care (exclusion, in some cases, are assets that are protected in trusts, etc, but in my brief reading it seems like in some states even those could become fair game.) If it was a few hundred dollars, Medicaid is probably not going to bother (but one never knows until it happens!) With a house or substantial monetary assets (cash, stocks, other property, etc), Medicaid can and likely will seek to recoup costs from those assets, even after the death of the Medicaid recipient. OP mentions $52k, so yes, Medicaid IS going to want to try to recoup that!
I would still *HIGHLY* recommend the OP (and anyone else who has a similar scenario) to seek appropriate legal advice!!! Those who are saying they cannot come after your assets to pay for uncle's stay, no, not YOUR assets, but in this case they WERE really his, even if he waived his right to the property. If it was properly done, it would have passed to him first, making it HIS asset.
GO GET LEGAL ADVICE!!! As someone else recommended, I would let the attorney work with Medicaid - do not call them directly!!
" Federal policy defers to states regarding how they track or monitor assets that pass to protected relatives in cases where the State retains its right to future recoveries from Medicaid recipients survivors."
Note "track", "monitor" and "right to future recoveries", so there is no olly olly oxen free here....
Disgustedtoo - totally imo, it’s #4 on your list. That’s my vote.
OP wrote that her hubs Aunt owned a house that was to be inherited by Aunts will to her estranged husband (who I called Uncle Boudreaux). Aunt will has it as Uncles inherited asset & he could have kept it under Medicaid rules as an exempt asset. But Uncle Boudreaux didn’t. Boo passed his ownership of the exempt asset to Auntie’s nephew & LisaAnnB’s husband, as that’s who Aunt wanted to inherit if both her & Uncle were deceased. Somehow in a short 2014 timespan there was application, property transfer & sale, probate / spousal affidavit, death, etc. State records didn’t dovetail all the info till probably 2015. Uncle Boudreauxs transfer of the house - which by doing this makes it a non exempt asset for Medicaid- finally surfaced. House cannot be properly transferred (sold) as there is a cloud on the title due to the ability of Medicaid to place a lien on property. As far as Medicaid is concerned there is no valid sale. Medicaid has a claim against the estate of uncle Boudreaux. House was his asset. Medicaid is following the $$$ and it lands at Lisa AnnBs mailbox.
For the buyer of Aunts house, all this could be a problem. That’s why I asked if the house was sold sold via Warranty Deed (as those usually almost always have title insurance). If it’s a Quit Claim Deed, there could be a clusterF on it to deal with. If LisaAnnBs hubs did it as a QCD, issue is QCD does not guaranteed ownership.
What’s so crazy in all this is that IF they would have just let empty house be and stay in Uncles name, then get inherited via Uncle Boudreauxs probate to hubs, Louisiana probably would have taken a pass on Recovery. (I’m assuming property value is low like under 50 - 75k; Uncle Boo did not have a M+ home in Old Metairie or Uptown NOLA but was like most elderly with an old house under 100k assessor value but with decades of delayed maintenance). The required cost benefit evaluation on Recovery for a old property would likely deem it not worthwhile to do Recovery especially if heirs open probate. Totally up to each state to determine what the tipping point is for doing Recovery beyond the federal 3k/10k rule. Mississippi has 65k-85k as theirs for Recovery. & it makes sense as time & costs are the same for state or its outside contractor for a 35k property or one worth 350k. I know which I’d spent time on.
LisaAnnB can you update us on what’s what? Thanks!
Best of luck with finding a good knowledgeable party and putting this to bed.
Before you contact an elder law attorney, have the family lawyer in LA explain to you (fully, including case law) why you can ignore the letter. If you are able to confirm what he says, that may be all you need.
Here's what I know about lawsuits (I'm a native NY-er, I know *a lot about lawsuits): in order to sue someone, there has to be something to attach, a house, an insurance policy. This house has passed through 2 hands since your uncle was approved for Medicaid. It's over. Your husbands sale of the house was legal. That's why buyers get an attorney and pay for a title search when they buy a house. Title search has to have come back clean or it would have stopped the sale. It's over. The funds may or may not be gone right now, but regardless, you can't attach someone's bank account. It's over. Medicaid obviously did not do their due diligence with regard to the gift and frankly, that's too bad for them.
The more I think about this, the more ludicrous it sounds. You do not *owe Medicaid anything. And there's nothing they can legally do about it!
I agree with the poster who said this may well be a scam!