Revealing Financial Accounts to Nursing Homes
I am in the process of placing my parent in a nursing home. Do I have to reveal any financial accounts that are listed in a revocable trust on the nursing home application? If not,is there a monthly maximum income amount I should be concerned with? And, does this amount represent all banking/savings etc accounts? (Parent doesn't have any stock and bond accounts, just one checking & one savings account.) If monthly income exceeds the maximum and parent is legally ruled incompatent, as the successor of Trust, can I withdraw funds from these accounts and transfer them into the trust? FYI:I do have all POA/Medical POA etc. in order. Also, before filling applications, should I set funds aside for prepaid funeral/burial expenses? And should this go into the trust? FYI: I don't have any siblings or other relatives who will contest any transfer of funds.
1 Answer from Attorneys
Re: Revealing Financial Accounts to Nursing Homes
If you are the successor trustee to a grantor trust that has provisions regardings incapacity of the grantor, you should be able to manage those assets previously transferred to the trust. If assets were never transferred, then the trust is unfunded and it may be too late for the "incapacitated person" to now make proper transfers to the trust. Any assets to which your father is legal owner would probably have to be disclosed. If you are talking about obtaining Medicaid Nursing Home benefits and required disclosures that is a different matter altogether.Typically when a guardianship is necessary any financial POA's are superceded by the guardianship. Again, whatever the trust is properly funded with before incapacity can be managed by the succesor trustee outside of any guardianship, i.e, without the involvment of the probate court. Further, your issues cannot be adequately answered without looking at the relevant documents.
Related Questions & Answers
-
Advanced estate planning protection from medicade Parents home value=$100,000. Tax... Asked 9/22/03, 10:58 pm in United States Texas Elder Law
-
55+ hud housing rules texas is winter residence a subdivision claims it is following... Asked 9/13/03, 9:30 pm in United States Texas Elder Law
-
Who has rights in this case? My father who is 65 had a stroke 14 years ago. Since... Asked 2/23/03, 8:49 pm in United States Texas Elder Law
-
Durable Power of Attorney and Guardianship Caretaker for 87 yr old grandmother 14... Asked 11/18/02, 1:50 am in United States Texas Elder Law
-
Power of attorney i need to get a power of attorney for my mother who has had a... Asked 12/03/01, 8:07 am in United States Texas Elder Law