Information
Everyone Should Know
Do
you own your home? Do you own it but
also carry a mortgage?
Do you hope to leave your family
home to a family member someday?
Do you now pay for
medical insurance? Have you ALWAYS
paid for medical insurance? If you
answered yes to that question this
information may not pertain to you.
However
if you now own a home, or own one with
a mortgage and have some equity, or
own a business, and DO NOT pay for
medical insurance, this is vital
information to know and research
about, in your own State.
People get jobs, buy
medical insurance, and buy homes.
Life changes may happen, jobs may be
lost, but they still maintain that
mortgage payment. Even if some have
to collect Social Security before
retirement age, most try to maintain
that mortgage payment and keep the
family homestead.
Now, If they are
collecting Social Security benefits
before retirement age, they may be
on their State's D.H.H.S. Medical
Program to help with Dr. visits and
hospital visits. Of course we are
"Forced" to have insurance. Many
join their State Medical Program to
show they have insurance and to
avoid that fine on their taxes each
year for not having insurance. But
no matter how difficult their lives
may be, they still make their
mortgage payments.
So
why does this matter? I have a friend,
who's been with my sister for 19
years. He is a self contractor who
installs carpets. I mention this only
because he filed taxes each year as a
carpet installer. They were never
married. He has a daughter that lived
with them both for many of those years
and is now in her early thirty's. Last
year they helped HER buy a house. Now,
he was working.. but hurting so he had
to collect Maine Care while he worked.
So when they went to apply for the
house, he kept that Estate Recovery
Agreement in the Maine Care Manual in
his mind. He made sure he had nothing
to do with the house... signature
wise. I checked the deed and the
mortgage paperwork, All in his
daughter's name.
I have to hand it to
him, he knew to do that for his
daughter. They all moved into the
new home and within a year he
started having serious medical
issues. He ended up needing a
pacemaker. So that was done. Then
covid hit.
He was considered "high
risk" his Dr. told him and scheduled
him an appointment for the vaccine
shot. I drove up to see them both to
show them why they should not take
the vaccine but his Dr. knew better
than my proof. They both took the
first shot. I went back up and tried
again that very morning of their
second appointment. He went anyway
and took my sister with him. I have
his vaccination card and his death
certificate. He died 30 days after
the second Pfizer Shot of Myocardial
Infraction, heart disease.
So while I'm going
through bills for Probate Court, his
daughter gets a claim in for
$386,051.93 dollars
from the State for Maine.
This bill was the full amount that
Mainecare had paid out for Walter's
many surgeries, while on Mainecare.
That is not a
misprint! Close to Four Hundred
Thousand Dollars.
Why would they send
that? I believe they think he owned
a Carpet Business, which he did not.
It was just him and my sister.
However, even if he didn't own a
business... If he had owned a home,
this would still be in play. The
State wanted his "home" that he
didn't "own."
That didn't happen in probate court,
once the deed was shown.
I have an ex-wife, who's brother was
in a bad accident. He took his very
large settlement and paid cash for
his house. When he passed away he
left the house to his sister. She
has $3,000.00 a year in taxes to
pay. The house is all paid for.
However, she is also on Social
Security and has been on Maine Care
for years. She has been in and out
of the hospital for years with
several operations. With the cost of
hospital visits I can imagine how
much she may owe Mainecare. I'm
thinking enough to take her home.
She is still alive and on Mainecare
for her COPD and breathing issues.
So who really owns her house?
She thought she'd
leave it to her grand children. She
will, we'll fix that. But her issue
is easy. All paid for home. Put
another name on the deed, take yours
off as soon as you can. The Maine
manual asks "Have you given away
anything in the past three months?"
However, In Maine There
Is A FIVE YEAR LOOK BACK.
I am assuming
anything you may do has to be done
at least five years before you pass
on, so time is important.
I have helped several
family members and friends with
Probate court after a loved one has
passed. I have learned a lot, but
never enough. To be honest every
case was different and this is the
first time I have heard of the State
sending a bill to the person taking
care of the will. I wondered why.
My
mother knew. She was on Housing,
Mainecare and Social Security but gave
us whatever items each of us wanted,
two years before she passed. She had
no will. She knew of that Estate
clause. It said they could lock us out
until inventory was taken. She was on
housing so perhaps they could. That
was probably in case she collected
Picasso's I told her. That never
happened but who knew? She didn't own
anything. They knew that. No bill was
ever sent to us.
My mother-in-law passes.
She was a nurse for many years. She
too ended up on Social Security,
Mainecare and Housing. No bill was
ever sent.
No house, no business
and the State Of Maine knew that.
But with Walt, better be
sure he didn't own a business.
If you look at the
manual, You start to think that it
was written to systematically take
every homeowner's property as soon
as the person in the home, who it is
willed to or later purchased by,
falls into the Maine Care scheme.
So please take a look at
the Maine Estate Recovery Manual I
have on these pages. My website
pages have JPG's for the manual
pages but you can print off a copy
in PDF form if you'd like. The Link
will be on each page.
Estate Recovery - How It Works
If your not from Maine,
I would bet your own State's Estate
Recovery Manual is not much
different. I would check and ask for
a copy.
I wish I knew how to
show you how to save your homes. I
guess a real estate Attorney might
know.
If you own it you
should be able to replace the name
on the deed. Remember to let the
family members know how to keep
their home and pass it down, in case
Social Security happens early in
life for them.
I
did help a friend who had a brother
and mother, living in the same home.
When she died I asked him how his
bother got the house. He told me she
had him put on the deed. When she
passed, he automatically owned the
house. However, he was a vet and had
medical insurance through the
VA. When he passed away, I
learned a bit more.
For example: He had
taken a loan out from his Credit
Union to remodel the bathroom. He
was in a wheel chair now and needed
that done. So that was done and a
loan amount was owed. His younger
brother stopped in to let the Credit
Union know his brother had passed
away.
Imagine their surprise
when they found out later, the
Credit Union took all their loan
money from his checking account that
very day, leaving nothing in his
account! So I guess that can happen.
Do not notify the Bank or Credit
Union until your ready to make
decisions on any money in the
accounts.
Probate Costs. Here in
Maine they are 10% of the total
amount you put down that the
deceased has left behind. Probate
asked if his brother owned a house,
we said yes. The cost of the probate
filing was thousands of dollars. I
spoke up and said, "wait a minute..
the bank really owns it." There is
no equity left. That helped. We came
up with a couple of thousand in
equity, which cost hundreds instead
of thousands to file in Probate
Court. Was that a win? Not Really.
He had to pay from his own pocket
due to having no money in his
brother's Credit Union Account.
So his poor brother had
to wait until the house was sold
before they could afford to place
him in the ground. He sold the
house. Think he made $6,000.00 off
the sale, which was used to take
care of his brothers remains. I
Never asked why the VA didn't step
in.
It
was a learning experience. Check
with your own DHHS Office for
a copy of their Medicaid Estate
Recovery.
Please Share This Information With
Your Family Members and Friends.
Q - WHICH STATES
HAVE MEDICARE ESTATE RECOVERY?
A - ALL STATES
I Notice The "Fact Checks" All Say
"Don't Worry, They Won't
Take Your Home." That Is FALSE.
If A Person Passes, They Will File In
Probate And Wait. They Wait Until ALL
The People
On The Deed Have Died. Then They
React.
Click To See Maine's
Estate Recovery Manual

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