My mom became paralyzed from a inner brain stroke and she had transferred her home to me to protect her from any liens,etc at her request. She continues to have small strokes. I also had served as her Power of attorney and now she want the home returned back in her name.
No family member wants to care for her and this is the only place she will have to live out her last days. Because she had no where else to go I became her caretaker for the last 2 years without a salary. I need some insight.
Since Mom's had some strokes/tias,
she may not be thinking clearly--very common--in fact, usual, after strokes, to have flawed reasoning.
Her [normal] fears of losing all her autonomy seem to be speaking, not reason/logic.
She made a good, rational, thought-out decision by transferring her home to you, and setting up Legal documents putting you in legal charge of her affairs.
THIS is EXACTLY what she was protecting herself and you by doing--preventing her post-stroke illogic/fear from losing what she worked hard to build over her life.
By transferring her home to you, she was protecting it for her family's sake.
I like the idea of making a document that simply guarantees her ability to stay in her home, regardless of title, until she cannot be in it any longer
---but not "until death", because none can make a promise like that
---she may need hospitalization for a time, prior to her death.
She may not fully understand that document, either--related to her stroke mentality.
Might also speak with her Doctor, to see if he will declare her unfit to handle business It kinda sounds like it, UNLESS she has other rational reasons for wanting to transfer it back.
Have you simply asked your Mother why she wants the title back?
Just curious.
You didn't actually say that you live in the house with your mom. If so, then you may well qualify for this exception.
Why is this important? Again, as others have said, if your mother dies in a nursing home having been a Medicaid recipient, the state must by law file a claim against her estate. Since her only asset will be the home, it will either have to be sold to pay back the state its claim (for the dollar amount of nursing home expenses your mother incurred during her lifetime) or family members will have to pay the state, if they wish to keep the house.
Note that even if you don't qualify for the Caretaker Child exception, if your mother is able to wait to apply for Medicaid for five years from the date she signed the deed into your name, the transfer will also not count against her.
For those who didn't plan years and years ahead, how your state does probate is critical to how much exposure you or your parent have within MERP. All states have exemptions (which MUST be filed for after death) to MERP: 2 year caregiver; handicapped child; family biz on property; family farm; family who live in the house would be on another gov't housing program if they house gets sold; all & every cost to maintaining empty home, etc. There are many exemptions. But again, you have to file for them.What seems to happen is the MERP program sends whoever is the assigned representative a letter stating that MERP is applicable and then requests that if you have an exemption, you HAVE TO FILE FOR IT to be reviewed by MERP. Some states have it set in state law that the baseline homestead exemption and below is not subject to MERP - MS has something like this and it's set @ about 75K. Other states seem to have policy that MERP doesn't to a recovery of a home under a set amount. MERP is a legal process and they (MERP) really have to determine whether or not to even proceed with the claim or lein against the house in the first place. The steps to do it against a 80K house is the same as a 380K house. I know where I'd spend my valuable time, but this is the gov't so maybe not.
Yes, you can place the property in a legal vehicle that removes it from probate - like a trust or move into an LLC or sell/transfer to family member. But you have to make sure that whatever you do will pass Medicaid review in your state. Some trusts only are viable in some states - like Lady Bird Trust. Some states view any trust not done past 5 years prior (aka "look-back") as reason to have the NH applicant ineligible for Medicaid payment. Other states don't. State law and regulations rule in all this. Imho, an experienced elder care attorney who practices in the county where the property is located is essential in all this
Whether your state does probate as a lein or a claim will make a big difference too.
If your state is a claim probate state, then claims have to be presented and filed. There has to be 3 notices in the paper on this. How your state does claims also makes a difference. For example, TX is a level of claim probate state. Items are paid by claim level starting with Class 1. MERP is a class 7 claim in TX, so the MERP recovery rates are much lower than in other states where it is an equal claim or a lein on the property. Credit cards are a class 8 claim - so good luck Capital One on that! MERP still happens in TX and TX has moved to a contractor (HMS) to do MERP, so recovery rates will likely increase as HMS seems to act as a debt collection agency. My point is your state law makes a big butt difference.
Planning ahead in all financial is ideal. But for most of us, the whole momma needs a nursing home is emergency incident related, when momma has a fall and can't realistically go back home to live on her own. Planning is just not done.
One thing to think about is if there isn't the time to do advance planning or changes that will work in your state, is to see if your parent has a will. If they don't, then they are considered to have died intestate. Some state, like TX, have law so that any and all properties of the intestate deceased are owned by the state. And the heirs have to prove and provide documentation for lineal heirship afterwards. For those that get stuck in this mire and still had a home or assets and were on Medicaid, in these types of states, the state can really be more aggressive in recovery as they are the placeholder of the assets.
Personally, I think as states are facing horrendous shortfalls, the rules on MERP will change and along with that the till-they-die exempt status on homes will change. For us in our 40"s, 50"s & 60's, it's not too early to plan.
Obviously something has her worried about the house. You can continue to put her off and suffer her obsession on the matter, or you can try to find out why she feels this way and talk it out. Good luck!
Perhaps the two of you can visit again with the attorney who put the house in your name, and he or she can explain why that was/is a good plan, and also take care of the part officially giving mother the right to live in the house for the rest of her life. This would be a good time, too, to arrange for a payment for your caregiving and perhaps a back payment for the last two years, IF she has the means to do that. It would be to her advantage if she ever has to apply for Medicaid. You are not exploiting her -- you are giving up a lot to care for her and you are entitled to some compensation (if she can afford it).
Good luck!
Perhaps a legal and binding document granting her residence for the duration of her life would satisfy her.
Additionally, talk to your local Medicaid office. If your state has an Elderly Waiver program, you may be able to be paid a stipend for your mother's care.
I wish you the best of luck.