Kan. Admin. Regs. § 129-6-57 - Transfer of assets
(a)
Definitions. For purposes of this regulation, each of the following terms shall
have the meaning specified in this regulation:
(1) "Assets" means all income and resources
of the individual and the individual's spouse, including any income or
resources that the individual or the individual's spouse is entitled to but
does not receive because of action by any of the following:
(A) The individual or the individual's
spouse;
(B) a person, including a
court or administrative body, with legal authority to act in place of or on
behalf of the individual or the individual's spouse; or
(C) any person, including any court or
administrative body, acting at the direction or upon the request of the
individual or the individual's spouse.
(2) "Compensation" means all money, real or
personal property, food, shelter, or service received by the individual or
spouse at or after the time of transfer in exchange for the asset in question.
A service received shall be considered compensation only if the service is
provided under the terms of a legally enforceable agreement to provide the
service in exchange for the assets in question and if the terms are established
before delivery of the service. Payment or assumption of a legal debt owned by
the individual or spouse in exchange for the asset shall be deemed
compensation.
(3) "Fair market
value" means the market value of an asset at the earlier of the time of the
transfer or the contract of sale. Current market value shall be determined in
accordance with K.A.R. 129-6-106(b).
(4) "Institutionalized individual" means an
applicant or recipient who meets any of the following conditions:
(A) Is residing in a nursing
facility;
(B) is residing in a
medical institution that is providing the individual with a level of care
equivalent to the care provided by a nursing facility;
(C) is residing in an HCBS living
arrangement; or
(D) is
participating in PACE.
(5) "Transfer of assets" means any transfer
or assignment of any legal or equitable interest in any asset that partially or
totally passes the use, control, or ownership of the asset of an applicant or
recipient, or the spouse of an applicant or recipient, to another person or
corporation, including any of the following:
(A) Giving away an interest in an
asset;
(B) placing an interest in
an asset in a trust that is not available to the grantor;
(C) removing or eliminating an interest in a
jointly owned asset in favor of other owners;
(D) disclaiming an inheritance of any
property, interest, or right;
(E)
failing to take a share of an estate as a surviving spouse; or
(F) transferring or disclaiming the right to
income not yet received.
(6) "Uncompensated value" means the fair
market value of an asset less the amount of any compensation received by the
individual or spouse in exchange for the asset.
(b) Ineligibility for payment of services. If
an individual or spouse has transferred or disposed of assets for less than
fair market value on or after the specified look-back date as determined by the
date of transfer, the individual shall not be eligible for payment of services
for any institutionalized individual as specified in paragraphs (a)(4)(A)
through (D).
(c) Exempted
transfers. An individual shall not be ineligible for payment of services due to
a transfer of assets in any of the following circumstances:
(1) The fair market value of the assets
transferred has been received.
(2)
A written request to transfer the assets has been submitted by the individual
and approved by the secretary before the date of the transfer.
(3) The transfer has been executed pursuant
to the division of assets provisions of K.A.R. 129-6-106.
(4) A transfer of an interest in the
individual's home has been made to any of the following, as determined by the
interest conveyed:
(A) The spouse of the
individual;
(B) a child of the
individual who is under the age of 21 or who meets the blindness or disability
criteria of K.A.R. 129-6-85;
(C) a
sibling of the individual who has an equity interest in the home and who was
residing in the home for at least one year immediately before the date the
individual entered an institutional or HCBS arrangement; or
(D) a child of the individual, other than the
child described in paragraph (c)(4)(B), who was residing in the home for at
least two years immediately before the date the individual entered an
institutional or HCBS arrangement and who provided care to the individual that
permitted the individual to reside at home.
(5) The assets have been transferred to any
of the following:
(A) The individual's spouse
or to another individual for the sole benefit of the individual's
spouse;
(B) the institutionalized
individual's child who meets the blindness or disability criteria of K.A.R.
129-6-85 or a trust established solely for the benefit of the child;
or
(C) a trust established solely
for the benefit of an individual under 65 years of age who meets the blindness
or disability criteria of K.A.R. 129-6-85.
(6) A transfer of assets has been made, and a
satisfactory showing that the individual intended to dispose of the assets at
fair market value, for other valuable consideration, or exclusively for a
purpose other than to qualify for medicaid has been established. The following
criteria shall be used to establish a satisfactory showing:
(A) A record of the facts, in chronological
order, related to each transfer of assets within the applicable look-back
period shall be assembled; and
(B)
a transfer of assets for less than fair market value shall be presumed to have
been for the purpose of establishing or maintaining medicaid eligibility,
unless the individual presents clear and convincing evidence that the transfer
was exclusively for some other purpose. The burden shall be on the individual
to rebut this presumption by furnishing clear and convincing evidence that the
asset was transferred exclusively for some other purpose. A signed statement by
the individual shall not be, by itself, clear and convincing evidence. Each
transfer shall be considered in the light of the circumstances at the time the
transfer was made. The total amount of the transfer shall be considered in
proportion to the length of the interval between the date of the transfer and
the date of the application for medical assistance. In addition, the following
factors shall be taken into account:
(i)
Whether the transfer was ordered by the court and neither the individual, the
spouse, the conservator, the guardian, the beneficiary of the transfer, nor
anyone else acting in their legal authority or direction took action to
effectuate the transfer; and
(ii)
whether the individual could not have anticipated the need for medical
assistance at the time of transfer due to an unexpected event occurring after
the transfer that resulted in the traumatic onset of disability or blindness,
the diagnosis of a previously undetected disability, or the loss of other
income or resources, completely outside of the control of the individual or
spouse, that would have otherwise precluded medical eligibility.
(7) The transferred
asset has been returned to the individual or has been made available for use by
the individual or spouse.
(d) Look-back date. The look-back date shall
mean the earliest date on which a penalty for transferring assets for less than
fair market value can be assessed, as specified in this subsection. A penalty
shall be assessed for all transfers by the individual or the individual's
spouse that take place on or after the look-back date. A penalty shall not be
assessed for any transfers that take place before the look-back date.
(1) For transfers of assets before February
8, 2006, multiple transfers that occur within a single month shall be treated
as a single transfer. The look-back date shall be either of the following:
(A) 60 months before the date the individual
received or was otherwise eligible to receive institutional care or HCBS and
has applied for medical assistance in the case of payment from a trust or
portions of a trust that are treated as assets disposed of by the individual as
specified in K.A.R. 129-6-109(c)(1) and (2); or
(B) 36 months before the date the individual
received or was otherwise eligible to receive institutional care or HCBS and
has applied for medical assistance in the case of all other transfers of
assets.
(2) For
transfers of assets on and after February 8, 2006, multiple transfers that
occur within a single month shall be treated as a single transfer. The
look-back date shall be the date that is 60 months before the date the
individual received or was otherwise eligible to receive institutional care or
HCBS and has applied for medical assistance.
(e) Transfer period of ineligibility. If the
individual or spouse has transferred assets for less than fair market value,
the individual shall not be eligible for the services specified in paragraphs
(a)(4)(A) through (D), as follows:
(1) For
transfers before February 8, 2006, the penalty period shall be equal to the
number of months calculated by taking the total cumulative uncompensated value
of the assets transferred by the individual or spouse on or after the look-back
date, divided by $4,000.
(2) For
transfers on and after February 8, 2006, the penalty period shall be equal to
the number of days calculated by taking the total cumulative uncompensated
value of the assets transferred by the individual or spouse on or after the
look-back date, divided by the average daily private-pay cost of nursing
facilities in the state in effect on the date the penalty begins. The average
daily private-pay cost shall be determined at least annually based on the rates
reported by the nursing facilities and compiled by department for aging and
disability services.
(f)
Penalty start date.
(1) The date on which the
penalty period begins shall be determined by the date of the transfer, as
follows:
(A) For transfers before February 8,
2006, the penalty start date shall be the first day of the month in which the
transfer occurred for applicants and no later than the second month following
the month of transfer for recipients giving timely and adequate notice as
defined in K.A.R. 129-7-65.
(B) For
transfers on and after February 8, 2006, the penalty start date shall be the
later of the following:
(i) For applicants,
the later of the following: the first day of the month in which the transfer
occurred or the first day on which the individual is eligible for medical
assistance based on an application for medical assistance and is receiving
institutional care or would be receiving HCBS but for the application of the
penalty period; and
(ii) for
recipients giving timely and adequate notice as defined in K.A.R. 129-7-65, no
later than the second month following the month of transfer.
(2) Separately
established penalty periods shall be served consecutively. Once the penalty
period is imposed, the period shall not be interrupted or suspended even if the
individual no longer receives institutional care or HCBS.
(3) If the spouse of the individual transfers
an asset that results in a penalty period and that spouse is subsequently
institutionalized and is determined otherwise eligible for medical assistance,
the remaining penalty period shall be divided between the spouses.
(g) Hardship waiver.
(1) A penalty period shall be initially
waived or suspended if the imposition of the penalty period would cause an
undue hardship on the individual. To cause an "undue hardship" on the
individual shall mean to deprive the individual of either of the following:
(A) Medical care to the extent that the
individual's health or life would be endangered; or
(B) food, clothing, shelter, or other
necessities of life to the extent that the individual would be at risk of
serious harm.
(2) Undue
hardship shall not exist if the application of a penalty period merely causes
an individual or any individual's family members inconvenience or restricts
their lifestyle. Undue hardship shall not exist if the individual transferred
the assets to the spouse and the spouse refuses to cooperate in making the
resources available to the individual.
(3)
(A) Any
individual claiming undue hardship may submit a written request to the
department at any time during the penalty period. The request shall include a
description of the undue hardship along with evidence to support the
claim.
(B) The facility in which
the individual resides shall obtain written consent from the individual or the
individual's personal representative in order to assert a claim of undue
hardship on behalf of the individual and provide supporting information on
behalf of the individual.
Notes
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