(a)
Acknowledgment of liability. Acknowledgment of liability will
be as follows:
(1)
General.
Liability for reimbursement will be as follows:
(i) Liability for reimbursement will not be
dependent upon agreement by the debtor. Action to protect or collect could be
delayed until the obligor leaves the assistance rolls or the asset is
converted. This delay, however, would increase the amount of the claim by
adding cost of the court suit and the like. In addition, the Commonwealth would
collect fewer claims because the assets could be spent before collection, and
uniformity of treatment could not be assured.
(ii) To avoid the publicity and additional
costs imposed on a former recipient or his estate by court action, and to
assure equal treatment, persons who are liable for reimbursement will be
required to acknowledge in writing at the time of application their liability
for reimbursement. If property is real estate, this acknowledgment will be
recorded at the courthouse and become a lien against the real estate owned by
the signers. If the property owned is personal, the acknowledgment may transfer
the title to the Commonwealth.
(iii) Only owners of property which is liable
for reimbursement will be required to sign acknowledgments of liability. The
liability of the property may be for assistance to the owner, to his relatives,
or both, in accordance with §
257.21 (relating to policy). If
property which is liable because assistance was received by the owner or his
relatives, is sold or transferred, the new owner may be asked to acknowledge
the liability of the former owner or he may be asked to agree to have his name
included as a judgment debtor if settlement of the claim is to be postponed.
Other actions will be possible when owners change and the county office should
notify the area office when it learns of the transfer of property which is
liable for reimbursement. The area office will take any action
necessary.
(iv) Although there will
be no liability for reimbursement of Blind Pension, a blind pensioner who is
liable for repayment of AFDC or GA received by his relatives in accordance with
§
257.21 will be required to
acknowledge the liability of his property in the same way as a nonapplicant
obligor.
(2)
Acknowledgment by applicant and recipient. Acknowledgment of
liability for an applicant or recipient will be obtained as follows:
(i)
Applicant.
Acknowledgment of liability for an applicant will be as follows:
(A) When it is known that there is
reimbursable property, the person, whether or not an applicant, who is liable
for reimbursement must sign the proper acknowledgment of liability for future
assistance before he or his spouse or unemancipated minor children living with
him can be considered eligible for assistance.
(B) A person who was liable and who had not
signed the acknowledgment of liability for assistance previously granted will
be requested to acknowledge liability for the previous assistance as well
before assistance is granted.
(C)
If the person refuses to acknowledge liability for this previous assistance,
the claim will be referred to the area office. If the county office records
show the person refused to sign in the past, no assistance may be granted until
the acknowledgment is completed. If, however, there is no record of a previous
refusal, assistance will be granted if otherwise eligible.
(D) The required acknowledgments should be
obtained during the application process or before the issuance of the first
check. When there is an unavoidable delay, as where a spouse is temporarily
absent because of hospitalization, or when court action is being taken by a
guardian, the applicant and property owner should use reasonable speed and take
every reasonable step to acknowledge liability. If otherwise eligible,
assistance will be granted while these steps are being taken. Assistance will
be discontinued immediately if the acknowledgment is refused or is delayed
except as provided in this subsection.
(ii)
Recipient. The
responsibilities of the recipient will be as follows:
(A) The person, whether or not a recipient,
who is liable for reimbursement must sign the proper acknowledgment of
liability for past and future assistance before he or his spouse or
unemancipated minor children living with him can be considered eligible for
continued assistance whenever either of the following take place:
(I) Reimbursable property is
acquired.
(II) Property subject to
reimbursement is discovered by a review, audit, or other means and an
acknowledgment should have been obtained but was not.
(B) If the person refuses to sign the proper
acknowledgment of liability, assistance will be discontinued, with proper
notice, and the claim will be referred to the area office in accordance with
subsection (a).
(3)
Acknowledgment of liability of a
minor or incompetent adult. Only a guardian authorized by the court
which appointed him, or other representative authorized by the court which
designated him, may sign an acknowledgment of liability of an adult declared to
be incompetent by a court. The guardian or representative will initiate the
court action necessary and assistance will be granted in the cases until the
guardian or representative can obtain authority to sign. Sufficient time will
be allowed to complete the process. If the property owner is a minor, the
regulation will be the same as in the case of an incompetent adult. If the
guardian or representative refuses to sign or to request authority to sign,
assistance will be granted to the minor and a memorandum referral made promptly
to claim settlement area. If the court refuses to give the necessary authority,
or if there is no guardian or representative, assistance may be granted if the
person is otherwise eligible, and the county office will take action on
reimbursement as advised by the area office.
(4)
Acknowledgment of liability by
property owner not living with spouse or unemancipated minor children.
A liable property owner not living with his spouse or unemancipated minor child
should sign an acknowledgment of his liability for the reimbursement of the
assistance granted them. The county office will obtain the signatures of
property owners located in the same county. If an acknowledgment is refused or
if the property owner is not located in the same county as the applicant, the
area office will take the action necessary to obtain an acknowledgment,
including legal action if necessary. The failure of the property owner to sign
voluntarily will not affect the eligibility of his relatives. The county office
will notify the area office by Form PA 173-S when it receives information that
an absent relative owns real or personal property other than that which may be
treated as income, such as wages, benefits, and the like. The county office
will learn of the possession of property by questioning the applicant or
recipient or from information brought to it. The county office will not be
required to make an investigation to discover possible assets of an absent
relative.
(b)
Methods of acknowledging liability of real property. The
methods of acknowledging liability of real property shall conform with the
following:
(1)
General.
Methods of acknowledging liability for real property in general are as follows:
(i) Form PA 9-Reimbursement Agreement-is used
to acknowledge the liability of real property. Form PA 9 contains a confession
of judgment which, when signed and recorded with the prothonotary of the county
in which the property is located, becomes a lien against the real property
owned at the time of recording. The lien thus obtained makes it unnecessary to
obtain judgment through suit. Form PA 9 provides for repayment of assistance
granted to or for property owner, spouse and unemancipated minor
children.
(ii) Whenever the CAO
learns that an owner of real property liable for reimbursement of assistance
granted before August 1, 1950, failed to sign a Form PA 9, the Area Office
shall be notified by memorandum. This memorandum shall specify the following:
(A) The dates the reimbursable assistance was
received.
(B) The relationships of
persons who received the reimbursable assistance.
(C) Whether or not the obligor is willing to
sign a reimbursement agreement covering the earlier assistance.
(iii) If the obligor is willing to
acknowledge liability for the assistance granted before August 1, 1950, the
Area Office will prepare a special reimbursement agreement and send it to the
CAO for signature and recording. If he is not willing, the Area Office shall
endeavor to obtain reimbursement by whatever action is appropriate.
(iv) A new acknowledgment shall be obtained
upon reapplication if the old one has been satisfied or reduced to an exact
amount by revival or stipulation, or if the old case record has been destroyed
or the material sent to the Area Office. The new acknowledgment is needed in
these situations to cover future assistance. A new acknowledgment may also be
required upon reapplication if the amount of assistance previously granted
already equals $5,000, as provided in paragraph (5)(i).
(2)
Signatures on Form PA 9.
A signature on the Form PA 9 shall be in accordance with the following:
(i) The signature on Form PA 9 shall agree
exactly with the name of the owner as it appears on the paper which is evidence
of ownership, and the deed or other evidence of ownership shall be examined to
make certain that the names are the same. If the deed and other evidence of
ownership is unavailable but has been recorded, the records of the recorder of
deeds shall show the name of the owner. If no deed or other evidence of
ownership has been recorded, the owner is required to take the steps necessary
to obtain and record the instrument. The CAO may record the instrument. In this
case the CAO shall report the advanced costs to Claim Settlement Division,
Harrisburg, on Form PA 3-R (Property Lien Notice) which also shall report the
recording of the Form PA 9.
(ii) If
the owner is unable to obtain proofs of ownership, or if the proofs cannot be
recorded, the CAO shall submit a summary by memorandum to the Area Office
attaching all available proofs of ownership. The CAO will be informed of the
proper action.
(iii) The way the
real estate is owned affects the signing of an agreement to repay. Subsection
(c)(1) contains a description of the common types of ownership and the
signatures required. If a situation does not seem to fit the types described in
subsection (c)(1), the Area Office shall be consulted. The Area Office shall
obtain signatures from individuals living outside the county.
(iv) Each signature on the Form PA 9 shall be
witnessed and dated. The worker may be the witness. Several signatures may be
bracketed and witnessed as one. Bracketed signings shall be done at the same
time.
(v) A signature by mark "X"
shall be witnessed by two persons who enter their post office addresses with
their signatures.
(vi) For
acknowledgment of liability of real property acquired by inheritance, refer to
subsection (c)(2)(iii).
(3)
Recording Form PA 9.
(i) Form PA 9 shall be recorded in the office
of the prothonotary of the county in which the real estate of the signer is
located. If a person liable for reimbursement owns real estate in two or more
Commonwealth counties, a separate Form PA 9 shall be obtained and recorded in
each county.
(ii) The CAO shall
record Form PA 9 on property located in that county, checking for transfers
before recording. The Area Office will record Form PA 9s on property located in
another county. For out-of-State property, refer to subsection
(c)(3).
(iii) When it is discovered
that the property has been transferred, a referral will be sent to the Area
Office if reimbursable assistance has been received.
(iv) Form PA 9 covers property owned by the
signer which is recorded in his name in the courthouse at the time the Form PA
9 is recorded. It is important, therefore, that the deed or other evidence of
ownership be recorded before the Form PA 9. Practices differ from county to
county, and the CAO shall learn from the prothonotary whether the Form PA 9 may
be safely recorded on the same day or the day following the recording of the
deed.
(v) When the recorder enters
a deed and other evidence of ownership in his records he shall note that fact
on the paper recorded. Absence of the recorder's statement of entry shows that
a deed has not been recorded. Before recording the Form PA 9, it is necessary
to make certain the names on the deed and the Form PA 9 are the same.
(4)
Recording
report. Notice of the recording of a Form PA 9 or other agreement to
repay as well as the recording of a deed or similar document shall be sent to
Claim Settlement Division, Harrisburg, on Form PA 3-R (Property Lien Notice), a
3 by 5 card assembled in sets of two with carbon interleaved. The recording of
a deed or similar instrument and the cost shall be reported on the same Form PA
3-R which shows the recording of the protective instrument such as a Form PA 9.
The CAO shall fill in the form on the typewriter and, without separating the
forms from the carbon, send both copies to Claim Settlement Division,
Harrisburg. The recording information shall also be posted to Face Sheet, Form
PA 740. The CAO shall be notified when the Regional Office records an
agreement.
(5)
Real
property liens. Real property liens shall be processed as follows:
(i)
General. Real property
liens in general are as follows:
(A) The Form
PA 9 lien shall be limited to $5,000. When the amount of reimbursable
assistance approaches $5,000, it is necessary to obtain and record a new Form
PA 9 if the county-assessed value of the property is over $200.
(B) In order that a worker may be reminded to
obtain the second Form PA 9, an entry shall be made in the General Control File
as soon as the first Form PA 9 is obtained. The maturity date for this entry
shall be the number of months in the future obtained by dividing $5,000 by the
monthly liability for assistance currently authorized.
(C) A similar entry in the General Control
File shall also be made for each person who signed one Form PA 9 before the
effective date of this procedure. The maturity date of this entry is the number
of months in the future obtained by dividing the excess of $5,000 over the
estimated amount of reimbursable assistance already granted, by the current
monthly liability for reimbursement.
(D) It is not necessary to establish a plan
for obtaining more than two Form PA 9s. Subsequent Form PA 9s shall be obtained
if both the real estate subject to reimbursement and reimbursable assistance
are more than $10,000, $15,000 and so on.
(E) Form PA 9, revised on or after July,
1950, may not be used if the reimbursable assistance was granted before August
1, 1950. A special reimbursement agreement from the Area Office shall be
requested as set forth in paragraph (1).
(F) Since a Form PA 9 covers only property
owned at the time of recording, an additional Form PA 9 is needed whenever
additional property is acquired by a person liable for assistance being
granted.
(G) An additional Form PA
9 shall be obtained and recorded in the same way as the original Form PA 9.
When reporting the recording of an additional Form PA 9 by Form PA 3-R, a brief
explanation of the reason for the recording shall be included, such as
"acquired property" or "liability over $5,000."
(ii)
Assignment of lien. An
assignment of lien transfers the rights of the Department under the lien. The
most common reason for assignment of lien is the desire of one of several heirs
of a deceased obligor to obtain the real property. Requests for assignment of
lien shall be referred to the Area Office which will process them and notify
the CAO.
(iii)
Correction
of a recorded lien. When a Form PA 9 has been recorded in a name which
does not agree exactly with the name under which the title to the property is
held, the recorded lien may often be corrected. When this difference in names
is discovered, the Area Office shall be notified. The Area Office shall either
instruct the CAO what to do or shall take proper action itself.
(iv)
Release. A release of a
lien shall conform with the following:
(A) A
release of a lien is the discharge of the property being released from
liability for the judgment upon which the lien is based. Other real property of
the debtor which has not been released remains subject to the lien and liable
for the judgment upon which the lien is based.
(B) A request for the release of a lien shall
be directed to the Area Office of the Bureau of Claim Settlement which has or
last had jurisdiction over the client-debtor. The Area Office shall make an
investigation and then recommend to the Director of the Bureau of Claim
Settlement that the request either be approved or disapproved. The final
decision is made by the Director or a designee.
(C) A release of a lien may be allowed under
the following circumstances:
(I) If the debtor
pays the Department the lesser of either the amount of the Department lien,
together with interest and costs, or the value of the property for which the
release is sought, that value being the market value at the time of the
release.
(II) If the property being
released is not liable and should not have been subject to the lien.
(III) If a deed in lieu of foreclosure of a
mortgage has been agreed upon between the client-debtor-and a governmental or
lending agency and the value of the liens prior to the Department lien equal or
exceed the market value of the property being released.
(v)
Revival. A
lien expires after 5 years unless it is revived within that period. To revive
the lien, the Area Office shall file a Form PA 184-S (Suggestion of
Nonpayment), with the prothonotary in the county of record shortly before the
expiration of the 5-year period. The CAO shall be notified when a lien is not
revived or is revived in the exact amount of the debt. If property is still
owned, the CAO shall obtain and record a new Form PA 9 if additional assistance
is authorized.
(vi)
Satisfaction. Procedures concerning the satisfaction of liens
are as follows:
(A) A satisfied lien is one
which has been discharged by a formal written acknowledgment by its holder, the
creditor. When an obligor wants to pay his claim or some other person, such as
a new owner, wants to satisfy the lien, he shall be referred to the Area
Office.
(I) If the amount of PA received by a
welfare recipient does not exceed the face amount of the recorded Department's
judgment, the Department will prepare an order of satisfaction upon tender of
the amount of assistance received plus costs pertaining to the recordation and
revival of the judgment.
(II) If
the amount of PA received by a welfare recipient exceeds the face amount of the
recorded Department's judgment, and the welfare recipient refuses to reimburse
the Department for the entire amount of PA received which is subject to
reimbursement, the Department will prepare an order of satisfaction upon tender
of the face amount of the judgment plus simple interest at the rate of 6%
per annum on the amount of PA received up to the full amount
of the judgment, plus costs pertaining to the recordation and revival of the
judgment. The amount of interest shall be calculated each time that a PA check
is issued by multiplying 6/26 (.2307) times the amount of assistance previously
received from the date that the judgment is recorded until the date that the
tender of the judgment is made. This satisfaction of the judgment does not bar
subsequent action by the Department to recover any amount of PA for which
reimbursement has not been made.
(B) When the payment agreed upon has been
made, the payer is given an "Order to Enter Satisfaction" for him to record, at
his own expense, with the prothonotary of the county in which the lien was
recorded. The CAO shall be notified of the payment and the furnishing of an
order to satisfy the lien. On reapplication a new Form PA 9 is
needed.
(vii)
Stipulation. Although the PA lien is in the nominal amount of
$5,000, the actual reimbursement claim may be less. If assistance reimbursable
by the obligor has been discontinued, he may have the amount of the lien
reduced to the actual claim. This is done by recording a stipulation specifying
the exact amount of the claim. If an obligor wants a stipulation, he shall
submit a written request to the Area Office or CAO. A Form PA 173-S shall then
be sent to the Area Office by the CAO and the exact amount of the claim is
computed. A stipulation shall be prepared by the Area Office and sent to the
obligor for him to record at his own expense and the CAO shall be notified
because a new Form PA 9 is necessary if assistance is resumed.
(viii)
Judicial sales.
Procedures concerning judicial sales are as follows:
(A) Judicial sales include sales by
government bodies for nonpayment of taxes-tax sales, sales by administrators of
estates and sheriff sales. The laws regarding these sales and their effect upon
property titles are complicated and their application varies throughout this
Commonwealth. As a general rule these sales may divest the property of the
Department lien.
(B) The Area
Office shall review notices of judicial sales and request referrals if the
nature of the sale makes it necessary to present the claim of the Department to
the authority selling the property.
(C) When advisable to protect the
reimbursement claim, the Area Office shall bid on the property at the judicial
sale. The results of the sales which affect the status of the lien shall be
reported to the CAO. If the property is purchased for the Commonwealth, it
shall be managed by the Claim Settlement Division.
(ix)
Escrow agreements.
Procedures concerning escrow agreements are as follows:
(A) An escrow agreement is a means for
holding money. Under this type of agreement, funds are held by a responsible
person or institution to be released under specified conditions of time and
purpose.
(B) Normally, money from
the sale or other conversion of a reimbursable asset is paid to the Department.
In certain circumstances the Department may consent to its being held in escrow
for the purpose of replacing or protecting an asset. An example is the setting
aside of the funds from a fire insurance settlement for the replacement of a
home destroyed by fire.
(C) The
review, approval and preparation of the escrow agreements is the responsibility
of the Claims Settlement Division. A request coming to the attention of the CAO
shall be referred to the Area Office on Form PA 173-S. The Executive Director
may be asked, and, if willing, may serve as escrow holder.
(x)
Postponement. A
postponement of a lien shall conform with the following:
(A) A postponement of a lien is the
subordination of a presently prior lien to the lien of a subsequent judgment or
mortgage. The right of the Department to collect the amount of its lien from
the property is thereby deferred to the right of another lienholder to collect
the amount of its lien first.
(B) A
Department lien may be postponed only with the approval of the Office of
Attorney General.
(C) A request for
the postponement of a lien shall be directed to the Area Office of the Bureau
of Claim Settlement which has or last had jurisdiction over the client-debtor.
The Area Office shall make an investigation and then recommend that the request
either be approved or disapproved.
(D) A postponement of a lien may be allowed
under the following circumstances:
(I) If the
position of the Department as a creditor is not adversely affected, in that the
value of the property after repairs, less the amount of the lien for the cost
of repairs, equals or exceeds the value of the property before
repairs.
(II) If the Department
receives fair consideration for the postponement.
(III) If the postponement is required to
permit a mortgage or loan which has been arranged through or by a Commonwealth
agency, bureau or office.
(IV) If
the debtor currently is eligible to receive assistance under the Public Welfare
Code (62 P. S. §§
101-1411) and the postponement is required to
implement a mortgage or loan in the amount which is necessary to pay for
repairs to the property, and these repairs are required to protect the health,
safety or welfare of the debtor or the family of the debtor.
(c)
Real property ownership rights and reimbursement actions. Real
property ownership rights and reimbursement actions will conform with the
following:
(1)
General. Real
property, also known as real estate, will include not only the land itself and
all things contained therein, such as minerals, but also growing timber as well
as buildings, structures, improvements and other fixtures of whatsoever kind
thereon. Usual types of ownership are described in the following table and the
appropriate reimbursement actions are described:
KIND OF TITLE
|
HOW
TO RECOGNIZE
|
REIMBURSEMENT ACTION
|
_______________________________________________________________________________________________ |
Sole Ownership
|
One person holds all rights to the
property. |
Deed or will specifies only one owner. |
PA 9 is signed
by the property owner. Entire value of the property is liable for reimbursement
of assistance for which the property owner is liable. |
_______________________________________________________________________________________________ |
Tenancy by the Entireties
|
Husband and wife own property jointly; upon death
of one spouse the survivor becomes sole owner. |
Deed or will specifies a
husband and wife owners and does not specify tenancy in common. |
Both
must sign the same PA 9. The entire value of the property is liable for
reimbursement of assistance for which either or both are liable. |
_______________________________________________________________________________________________ |
_______________________________________________________________________________________________ |
Tenancy in Common
|
There are two or more owners and each owns a share
of the property. Each owner may sell or encumber his share alone and when an
owner dies his share becomes part of his estate. |
Deed or will names two
or more persons as owners without specifying right of survivorship. In the case
of husband and wife, the deed or will must indicate that property is not held
by entireties. |
Each owner liable for reimbursement signs a separate PA
9. Each share of the property is liable for reimbursement of assistance for
which that owner is liable. |
_______________________________________________________________________________________________ |
Tenancy with Right of Survivorship
|
This has some of the elements of both tenancy by
the entireties and tenancy in common; however, on the death of one owner his
share passes to the survivor(s). |
Deed or will names two or more owners,
not man and wife, and the right of survivorship is specifically
provided. |
Refer to the Area Office for a special agreement. The
property is liable for reimbursement but the effectiveness of the protection
depends on obtaining all the signatures. |
_______________________________________________________________________________________________ |
Life Interest
|
Life tenant and remainderman each hold simultaneous
interests in the same property. Life tenant enjoys use and income from property
during his lifetime or the lifetime of some other person. The remainderman
receives his full interest upon termination of life interest. |
Deed or
will specifically mentions the rights of the life tenant and the
remainderman. |
Life tenant signs PA 9. The remainderman signs a PA 9 for
all assistance for which he is liable from the date of delivery of the deed or
the date of death of the person willing him the property. |
_______________________________________________________________________________________________ |
Building on Leased Land
|
Land on which building is erected is owned by one
party; house only is owned by another. |
Owner of building has a lease
allowing possession of land for a specified period of time. |
County
Office obtains and records chattel mortgage from house owner. To get form,
County Office sends memorandum to Area Office listing house owner's name,
description and address of building, and land owner's name. |
_______________________________________________________________________________________________ |
(2)
Acquisition of real
property. Acquisition of real property will be in accordance with the
following:
(i)
Deed. When
real estate is transferred, the title usually passes to the new owner by a
document called a deed. The deed shows who owns the property and the type of
ownership. The date the title passes to the new owner is the date of delivery,
generally the same as the date of acknowledgment. Real estate deeds will be
recorded in the office of the recorder of deeds in the county where the
property is located. The recorder will make a copy of the deed and file it in
his office where it will be available for inspection. The date and time the
deed is accepted for recording as well as the deed book and page number will be
shown on the original deed. Absence of this information from the deeds will
mean that it has not been recorded.
(ii)
Articles of agreement (sales
agreement). Articles of agreement are contracts to buy and sell real
property. They are most commonly used in installment purchases. Although
complete, or legal, title to the property does not pass to the new owner until
the deed is delivered, the buyer does obtain a right in the property, an
equitable title, as soon as the agreement is made. So far as reimbursement is
concerned, articles of agreement will be considered the same as a deed. The
articles should be recorded before the Form PA 9 and the name on the Form PA 9
should be the same as the purchaser on the articles. In cases where the buyer
is married the spouse should also sign the Form PA 9, even if not mentioned in
the sales agreement. The Form PA 9 should be recorded even though the articles
of agreement cannot be recorded. If the county office learns later that the
articles have been recorded, the area office should be notified.
(iii)
Inheritance.
Procedures concerning inheritance shall conform with the following:
(A) In each case involving an estate where
all the heirs are adults, the county office will have each liable heir sign a
separate Assignment of Interest in Decedent's Estate, Form PA 198-S, in
duplicate. The heir will sign his full name, or in case of a will, in the same
way as shown in the will. Signatures of liable heirs not living in the county
of application will be obtained by the area office. If one of the liable heirs
is a minor, the case will be submitted to the area office for advice.
(B) The original and duplicate of Form PA
198-S and a copy of the will, if any, will be sent to the area office with the
Form PA 173-S. The Form PA 173-S will include the name and address of the
administrator and attorneys, if any, and any other pertinent
information.
(C) If real property
is involved, the county office, in addition to taking the above action, will
obtain and record an individual Form PA 9 from each liable heir.
(iv)
Tax sale.
Real property owned by a recipient may have been sold or may be scheduled for
sale for delinquent taxes. In general, the original owner will retain rights of
ownership in the property for two years after the property has been sold for
nonpayment of taxes by the city or county treasurer, and may lose all rights if
the property has been sold by the sheriff or county commissioners. The terms of
certain sheriff sales for taxes will allow the former owner a year to redeem
the property. A lien can be obtained which will be effective against rights
which have not been lost. The taxing authorities will act under various laws
which do not affect the rights of the owner uniformly. Several general rules
appear in this subparagraph. Other situations will require the advice of the
area office. The county office should notify the area office when it learns of
any of the following situations:
(A) County
treasurer's sales to a third person, which is a person other than the owner,
will not be final for two years. During this period, the owner may regain full
title by paying the delinquent taxes and certain other charges. The county
office should, therefore, obtain and record a Form PA 9 during the two years
redemption period.
(B) County
treasurer's sales to the county commissioners will not be final until the
commissioners, in turn, sell the property to a third person. The county office
should, so long as the commissioners have not sold the property, obtain and
record a Form PA 9 in the usual manner.
(C) Tax Claim Bureau sales will be final and
title will be lost. However, as long as the Tax Claim Bureau has not actually
sold the property, the county office should obtain and record a Form PA 9 in
the usual manner.
(D) The new
owner, if his property is liable for reimbursement, will be required to sign a
Form PA 9 regardless of the way title was acquired and regardless of any rights
of redemption the former owner may have.
(v)
Adverse possession (squatters'
rights). Adverse possession is the acquisition of property by open,
notorious, and continuous possession or use of the property for a period of 21
years hostile to the rights of the actual owner. The Form PA 9 should be signed
in the legal name of the obligor and also in any other names by which he is
known.
(3)
Real
property located outside of this Commonwealth. Each state has its own
laws relating to real property, its ownership, sale and encumbrances. It is
impractical to specify the proper action to be taken when a person liable for
reimbursement owns property outside of this Commonwealth. Each such case should
be referred to the area office by a memo giving the following information:
(i) The name or names of the owner.
(ii) The kind of title.
(iii) The exact location of the
property.
(iv) Known information
about the value of the property and the encumbrances against it. The area
office will take the necessary action.
(d)
Methods of acknowledging
liability for assignable personal property. When assignable personal
property is liable for reimbursement, the usual action taken to obtain
repayment from such assets will be to have the owner sign and turn over to the
Department the document which is the evidence of ownership so as to transfer
ownership to the Department. The owner will be given an Assignment Receipt,
Form PA 198.
(e)
Personal
property ownership rights and reimbursement actions. Personal property
ownership rights and reimbursement actions are as follows:
(1)
General. The numerous
types of personal property and varieties of ownership make a standard procedure
impractical. Instructions for obtaining acknowledgment of liability of personal
property are given in §
257.23(c)
(relating to requirements). The handling of the types contained in this
subsection is more involved than most other types of personal property and is
therefore shown in greater detail than found in §
257.23(c).
(2)
Delayed unemployment
compensation. Benefits are considered delayed if they are received
later than the normal payment date as listed in §
257.23(c).
Reimbursement of assistance which is granted pending receipt of the payment is
required. The action to be taken and the "Agreement" form to be signed by the
claimant depends on the type of compensation. It is important that the
appropriate agreement form be obtained and forwarded to claim settlements
promptly whenever assistance is granted to a person whose unemployment
compensation is delayed.
(i)
Form PA
176-K (Agreement and authorization to Pay Claim). The Form PA 176-K is
used to refer claims for assistance granted because of delayed unemployment
compensation from the following sources, under subsection (f)(2).
(A) Employment outside of this
Commonwealth.
(B) Federal Employee
Unemployment Compensation.
(C)
Railroad Unemployment Compensation.
(D) Veterans Unemployment
Compensation.
(ii)
Form PA 176-U (Agreement to Pay Claim-Delayed UC Checks). Use
of Form PA 176-U shall be as follows:
(A) The
Form PA 176-U shall be used when all or part of the compensatory employment was
in this Commonwealth. The recipient shall be informed that the Form PA 176-U
has a limited Power of Attorney clause which enables the Department to deposit
available UC checks to apply against the reimbursable PA. Form PA 176-U shall
be prepared and distributed according to the instructions on the form. The
information needed shall be obtained from the forms which the claimant receives
from the local UC office and from his statements. Certain information, such as
whether an appeal from a disqualification or a request for a redetermination
has been made, may be obtained from the local UC office. If there is no
apparent reason for delay, the local UC office may be able to supply the
details. Entering the correct Social Security Number is extremely
important.
(B) The Bureau of Claim
Settlement shall send the Form PA 176-U to the Bureau of Employment Security.
The first check, or group of checks, written after the forms are processed
shall be sent to the Bureau of Claim Settlement. The Bureau of Claim Settlement
uses a transcript of assistances granted to compute the amount of the
reimbursable assistance. The amount is calculated from the date the UC was
originally due to the date of expected closing or adjustment because of UC. The
amount collected is the amount of reimbursable assistance or the total of the
UC checks, whichever is less. The claimant shall be notified by letter from the
Bureau of Claim Settlement within 20 days from the date the Bureau of
Employment Security notifies the Bureau of Claim Settlement that the UC check
is available. The letter shall itemize the UC checks involved and the amount of
reimbursable assistance received. The overage, if any, shall be forwarded to
the claimant.
(C) The Claims
Settlement Agent shall compute from the case records the amount of reimbursable
assistance received from the due date to the date of expected closing or
adjustment because of UC. This figure is compared with the total of the UC
checks and the lesser amount collected. An overage is given to the claimant by
the CS Agent.
(D) A Form PA 189-R
(Claim Settlement Report of Referral) showing the period of claim, the amount
collected and the amount given to the claimant shall be prepared by the CS
Agent and sent to the CAO immediately.
(3)
Delayed wages.
Reimbursement is required of assistance granted, pending the receipt of wages
not paid on the normal payday. Wages received when normally due are considered
as income to be adjusted to the grant under Chapter 183 (relating to income).
The form for acknowledging reimbursement from delayed wages is Form PA 176-K
(Agreement and Authorization to Pay Claim) as set forth in subsection
(f).
(4)
Inheritances. The instructions given in subsection (c)(2)(iii)
apply to inheritances of personal property.
(5)
Life insurance.
Procedures concerning life insurance are as follows:
(i) Assignment of insurance on the life of a
person liable for reimbursement, and acknowledgment of liability of insurance
for reimbursement of assistance and agreement to repay, are obtained under the
conditions listed in §
177.31 (relating to resource
limit). A payment from a life insurance policy not subject to liability for
reimbursement and repayment, and not subject to assignment or to naming of the
Commonwealth as beneficiary, is not reimbursable. A payment of face amount of
an assigned policy or a policy on which the Commonwealth is named beneficiary,
and a payment of cash from an insurance adjustment, is reimbursable under the
conditions and limitations in § 177.31. A periodic disability payment or
dividend is not reimbursable. The payment is considered income and does not
deplete the resource liable for reimbursement.
(ii) The insurance company form for total
assignment shall be used in preference to Form PA 6-F. The assignment form
shall be completed in triplicate naming "Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,
Department of Human Services" as assignee.
(iii) The original of the assignment shall be
sent to the insurance company. The first copy shall be sent to FAIR
Headquarters, Harrisburg. The second copy shall be filed in the record. Form PA
6-G (Distribution of Insurance Benefits) shall also be prepared in triplicate.
The original shall be given to the assignor, the first copy shall be sent to
Fair Headquarters, Harrisburg, and the second copy shall be filed in the
record. If the rules of the company do not permit assignment of the insurance,
the Department shall be named irrevocable beneficiary. The insurance company's
change of beneficiary form shall be used. If the company form does not restrict
the right to change the beneficiary, Form PA 6-K (Assurance as to Nonchange of
Beneficiary) will be sent with the change of beneficiary to the company. The
Form PA 6-K shall be prepared in triplicate, the original going to the
insurance company, the first copy to FAIR Headquarters Harrisburg, and the
second copy to the case record. For group life insurance an additional copy of
the Form PA 6-K will be made and sent to the employer.
(A)
Death of the insured.
Upon learning of the death of the person whose life insurance policy has been
assigned to the Department, the CAO shall send Form PA 173-S to FAIR
Headquarters, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania at once. The insurance company shall
immediately be authorized by FAIR Headquarters to pay the amount due the
beneficiary. The reimbursement claim shall then be computed and
collected.
(B)
Release of
assignment. Release of assignment is as follows:
(I) An insurance assignment may be released
upon the payment of the smaller of the following two amounts:
(-a-) The amount of assistance reimbursable.
(-b-) The excess of the present cash value of insurance
owned by the assignor over the cost of a $500 paid-up whole life policy if the
insurance was assigned after July 31, 1945.
(II) A request for release of insurance
assignment shall be referred to FAIR Headquarters, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
with Form PA 173-S and the insurance company form for release. Disposition of
the request shall be reported to the insured and the CAO.
(6)
Stocks and
bonds. Stocks and bonds which cannot be sold and so used for current
maintenance shall be assigned in blank. This is done by having the owner sign
the certificate in the space provided for transfer of title without naming a
new owner and by having his signature guaranteed by a bank official. The owner
shall be given a Form PA 198-Assignment Receipt-and the assigned securities
shall be sent to the FAIR Headquarters Division, Harrisburg,
Pennsylvania.
(7)
Support
order payments. Form PA 176-K shall be obtained as soon as it is
determined that the support payments have been delayed or are in arrears. The
claim for reimbursement begins the first date on which the support is paid and
ends when the payment is made. The first paragraph of the Form PA 176-K shall
be completed as follows:
" . . . pending receipt of delayed support payment due
me." Frequently, arrearages are included with current payment. For example, a
court order of $12 weekly might be raised to $14 until the arrearages are
caught up. In those instances, the court order will be treated as current
income despite the fact that arrearages are included.
(f)
Resources not usually
assignable. Resources which are not usually assignable will be as
follows:
(1)
General.
Resources subject to reimbursement which are neither real property nor
assignable personal property will require the use of special agreements. These
agreements will be prepared to fit the individual situation by either the area
office or the county office. The county office will use Form PA 176-K,
(Agreement and Authorization to Pay Claim) as its special agreement form,
limiting its use to the types of resources listed in §
257.23, filling in the blank space
on the form following the words "pending receipt of" with the appropriate
phrase from the list. The legal terms in the Form PA 176-K are usually found in
most promissory notes and agreements of this type. They are used in order to
insure the rights of the creditor and appear on the Form PA 176-K in order to
expedite the collection of the claim where the obligor does not repay as he
originally promised. The terms are listed as follows in the order in which they
appear on the form:
(i)
With or
without declaration. The declaration is a statement of claim which
ordinarily must be filed before judgment can be taken in civil proceedings.
This provision allows this step to be omitted.
(ii)
With costs of suit.
Filing and collection fees and the like may be added to the amount of the
judgment.
(iii)
Release of
errors. This waives the right to object to errors which have been made
in technical respects such as misspelling of name, incorrect address, and the
like.
(iv)
Without stay of
execution. This waives the right to prevent sale of property to
satisfy the judgment by posting security, by furnishing proof that he owns real
property worth as much as the amount of judgment, or for other legal
reasons.
(v)
Waive and
release all relief from any or all appraisement, stay, or exemption
laws. Under the laws of the Commonwealth, a debtor whose property is
being sold for the payment of a judgment is entitled to retain $300 worth of
his property. This is known as the debtor's exemption. In claiming this
exemption a debtor shall take steps to have his property appraised so that $300
worth may be set aside to him and not sold. The execution on the judgment may
be stayed to allow for appraisal to cover the debtor's exemption or for other
reasons, some of which have been given in this subsection. The effect of this
provision is to waive the benefit of the debtor's exemption laws.
(2)
Preparation of special
agreements. Use of Form PA 176-K will be as follows:
(i) Form PA 176-K (Agreement and
Authorization to Pay Claim) will be prepared in duplicate and signed by the
recipient or by both the recipient and his spouse if he is married and his
spouse is living with him. The duplicate will be given to the signer. The
advice of the area office should be requested concerning the signatures
required where the beneficiaries of a resource are not husband and
wife.
(ii) If reimbursement action
by the area office is required, the County Office will send the original Form
PA 176-K together with Form PA 173-S, or memorandum if a personal injury or
property damage claim is involved, to the area office promptly.
(iii) The Form PA 176-K will be returned to
the signer if the reimbursement claim is paid or if all the resource listed on
the Form PA 176-K is used to make reimbursement. The county office will return
the Form PA 176-K if collection is made in accordance with subsection (i)(1).
The area office will return it if collection is otherwise made. A Form PA 176-K
recorded as a lien cannot be returned. In its place the Area Office will
furnish an Order to Enter Satisfaction, as set forth in subsection
(b)(5)(vi).
(g)
Referral for reimbursement. Use of Form PA 173-S will be as
follows:
(1) In general, the county office
will submit a Form PA 173-S, (Reimbursement Referral) whenever action by the
area office is necessary to protect or collect the claim. If the county office
learns of the need for such action, the referral will be made at once. The area
office will request referral whenever it learns of the need for
action.
(2) The only reimbursement
materials sent to the Claim Settlement Division, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania are
insurance referrals, as set forth in subsection (e)(5)(iii)(A), assigned stocks
and bonds, as set forth in subsection (e)(6), and Form PA 3-R, as set forth in
subsection (b)(4). Other reimbursement material will be sent to the area
office.
(3) A referral for
reimbursement must always be made in the following situations, taking into
consideration that this list is general in nature and does not supersede any
specific instructions contained elsewhere in this title:
(i) Assistance is discontinued and liability
for reimbursement has not been acknowledged.
(ii) Assistance is granted without
acknowledgment of liability for previous assistance.
(iii) A property owner dies before the Form
PA 9 is recorded or liability of personal property is acknowledged.
(iv) Property liable for reimbursement is not
occupied by the owner, his spouse, or his child.
(v) The estate of a person liable for
reimbursement is not being settled and there is real or personal property to be
sold.
(vi) A case record is being
destroyed or segregated for destruction.
(vii) The area office requests referral. An
individual referral may be requested or lists may be given the county office
with a request for clearance and referral where there is liability but no
previous referral.
(viii) Cash is
or will be obtained by a transaction which converts assets to cash and depletes
the value of real property. Examples of such transactions are as follows:
(A) Leasing of oil, gas, or mineral
rights.
(B) Sale of timber except
from farmed timber.
(C) Coal
stripping.
(ix) Cash is
or will be obtained as a result of damage to the property by fire, flood, road
construction, accident and the like.
(x) Delayed payments are received and
adjustment to the grant cannot be made in accordance with subsection
(i)(1).
(xi) Assistance is granted
pending conversion of property into cash.
(xii) A person whose life insurance has been
assigned to the Department dies.
(xiii) A release of assigned insurance is
desired.
(xiv) Reimbursement is
offered by the property owner, by someone acting on his behalf or by a person
purchasing the property.
(xv)
Request is made for information about the amount of the indebtedness, except
where a rough estimate is satisfactory.
(xvi) Request is made for a release of lien,
a postponement of lien, or stipulation. Reference should be made to subsection
(b)(5)(iv) and (vii).
(xvii) Where
the county office learns that property liable for reimbursement is transferred
to a new owner.
(xviii) A court
orders a legally responsible relative to reimburse the Department for
assistance paid to the client.
(xix) Repayment of SSI for AFDC
cases.
(h)
Form PA 173-S (Preparation of Reimbursement Referral). Use of
Form PA 173-S will be in accordance with the following:
(1) A Form PA 173-S, A Reimbursement
Referral) should be sent to the Area Office in a single copy prepared either in
ink or on the typewriter for every reimbursement claim referred to the area
office. A single Form PA 173-S should be prepared for joint owners who are
included in the same assistance unit. Examples are husband and wife, or mother
and four children, all of whom have an interest in the estate of the husband
and father.
(2) The referral will
be forwarded with one copy of Form PA 361 (Standard Transmittal). More than one
Form PA 173-S may be listed on the Form PA 361. However, submission of the
referral should not be delayed in order to fill up the Form PA 361 and Form PA
361-S should not be used.
(3) The
identifying information on the Form PA 173-S is self-explanatory. The other
items will be filled in as follows:
(i)
Previous referrals. The appropriate square will be checked. If
previous referrals were forwarded under names or case numbers other than those
shown on the form, they will be listed on the reverse under
"Remarks."
(ii)
Situation
which prompted referral. A brief statement will be entered of the
reason for referral, that is, "Requested by Area Office," "Reimbursement
offered by (name)," "Property Owner died (date)," and the like.
(iii)
Real property. The
names of the owners should be exactly in the same form as on the deed, will,
sales agreement, or other evidence of ownership. "Date acquired" is the date on
which the right to ownership first existed. For example, the date on which
first payment was made on account of purchase price, the date of death of a
person from whom property was inherited, or the date of death where a
disinherited spouse had right to take against the will. If the property was
acquired before the first assistance grant was received, "before first grant"
will be sufficient.
(iv)
Department judgments. Spaces are provided for three judgments.
The amount of lien is usually $2,000 or $5,000, but there are many in the exact
amount of the claim. The area office has a listing of revivals. The county
office need furnish only the original recording data to identify the lien which
attaches to the property listed on the referral, and need only furnish the
costs it advanced. To make certain that the costs advanced by the Department
for recording deeds are refunded, they should be reported in this
space.
(v)
Personal
property and insurance. The asset will be described as "Cash
inheritance," "Delayed wages," "(Name) Company Stock." The other items are
similar to the items under Real Property. Assigned insurance policies will be
listed regardless of reason for referral. Unassigned insurance policies will be
listed only when referral is made because of insurance.
(vi)
Composition. Changes
will be listed in the assistance unit and grant groups from the date of
acquisition of property or the right to own property, or the date assistance
began, whichever is the later date. The codes will be converted on the Form PA
740 to agree with the codes at the bottom of the Form PA 173-S. If the property
owner dies, another referral should be prepared for the new owner if one is
required under subsection (g) of this section.
(vii)
Remarks. Explanations
or additional information will be entered here. If more space is needed,
additional sheets of 8-1/2 by 11 paper will be attached.
(viii)
Signature. This must
be the signature of a person for whom an approved signature card has been
submitted.
(ix)
SSI
clients. Forms for SSI clients found eligible for retroactive SSI
benefits must also include a statement showing what the Family Size Allowance
was with the SSI eligible included in the grant, and what the Family Size
Allowance would have been with the client removed for the reimbursable period
covered.
(i)
Collection of reimbursement. Reimbursement may be accomplished
in one of two ways, either by reduction of grants or by payment to Claim
Settlement.
(1)
Reimbursement by
reduction of grant-optional method. The optional method of
reimbursement by reduction of grant will be in accordance with the following:
(i) Reimbursement may be made by reduction of
assistance that would otherwise be granted when money subject to reimbursement
is received in an amount equal to or less than 1 month's grant to the
assistance unit and when all of the following conditions apply:
(A) The reduction can be made in the first
two semimonthly payments whose deadlines can be met. The grants in the
assistance unit may be reduced or discontinued but the reduction of assistance
which would otherwise be granted must be the full amount of reimbursement due.
The reduction will be made by including the full reimbursement amount in "Net
Income" for 1 month.
(B) The cash
is not derived from real property covered by a Form PA 9 or from personal
property assigned to the Department. A judgment or assignment will create an
asset of the Commonwealth which may not be surrendered by the
Department.
(C) The claim has not
been referred to the area office. However, collection by reduction of grant may
be made after referral to the Area Office with the agreement of the area
office.
(ii) If the
amount of assistance which would otherwise be granted during these first two
semimonthly payments is not reduced by the full amount of the cash received,
reimbursement must be made by payment to the Area Office. In such an event,
Form PA 176-K and Form PA 173-S will be forwarded to the area office. Reference
should be made to paragraph (2) for acceptance by the county office of a cash
payment on a reimbursement claim.
(2)
Reimbursement by
payment. The county office should not compute or attempt to settle
reimbursement claims except as provided in paragraph (1). However, it should
accept payment if the debtor has the money and offers repayment. The payer will
be informed that the money is on account and will be forwarded to the area
office where the exact amount of the claim will be determined. He will also be
informed that he will receive by mail an official receipt and that if the
payment does not equal the claim the area office will refund any excess or
notify him what additional payment is necessary. However, the county office may
not accept payments for purchase or rental of property owned by the
Commonwealth. For each payment received the county office will prepare
Memorandum Receipt, Form PA 175-M, in triplicate. The original receipt will be
given to the payer and the third copy retained in the county office. The
payment will be sent to the Area Office with the duplicate Form PA 175-M, two
copies of Form PA 361, (Standard Transmittal) and one copy of Form PA 173-S, if
referral had not been made before.
(3)
Special agreement
claims. Whenever a signer of a special agreement required by
subsection (f) fails to appear for an interview with a claims settlement agent
to arrange for settlement of the claim, the county office will be notified. If
the debtor is receiving assistance, the county office should make an attempt to
have the signer appear for an interview with the claim settlement agent either
at the area or county office. If this attempt is unsuccessful, the signer shall
fail to fulfill his responsibility of discussing with a representative of the
Department a matter relating to his receipt of assistance. Therefore,
assistance to the signer, his spouse, and his unemancipated minor children
living with him will then be discontinued by the county office. Assistance may
not be resumed until the signer reports or agrees to report for an interview
with claim settlement agent.
(4)
Legal action to collect reimbursement. Legal action to collect
reimbursement will be in accordance with the following:
(i) Ordinarily reimbursement claims based on
real property are protected by recording a Form PA 9 and are collected when the
owner desires an unencumbered title. Those based on personal property are
protected by assignment or a special agreement and are collected when the
property is converted into cash. However, a variety of circumstances may
interrupt this orderly process. When such an interruption occurs, the Claims
Settlement Bureau will review the case and initiate such action as may be
necessary and advisable in order to protect and collect the claim. In deciding
the action to be taken in each case, the Claims Settlement Bureau will consider
the laws which apply, the cost of the various possible proceedings, the value
of the property involved, the possibility of actual collection, and the amount
of the claim. Legal action may be instituted by the area office or by the State
Office of the Claims Settlement Bureau. Typical examples of legal action are as
follows:
(A) If a Form PA 9 has not been
recorded and the obligor does not agree to make reimbursement, suit will become
necessary. When judgments in favor of the Department are granted, the result
will be the same as if a Form PA 9 had been signed and recorded.
(B) An obligor dies and neither an executor
nor an administrator is named to settle estate. A claim settlement agency may
administer the estate.
(C) An
obligor or his heirs will not sign an amicable scire facias to
revive a lien, and suit to revive becomes necessary.
(ii) Legal actions to obtain or collect
judgments for assistance will result in the fixing of a definite sum due. This
amount will be based on the assistance granted in the past. Therefore a new
Form PA 9 will be necessary from property owners who reapply or who otherwise
become liable for reimbursement after legal action has been taken. These
proceedings will be the complete responsibility of the Claims Settlement
Division which will keep the county office informed of results. The county
office, however, will be called upon from time to time to supply information,
to make affidavits, or to cooperate in other ways.
(j)
Reimbursement
responsibilities. Reimbursement responsibilities will be as follows:
(1) Responsibility for action necessary for
protection and collection of the reimbursement claims of the Commonwealth will
be divided between the Department and the county offices. The county office
will have responsibility for taking certain preliminary action to secure the
right of the Commonwealth to reimbursement. In addition, it will cooperate with
the Claims Settlement Bureau in the collection of reimbursement. This means
that the county office is to accept a reimbursement claim when offered by a
client and a claim agent is not available. The Claims Settlement Bureau of the
Department, through its area offices, will have the ultimate responsibility for
insuring that necessary action is taken to protect the interests of the
Commonwealth, and to collect or settle all claims. The reimbursement
responsibilities of the county office are as follows:
(i) To identify real or personal property
liable for reimbursement.
(ii) To
explain to applicants and recipients their liability for
reimbursement.
(iii) To obtain from
persons liable for reimbursement the proper acknowledgments of that
liability.
(iv) To record liability
for reimbursement so that referral can be made to the Area Office for
collection or other action.
(v) To
furnish the area office with information necessary to collect
reimbursement.
(vi) To discuss with
field service representatives general questions relating to Departmental
reimbursement policy.
(vii) To
refer to the area office the following:
(A)
Reimbursement claims not collectible by reduction in grant.
(B) Offers of reimbursement.
(C) Questions on laws, legal action, the
effect of local court practice or local problems relating to property ownership
or reimbursement.
(D) Questions or
inquiries received concerning specific or potential claims, except that a rough
estimate of a claim may be furnished if requested by a person who has a
legitimate interest.
(viii) To accept payment of reimbursement
claims in accordance with subsection (i). This does not authorize the county to
make a collection, but only to accept a payment. The county may not initiate
the contact except as provided in this subsection.
(ix) To execute affidavits necessary for
legal action.
(2) In
addition to the referral from Form PA 173-S, the county office will interchange
information with the area office by memorandum. For example, after referral the
county office will send the area office any information it receives on the
following:
(i) Inquiries regarding a
claim.
(ii) Information pertinent
to court actions.
(iii)
Circumstances to be considered when settling a claim.
(iv) Recommendations or factors the County
Office feels are valuable in settling the claim.
(v) The receipt of any money from which the
claim could be paid.
(3)
The county office will send to the area office a dummy copy of Form PA 122 or
Form PA 122-N changing the address, resuming or discontinuing assistance for a
case in which there is an outstanding reimbursement referral, indicated by an
entry in the column "Dummy 122 to CS" of Form PA 740. The reimbursement
responsibilities of the Claim Settlement Division will be as follows:
(i) To determine the amount of every
reimbursement claim.
(ii) To
maintain records of reimbursement claims.
(iii) To collect reimbursement.
(iv) To take necessary legal or other action
to protect, collect or settle reimbursement claims.
(v) To advise the county office on questions
of law and legal procedure regarding property ownership as it affects
reimbursement.
(vi) To notify the
county office of the final disposition of each reimbursement claim.
(4) The area office will furnish
the county office with information necessary for the county part of the
reimbursement procedure. This will include reports on recording, revival and
satisfaction of liens on real property and final settlement of claims. The
report may be made by a memorandum, a form prepared for that purpose alone, or
by a copy of a document primarily prepared for another reason.