Dear Mr. Premack: My mother has a Will
which says that upon her death everything goes to my sister, who lives
with her and is her caregiver, since our mother is legally blind. My
brother and I have no objections on this. What is the simplest and
cheapest way for the house to pass to our sister so there won't be any
problems when mother passes on? She is 90 years old and aside from not
being able to see she is in fairly good health. – CA
Your mother has already taken the most
fundamental step by creating a Will that declares her intentions. When
your mother dies, the Will can be offered for probate. There are two
possible processes:
- If there are no debts, your sister can ask the court to issue an
Order probating the Will as a Muniment of Title. The Order
recognizes the Will’s validity and informs the community that your
sister is owner of the house. When recorded in the real property
records at the courthouse, the Order and the Will together are just
like a deed giving her ownership.
- If there are debts, the person named as Executor in your
mother’s Will can ask the probate court for "letters testamentary".
Once the debts are settled, the Executor can sign and record a deed
conveying the house into your sister’s name.
Probate accomplishes your mother’s goal,
but it does involve some process, time and expense. Since you want the
"simplest and cheapest way", your mother can take some other steps
(beyond having a Will) to change title to the house.
The first option to explore is gifting the
house to your sister right now. It is simple, but it is not necessarily
cheap because your mother’s school tax freeze will be lifted and there
will be no 65+ exemption on local property taxes (unless your sister is
65+). She will also have to deal with federal gift taxes, and she will
lose control over the house. I do not recommend an outright gift.
Second, your mother could sign a deed in
which she retains a life estate, granting your sister a remainder
interest in the house. This has several advantages: it maintains the
home as your mother’s homestead so she has control over occupancy,
maintains the local property tax status and avoids gift taxes. It passes
full, unrestricted title to your sister at the moment of your mother’s
death but does not go before a Judge for probate.
Life estate has a few disadvantages as
well. Your mother will no longer be able to use the house as collateral
for a loan (unless your sister joins her). Your mother cannot sell the
house unless your sister agrees. Also, if your mother ever goes into a
nursing home and needs Medicaid assistance she will face a transfer
penalty for the value of the remainder interest gifted to your sister.
She may feel that the potential negatives
are outweighed by the positives. It is a judgment call to be made by
your mother. She may decide that keeping the house until she dies
provides her the most control and security, and that "cheap and simple"
aren’t as attractive when balanced against control and security. Either
way, she needs to discuss this privately with a qualified Elder Law
attorney.