Dale Latimer
Junior Member
If the estate of a parent owns the house I as a recipient live in, wouldn't it be treated like a trust if under no circumstances will it pay me (or I pay it) to live there? Certain kinds of trusts are regarded as not being resources to the recipient, allowing him/her the full benefit amount.
I recently had an SSI case re-heard at my local SSA office. The original decision was that because I had not been clear about who owned the house I currently live in (my parents died, mother in 2015 and dad in 2016), I was therefore receiving in-kind support and maintenance from my brother, who manages dad's estate but has left the house among the estate's assets, in part due to the unavailability of any suitable living space to me.
The SSA's initial plan was for me to both pay back $4,000+ in overpayments AND accept reduced supplements going forward. It didn't help that I also had over $2,000 accrued cash value in a life insurance policy whose premiums I assumed after dad passed.
The new decision (apparently, I had a tough time hearing the person doing the re-hearing) was that my supplements would not be reduced, but that I was still on the hook for the overpayments, which at $50/month will take about 7 ½ years to be resolved.
Right now I know that once the next supplement is paid Oct 1st, my combined resources (cash on hand + bank balance + supplement) will exceed the $2,000 resource limit, and I am seeking to get rid of around $500 to get those resources back to below the limit.
Should I appeal the decision again (it would go to an ALJ, I was told) contending the estate should be regarded as a trust, and will my local office accept any other payments to shorten the time needed to resolve the overpayments until the appeal is heard?
Thanks.
dL
I recently had an SSI case re-heard at my local SSA office. The original decision was that because I had not been clear about who owned the house I currently live in (my parents died, mother in 2015 and dad in 2016), I was therefore receiving in-kind support and maintenance from my brother, who manages dad's estate but has left the house among the estate's assets, in part due to the unavailability of any suitable living space to me.
The SSA's initial plan was for me to both pay back $4,000+ in overpayments AND accept reduced supplements going forward. It didn't help that I also had over $2,000 accrued cash value in a life insurance policy whose premiums I assumed after dad passed.
The new decision (apparently, I had a tough time hearing the person doing the re-hearing) was that my supplements would not be reduced, but that I was still on the hook for the overpayments, which at $50/month will take about 7 ½ years to be resolved.
Right now I know that once the next supplement is paid Oct 1st, my combined resources (cash on hand + bank balance + supplement) will exceed the $2,000 resource limit, and I am seeking to get rid of around $500 to get those resources back to below the limit.
Should I appeal the decision again (it would go to an ALJ, I was told) contending the estate should be regarded as a trust, and will my local office accept any other payments to shorten the time needed to resolve the overpayments until the appeal is heard?
Thanks.
dL