My brother and sister in law live in Ohio. They bought a home about 20 years ago. They've been married about 23 years. At that time my brothers credit was pretty bad at the so the mortgage would only finance the house for my sister if my brother signed away his dower rights.
Now, it looks as if his wife is going to have to go into a nursing home and will require medicaid eventually. The house is only in my sister in law's name and because he signed away dower rights, does this mean, if she dies, he will have no claim on the house as the spouse? The mortgage is paid off now. We realize that the state will come after the house when she dies to help pay what medicaid has paid on her behalf and are worried that my brother will have to sell the house and be left with nothing and nowhere to live? Other then the house and the car, they have very few assets. They don't have a will (she refuses to make one).
Does this look like that's the way it is on Ohio? He's paid his fair share, paying bills, buying groceries, upkeeping the home, etc...shouldn't he get something, even though he signed away his dower rights? Expecially since the mortgage company is now out of the picture? Thanks for any answers! ;-)
Now, it looks as if his wife is going to have to go into a nursing home and will require medicaid eventually. The house is only in my sister in law's name and because he signed away dower rights, does this mean, if she dies, he will have no claim on the house as the spouse? The mortgage is paid off now. We realize that the state will come after the house when she dies to help pay what medicaid has paid on her behalf and are worried that my brother will have to sell the house and be left with nothing and nowhere to live? Other then the house and the car, they have very few assets. They don't have a will (she refuses to make one).
Does this look like that's the way it is on Ohio? He's paid his fair share, paying bills, buying groceries, upkeeping the home, etc...shouldn't he get something, even though he signed away his dower rights? Expecially since the mortgage company is now out of the picture? Thanks for any answers! ;-)