Tuesday, July 19, 2016

Fraudulent Transfer Claim Against Nursing Home Resident's Sons Survives

Nursing homes and state departments of Medicaid will become more proficient in developing and implementing techniques to pursue assets in resource recovery over time.  Accordingly, planning techniques must be more, not less, sophisticated.  An excellent exampleof just how devastating simple, self-help, plans lacking in sophistication can be, is the planning of the Nyce brothers.  A U.S. district court recently ruled that a nursing home can assert its case for fraudulent transfer against the brothers, who transferred their mother's funds to themselves, because the claim survived the resident's death. Kindred Nursing Centers East, LLC v. Estate of Barbara Nyce (U.S. Dist. Ct., D. Vt., No. 5:16-cv-73, June 21, 2016).

Roger and Kinsley Nyce were agents under their mother's power of attorney. Their mother, Barbara Nyce, entered a nursing home and signed an admission agreement in which she agreed to pay the nursing home or apply for Medicaid. Ms. Nyce filed for Medicaid, but the application was denied because the Nyce brothers withdrew money from Ms. Nyce's bank accounts to pay themselves. Ms. Nyce also transferred her real estate to her sons. Ms. Nyce died owing the nursing home $137,586.92.

After Ms. Nyce died, the nursing home sued her estate as well as the Nyce brothers individually for fraudulent transfer. The estate cross-claimed against the Nyces, alleging breach of fiduciary duty and conversion. The case was removed to federal court, and the Nyces moved to dismiss the claims. The Nyces argued that the estate couldn't sue for fraudulent transfer after Ms. Nyce died and that the estate's cross claim fits into the probate exception to federal jurisdiction.

The United States District Court, District of Vermont, denied the motion to dismiss. The court held that the fraudulent transfer claim survived Ms. Nyce's death because state law does not require that there be a pending claim in order for an action to survive. The court further holds that the probate exception cannot be used to dismiss widely recognized torts, such as breach of fiduciary duty.

The brothers plan for protecting their mom's assets didn't turn out to be so Nyce. 

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