There is a child caregiver exemption that you might be thinking of. Usually assets are turned over to nursing home/medicad but if a child has been living in the home, providing care, then that person can receive the home.
Check around your community for an "elder law" attorney and get this done as soon as possible before nursing home is needed.
All the best.
They are called... A house sitter! (Seriously) -f
Someone probably has your cell phone number or someone entered your house and used your phone.
no...someone has to die there if there is going to be a spirit
Destined(:
You and your husband own the house. Now your husband is going to a nursing home. You are living in the house. Do you want to stay in the house or leave it? The fact that he went to the nursing home should have nothing to do with the deed. If you wish to sell the property, after you have a buyer, you and a notary could visit him in the nursing home to get his signature on the deed and sell the property. In this state when he dies, you get the house outright.Another View: I disagree with the above answer - at least in part! If your husband is medically diagnosed with Alzheimer's Disease any signature he makes after the date of his diagnosis can be legally challenged since he is quite probably mentally incompetent. If the ownerhsip of the home is in doubt and you feel that you are not protected I strongly recommend you get legal counsel to assist you as quickly as possible in order to protect yourself.
She did make a nursing home that held 12-15 people at a time. It was called "The Harriet Tubman Home."
Well when it hits the window its suppose to mean someone there is going to die.
go down to your courthouse and they have a listing there. It also tells you what the house is going to start out at when bidding starts.
Fashion House - 2006 Nursing the Wound 1-32 was released on: USA: 23 October 2006
In Medicaid, any change in the way an asset is held is a "transfer" of assets. The nursing home resident may transfer approximately $100,000 to the spouse living in the community without penalty. Otherwise, in general, if the State determines that the applicant or recipient did not receive "fair market value" for the transfer, it will likely decline to pay nursing home costs for the time that the transferred assets would have paid for that care - i.e., gift was made in May, gift = $10,000, private pay rate = $2,500; patient is ineligible for payment for nursing home care for four months, May, June, July and August. Other medical assistance can be approved if the person is otherwise eligible.) It seems unlikely that the nursing home would be interested in the house. If the person is not going to return to the community, the State will expect the house to be sold and the net proceeds used to pay for medical care and other necessities.
'Stepping out', in Uncle Ade's use of it when he was talking to Fabian and Nina, means that you're going out with someone (in this case, Fabian and Nina) or telling others that you're going out with someone.
Not at all ! That is called abuse and you should call the police and report it or tell someone !