Using Reverse Mortgages in Complex Estate Planning - What Elder Homeowners Need to Know

Reverse mortgages are not just for poor people anymore. I am tired of hearing about reverse mortgages - in the past six months it's as if someone flipped a switch to turn up the noise, not necessarily the quality, of the messaging to elders about reverse mortgages.  

In my practice as an estate planner in Massachusetts I am often called upon to "get creative" on behalf of clients. As one of only a few true legal experts in the reverse mortgage industry, my creativity often opens the discussion with clients about complex uses of reverse mortgages in estate planning.

 I have developed several methods to leverage the equity value of a client's house to enhance either the economic benefit or overall personal security of clients. To explain the concepts in shorthand, Gosselin Law claims a servicemark on the shorthand names of many of our approaches. Here are examples of somewhat magical things that can be done with reverse mortgages as an estate planning tool.

GOLDEN TRIANGLE(sm). The Golden Triangle demonstrates to elders looking to plan for long term care how to use the reverse mortgage as a tool for closing the five year gap provided under the new Medicaid laws. It is a triangle as there is an estate plan, a long term care plan and a reverse mortgage plan coming together to provide for both current and future long term care needs. Here's how it works:

Mary, a 77 year old widow in Boston, has lived in her own home for over 40 years. This is the house that sheltered her family, where her dear husband passed and where she intends to stay until the very end. Although Mary has a good pension from the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Social Security and adequate short term savings,  Mary is concerned that if she needed long term medical care that she could not afford to remain in her home or pay for a nursing home. Mary also wants to provide as much for her family upon her death as possible; after all she and her husband both worked hard to be able to leave something for their three children.

Mary's good health and family history of longevity helps indicate that Mary will likely grow to be very old. Her home is valued at $450,000 in today's real estate market. Based on her age, current interest rates and the property's values, Mary's HECM line of credit will be about $280,000 at closing. Mary qualifies for long term care insurance, but she feels that the $5,000 annual premium, although vitally important to her ability to remain in her home, is too much to pay on her fixed income. As many elder law lawyer advised her to  transfer the house to avoid exposure to a Medicaid lien - but every technique available requires a 5 year waiting period before she would be elegible for Medicaid.  At 77, Mary could live 15, 20 years or even longer - so even with her fixed income and ongoing inflation, she will no longer be able to afford to stay in her home in the not so distant future.

By securing a HECM reverse mortgage line of credit or similar reverse mortgage product, Mary will enable herself to have access to both a current and ready pool of cash, but also an appreciating line of credit that will be available to her for the rest of her life. Using a $5,000 per year draw, Mary will be able to buy the "Cadillac" of long term care insurance (including extensive home care benefits and high benefit limits) which will also serve to exempt her house from Medicaid liens immediately, without waiting for five years. At the same time, Mary's estate planning will have time to season. After five years, Mary will have had the peace of mind in the form of long term care insurance, lifetime financial security, and in her ever increasing available HECM cash and a now permanent estate plan to carry out her wishes. A Golden Triangle, indeed.

An interesting variation on the reverse mortgage that could work well in the Golden Triangle is the "Retirement Mortgage" from Virgin Money. Essentially a child acts as the reverse mortgage lender, documents the transaction as a loan to ensure that he or she is repaid before any other siblings at the time of the elder's death. I am a big proponent of Virgin Money (full disclosure is that I am working with Virgin Money in developing new and exciting products for the US market), on the principle that families should be helping each other first before turning to often high cost products from the financial services community. 

SNOWBIRD(sm). In the Snowbird(sm) we show reverse mortgage companies how to prospect with sunbelt real estate agents to facilitate the purchase of properties with reverse mortgages, primary residences can be obtained with a reverse mortgage purchase money mortgage, and secondary residence by using a reverse mortgage leveraged primary residence in Massachusetts as collateral for the real estate purchase. Similarly, we show elder homeowners how to conserve cash by using reverse mortgages as purchase money mortgages. Here's an example:

Bob and Cathy, 70 and 68 respectively, haved lived in their lovely 4 bedroom home in Newton for over 30 years. Now retired, Bob and Cathy enjoy playing golf, sailing and visiting with their two children and their families (who both live in the Greater Boston area). As much as they enjoy the New England seasons, they enjoy spending the Winter and long weekends in Florida. They have made many new friends and enjoy the Florida lifestyle, especially in the Clearwater Beach area.

Financially, Bob and Cathy have not fared too well. Bob worked for Polaroid for over 30 years, but because of its collapse, his pension benefits and stock savings (all in Polaroid stock) are meager at best. Bob continues to work part time at The Country Club in Brookline, which also gets him some free time on the greens. Cathy never worked outside the home, but has been doing quite well organizing Ebay sales for her friends and neighbors looking to downsize their homes. The thought of doing this at this point in her life brings Cathy to tears, but she and Bob agree that they would enjoy having a place in Florida during their healthy retirement years.

Based on Bob and Cathy's ages, current interest rates and the $800,000 value of their Newton home, they could borrow approximately $425,000 in reverse mortgage cash. They could draw it all at the closing or take some in a lump sum and leave rest to be available for future withdrawals. Bob and Cathy would very much like to purchase a $200,000 condominium in Clearwater Beach condominiums, not far from their favorite public golf course.

By taking out a reverse mortgage as above, Bob and Cathy will have the best of all worlds. They will have the cash they need to buy the Florida condominium outright (and enjoy its appreciation throughout their retirement), a financial cushion in the form of the remaining credit line on their Newton home, and most importantly, will be able to keep and enjoy their home. Of course, interest will acrrue on their borrowings, but between the expected appreciation of the Florida property and the value they place on the two-home lifestyle, Bob and Cathy will have it all in retirement thanks to the Snowbird.

ROBINHOOD(sm). The Robinhood(sm) guides more sophisticated and larger property value elders on the use of asset leverage by using other financial products, especially second to die life insurance. In simple terms, the reverse mortgage is used to pay premiums and the actuarial analysis results in a positive arbitrage for the reverse mortgage borrower. Here's a simple example to ilustrate the idea:

Mike and Sheila enjoy financial security by anyone's measure. Mike, recently turned 65, and Sheila, 66, just sold their successful software company to a larger competitor - realizing over $10 million in restricted stock in the buyer from the sale. Adding that to their $2 million primary residence in Brookline, $3 million Nantucket home and $5 million in other savings, mainly in qualified retirement plans, Mike and Sheila will pass a large estate on to their five children. Or, will they only fill the coffers of the US Treasury? Based on a $20 million estate, Mike and Sheila's estate planning attorney showed them a potential estate tax of over $6 million if they were to die this year.

If we were their attorneys, we would suggest setting up an irrevocable life insurance trust (ILIT) to hold a survivorship (second to die) life insurance policy. As wealthy as they may seem, Mike and Sheila lack sufficient liquidity to commit to a relatively large insurance premium, although the arbitrage on the numbers clearly show the economic benefit of establishing such an estate plan while they are young and healthy. The solution? A reverse mortgage, either on a line of credit basis where premiums are paid annually or a lump sum cash account where Mike and Sheila can purchase their life insurance (through the ILIT) with a single premium.

By using the reverse mortgage to pay the life insurance premium, Mike and Sheila will get the liquidity they need without running afoul of income tax rules or using restricted or otherwise inaccessible assets to pay for the needed life insurance. Upon the second of Mike and Sheila's death, the overall estate will be liquidated and the reverse mortgage paid in full with part of the cash proceeds of the life insurance policy, the balance to be used for paying estate taxes or direct bequests to their family. Based on a sophisticated side-by-side analysis of their reverse mortgage projections and life insurance guarantees, Mike and Sheila can make an educated arbitrage decision without significant risk of economic loss.

We are not licensed to provide insurance or loan products and any decision to proceed with any of these advanced reverse mortgage plans requires you to work with your trusted advisors. But, Gosselin Law can help our clients evaluate various complex uses of insurance and mortgage tools, as well as suggest reliable sales organizations

Gosselin Law is one of the only elder law firms in the country with a reverse mortgage specialty practice. We can assist homeowners in the states where we are licensed or associated with local counsel with the planning of reverse mortgages, coordination of federal benefits with reverse mortgage loan proceeds and gerneral asset protection and estate planning.

Affordable Christmas Gifts for Parents from Santa Claus and Brooke Astor

The son of philanthropist Brooke Astor was accused in an indictment unsealed Tuesday of plundering his mother's $198 million estate and conspiring to have the Alzheimer's-stricken socialite sign a new will leaving her fortune to him.

I guess this shows us that the rich are just like everyone else. Greed is no more a condition of poverty than hunger is a condition of obesity. Humans with a nature to cause harm to their families for their own profit come in all shapes and sizes. Brooke Astor is no more immune to her family's greed than any other elderly woman suffering from the ravages of dementia. Probate, estate taxes and trust issues for the rich are the same as for everyone else - just magnified by the scale of wealth.

A big part of our estate planning process is developing strategies to prevent abuse of the elderly. Using co-fiduciaries, professional trust services and checks and balances built into our documents, we are able to give our clients strong lines of defense. Brooke Astor may have had access to the best lawyers in the United States because of her wealth, but without an understanding of elder law and the dangers of elder abuse, even the best lawyer in Boston cannot imagine the opportunity for fraud within a parent-child relationship. Our experience tells us that the "big firm" lawyers are ill equipped to deal with what is often more social work than legal work.

Our practice is to approach mental health issues in our elderly clients as a multi-disciplinary issue. Working closely with medical providers, financial planners and social workers we craft bespoke plans that respect each individual client's unique personal situation. House, hospital or nursing home calls are commonplace in what we do, how else could we know how our clients live? Ask your downtown Boston lawyer to visit the nursing home on a Saturday morning.

In her day Brooke Astor, was a great philanthropist. In a great twist she will continue to be philanthropic through her own son's misdeeds by giving America an example of greed to the umpteenth degree. For elder law lawyers, Santa Claus could not have brought a more perfect Christmas present for elder parents than the example of the consequences of poor planning. Do your grandparents, parents and self a favor and give the affordable Christmas gift of good estate planning. And, yes, I would be happy to sell you a gift certificate for estate planning!

 

Welcome to Boston, AARP

The American Association for Retired People is in Boston this weekend for a national conference.

Watch your wallets.

AARP started out speaking and advocating for older Americans who were not well-represented in Washington. Success brought more and more older Americans into the fold. AARP soon realized there was gold in the mailing list of elders looking for a voice in a sea of special interest lobbyists, corporate welfare and multi-national hand-outs.

At first, the mailings were but a trickle of approved companies soliciting the business of older Americans. AARP members gave these first mailings careful consideration because they came from a respected organization. But AARP's lure and the lust for the buck grew along with the mailing list.

The trickle became a rampaging flood as the mailboxes of elders strained to keep up with the assembly-line parade of ads for nearly anything that could be sold. Liver spot bleach, incontinence pads, denture glue - you name it and AARP will pitch it to its members for a piece of the action.

The age for membership in this association of retired people dropped to 50. How many 50-year old folks retire these days? Not many, but boy did that age drop plump up the mailing list and the coffers!

AARP's big weekend event - the Boston conference? The Life@50+ National Event & Expo is nothing more than a huge trade show - more chances to sell something, anything to the droves of people flocking to the show. Representation and service of elders is the banner AARP always waves, but it seems to this cynical eye the real purpose these days is to feed and grow the marketing machine.

Yes, the trade show will present even more opportunities to sign up even more elders for non-stop health insurance salesman, sellers of chair lifts and call-alert systems for when you've fallen and can't reach your wallet.

Congress might soon have to pass a DO NOT SOLICIT THE DEAD Bill, to protect surviving family members from the deluge of direct mail that will try to follow elders into eternity in the hope of one last sale.

My Hero - Bobby Rook

A few years ago I realized that being a lawyer in Massachusetts was not the easiest job. As a lawyer, particularly in Massachusetts, there was constant pressure to compete for clients with the other lawyers, to always be on top of my game in elder law, estate planning, real estate, etc. (people seem to prefer to hire the smartest lawyer they can find) and making sure that my legal fees were paid. So essentially, clients came to me with their legal problems, I handled their cases over long periods of time as their lawyer, and to some degree chased the law firm's clients for legal fees. I needed a change. But what business could someone with nothing but years on years of school and training to help people with wills, trusts, probate, mortgages, purchase and sales agreements and estate taxes even imagine running as a moonlight operation? Ice Cream seemed to be the key to the kingdom.

Unlike a law firm, an ice cream store had few obtacles to providing excellent service. Heck, at first glance it looked like this lawyer would only need some ice cream, a way to keep it cold and a smile. The ice cream shop, as opposed to running a Boston law firm, appeared to have three elements - people arriving with joyful anticipation; people paying cash for a short and satisfying relationship with my firm; and people leaving happy and returning as soon as tomorrow to do it all again. Compared to a law firm, this business had it all. Now here is how lawyers should not be in the ice cream business. LICC, Inc. might have been doomed from its name, Lawyers Ice Cream Company. I bought a cute little piece of real estate in Winchester (we are just outside Boston proper inside 128), made a deal with the world's most famous ice cream lawyer, Bobby Rook, lawyer/owner of Emack & Bolio's Ice Cream. Here's Bobby's story in his own words from the Emack & Bolio's website.

Boston 1975. Peace, love, rock 'n roll. The music was everywhere. Live rock 'n roll music was being played at clubs throughout the town and rock 'n rollers from all over the US were coming to Boston to be part of the hot music scene. The only problem was the Boston Blue Laws. Clubs closed at midnight. What a bummer! Just when you and the music were really happening everything came to a halt. Along come these hippie lawyers working pro bono for the homeless, for gay civil rights, for anti-war demonstrators and of course representing all these famous rock 'n rollers who were being signed by major record labels. The solution to the midnight munchie blues: rent a basement in the Coolidge Corner section of Brookline, MA / buy a commercial ice cream machine / invite your rock star friends to hang out after their gigs eating homemade ice cream with outrageous flavors (creatively inspired by the lawyers and the rock 'n rollers) / play acoustic (we had neighbors) music 'til the wee hours of the morning. The rock 'n rollers loved the ice cream and the vibe. The basement ice cream hangout needed a name. Two homeless gentlemen that the lawyers did pro bono work for asked that the ice cream shop be named after them. The name had good karma. Emack & Bolio's. An ice cream legend was born.

James Brown (l) and Bob Rook

Bob Rook, founder of Emack & Bolio's with James Brown in 1977

Bob Rook, a music lawyer, started E&B as a place that musicians could go to after their gigs to mellow out and satisfy their munchies. Some of the groups that Bob has worked closely with are: Aerosmith, Boston, The Cars, U2, James Brown and Al Green

So, I hired half a dozen 16 year olds to scoop ice cream. Like owning a boat, the day I opened for business was great - shiny new counters, banners, crowds, everything but the marching band. From there it was all down hill...... Most of the 16 year olds had complicated social calendars to meet that didn't involve keeping a work schedule. The ones that did show up mainly stole ice cream or money or both. Once school closed in town, everyone left, Winchester is a desolate little burg in the Summer - great for relaxing, hard for selling ice cream. Needless to say, I found out quickly that I am a far better probate, real estate, elder lawyer in Massachusetts than ice cream guy. I envy Bobby Rook - the Massachusetts lawyer that has the best of both worlds - ice cream and being a lawyer in Massachusetts.

Prove It!

Is there a dirtier word in the whole wills and trusts business than probate? The public perception is that probate is nothing more than a way for lawyers and the government to get their fingers into people's pies. The whole point of probate in the first place is to establish the veracity of legal documents - your will is not your will until and unless it is presented to the public as a whole. This is done to prove whether it was signed the right way, you were mentally competent when you signed it and it meets other formalities. By law, and mainly because the law dates back several hundred years to England, probate in Massachusetts lasts for at least one year from the date of death and often much longer because of various administrative tasks required of an executor in Massachusetts.

What does a probate executor do anyways? I like to say that the business of being an executor is the only business where you are successful if you go OUT of business. The role of executor is to gather the decedent's personal property (the probate estate) and to distribute either according to the decedent's will or by operation of the Massachusetts intestacy laws. Intestacy laws in Massachusetts apply when there is no will and the executor in that case is technically called the administrator of the estate, but it's really the same thing for all practical purposes before the Massachusetts Probate Court. The executor is sort of the bus driver for the whole probate estate - abiding road signs and bringing the passengers (money) to their appropriate destinations. The executor needs to gather the assets, pay the taxes, divide up things that are hard to divide up (like a porcelain doll or a Chris Craft boat), pay taxes and other bills and lastly distribute funds to the legatees under the will or to the heirs in intestacy. In some states it can be a reasonably well paying proposition.

For the most part in Massachusetts probate, being an executor is a very responsible and only modestly compensated role. Admittedly, legal fees for probate can add up do to the procedural and practical steps necessary to properly settle an estate in Massachusetts. If you do even a little planning probate is entirely avoidable. But that little planning is not getting your will done. In fact, a will is nothing but a ticket to the Massachusetts Probate Court. Without probate there is no will as it is your last will that counts. Remember we call it your LAST Will and Testament, it's the latest date that matters for the probate court in Massachusetts.

An old time Boston lawyer told me the story of a Boston Brahman woman who lived on Beacon Hill. She would come into a his downtown Boston law firm each Friday at ten in the morning for the sole reason of updating her will. Each week she would have a new codicil to her will drawn up and then executed in full view of her lawyer as notary public, two legal assistants as witnesses and her two caregivers. She would make a point of reading aloud the codicil to her will in the presence of these persons. "I, Mary So-So, being of sound mind, blah, blah, blah..... leave my nurse Mary 68% of the funds set aside for my caregivers for exceptional service in the past week and to my nurse Eloise 32% of the funds set aside for my caregivers due to her tardiness in preparing my evening baths." And apparently this went on for many years as the old dame received excellent care. Her last will was the one that mattered.

Aging and the Boston Red Sox

 

My father always said that the first 100 years were the hardest in life. From the looks of things in the growing number of centenerians in the world, I'd say he was right on the money. Look here from some amazing statistics about aging in the US. Life expectancy in the US has been increasing among the population as a whole dramatically, even in just the past 10 years. This increase of course is mostly due to medical advances, improved communication about diseases allowing for early diagnoses and the end of the Boston Red Sox' "curse of the bambino" (just my theory).

In elder law practice this shift towards amazing longevity has caused us to re-examine some of our most basic tenets for planning, and indeed with more clients living longer increasing the range and scope of our services. As people live longer and longer, or at least as their bodies do, diseases that cause memory loss (such as dementia, Alzheimers) or forms of psychoses (particularly severe depression) and other neurological conditions that reduce either or both cognitive or communication skills of the patient are increasing dramatically. Often families do not have any history of the diseases as noone had ever reached such ages in past generations.

As we counsel clients we no longer make the assumption that clients will have relatively short periods of skilled care, but rather we must take very seriously the prospect that a client could not only outlive their personal financial resources, but also need skilled care for many years. This long term care period could last years beyond what we've considered the conventional wisdom for convalescent care. In addition, we have several client situations where two generations of a family are in nursing care at the same time - perhaps mom is in her 90's and her child in her 70's and both are in long term care. Which leaves adult grandchildren and great-grandchildren in fiduciary roles once reserved only for children. Not only does this expand the family tree and the size of the inevitable "committee" that makes decisions, but also the burden on the younger generations to manage both their own families and the decisions of the elders that are depending upon them.

I will come back to this topic again as the impending arrival of the baby boomers in their troisieme age is changing everything. GosselinLaw.com >