Often personal injury victims who will need costly medical assistance throughout their lives will direct any settlement or judgment they receive into a “Special Needs Trust” (SNT). Federal law allows these individuals to use the trust funds to supplement the medical assistance that is available from basic Medicaid benefits so long as the SNT is an irrevocable trust. Recently, the Social Security Administration (SAA) has disqualified certain trusts, even though they are specifically designated as irrevocable trusts, by applying arcane doctrines from English feudal law, such as the Doctrine of Worthier Title. The article explains these doctrines and examines examples of inconsistent or faulty application of the doctrines by the SSA. The artic...
The doctrine of estates is the common law system for the classification of divided ownership. Its ...
Beginning with workmen\u27s compensation in 1910 and getting great impetus from the depression of th...
This article seeks to examine the extent to which a unified concept of unconscionability can be used...
Often personal injury victims who will need costly medical assistance throughout their lives will di...
This article explores the ins and outs of special needs trusts, which can offer your client improved...
This paper examines the advantages and disadvantages of using special needs trusts in order to provi...
Supplemental needs trusts are trusts designed to assist individuals with disabilities by paying for ...
Title from PDF caption (viewed on Nov. 26, 2007).; "February 23, 2007."; Includes bibliographical re...
Special considerations come into play when a plaintiff poised to recover money is a child or an indi...
The basic federal safety net program for elderly, blind and disabled persons is Supplemental Securit...
In America, plaintiffs in tort settlements receive more benefits, including Medicare benefits, than ...
Use of the stretch strategy for an inherited IRA offers many attractive features for estate planning...
In Nebraska, as in many other states, a person, during his lifetime, may dispose of personal propert...
The Achieving a Better Life Experience (ABLE) Act of 2015 establishes 529A plans which provide speci...
Medicaid is a joint federal-state partnership program that provides medical care to the elderly, bli...
The doctrine of estates is the common law system for the classification of divided ownership. Its ...
Beginning with workmen\u27s compensation in 1910 and getting great impetus from the depression of th...
This article seeks to examine the extent to which a unified concept of unconscionability can be used...
Often personal injury victims who will need costly medical assistance throughout their lives will di...
This article explores the ins and outs of special needs trusts, which can offer your client improved...
This paper examines the advantages and disadvantages of using special needs trusts in order to provi...
Supplemental needs trusts are trusts designed to assist individuals with disabilities by paying for ...
Title from PDF caption (viewed on Nov. 26, 2007).; "February 23, 2007."; Includes bibliographical re...
Special considerations come into play when a plaintiff poised to recover money is a child or an indi...
The basic federal safety net program for elderly, blind and disabled persons is Supplemental Securit...
In America, plaintiffs in tort settlements receive more benefits, including Medicare benefits, than ...
Use of the stretch strategy for an inherited IRA offers many attractive features for estate planning...
In Nebraska, as in many other states, a person, during his lifetime, may dispose of personal propert...
The Achieving a Better Life Experience (ABLE) Act of 2015 establishes 529A plans which provide speci...
Medicaid is a joint federal-state partnership program that provides medical care to the elderly, bli...
The doctrine of estates is the common law system for the classification of divided ownership. Its ...
Beginning with workmen\u27s compensation in 1910 and getting great impetus from the depression of th...
This article seeks to examine the extent to which a unified concept of unconscionability can be used...