Medicaid and Elective Share Claims in New Jersey, Friedman Law

Category

Medicaid and Elective Share Claims in New Jersey

Posted on: September 17th, 2015 by Mark R. Friedman

In New Jersey, if your spouse dies, you have a legal right to take what is called an “elective share” from his estate.

The elective share is the minimal amount that a spouse is entitled to by law.  It’s meant to prevent someone from disinheriting his or her spouse and leaving the spouse destitute.  For example, the elective share would prevent a man in a second marriage from leaving everything to his children from a prior marriage, and leaving his second wife bereft.

The amount of the elective share is determined through a complicated formula, per N.J.S.A. 3B:8-1 et seq.  Essentially, the elective share is equal to one-third of the deceased spouse’s estate, plus certain property the decedent gave away while he was alive, minus the property the surviving spouse owns.

In short, the elective share is the minimum that one spouse can leave to the other when he or she dies.  This is great for scorned spouses, but not as good for Medicaid beneficiaries.

To qualify for Medicaid, you generally must have less than $2,000 in assets.  So if you are on Medicaid, and your spouse isn’t, and your spouse dies and leaves an elective share to you, then that property will disqualify you from Medicaid until it’s spent down (or otherwise disposed).  If you’re receiving long term care Medicaid, that property will likely be lost to long term care costs.

However that’s a lot better than the alternative.  Most people in first marriages leave all of their property to their spouses, not just the elective share.  That means all the property will be lost to long term care costs.  Instead, if your spouse is on Medicaid and you aren’t, you can create a new estate plan that leaves the minimum elective share to your spouse, and the rest of your property to your children, siblings or other heirs.

For information about your specific circumstances, call or email FriedmanLaw today.

logo

As this website provides general information and isn’t tailored to your particular situation, it doesn’t constitute legal advice and may not take into account rules and exceptions that affect you. Although updated from time to time, this website may not take account of

recent legal developments or differences in laws from state to state. For safety sake, obtain individual legal advice before you act! You assume all risk of acting on information contained in this website. This website doesn’t constitute legal advice, and no attorney-client

relationship exists unless FriedmanLaw and you execute a written engagement agreement. Please contact us at 908-704-1900 to discuss engaging FriedmanLaw to help resolve your legal concerns.

Homepage photo: Cows grazing at Meadowbrook Farm, Bernardsville, NJ by Siddharth Mallya. October 23, 2012. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Autumn_Leaves_13.jpg.
Interior photo: Somerset hills pastoral scene by Lawrence Friedman.

 This website provides general information, that does not take into account your particular situation or rules and exceptions that may affect you. This website does not provide legal advice, and information herein is not meant to be acted on. You should obtain individual legal advice about your situation before you act, and you assume all risk for acting on any information on this website. There is no attorney-client relationship as a result of this website, and there is no attorney-client relationship between FriedmanLaw and you unless you execute a written engagement agreement with Friedman Law. The Supreme Court of New Jersey does not endorse attorney advertising, and no aspect of this advertisement has been approved by the Supreme Court of New Jersey.

Website By TheCoolMoon

Homepage photo: Cows grazing at Meadowbrook Farm, Bernardsville, NJ by Siddharth Mallya. October 23, 2012.