H.K. v. State

877 A.2d 1218, 184 N.J. 367, 2005 N.J. LEXIS 927
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJuly 21, 2005
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 877 A.2d 1218 (H.K. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
H.K. v. State, 877 A.2d 1218, 184 N.J. 367, 2005 N.J. LEXIS 927 (N.J. 2005).

Opinion

Justice LaVECCHIA

delivered the opinion of the Court.

At age sixty-seven, H.K. applied for Medicaid assistance and was declared ineligible by the New Jersey Division of Medical Assistance and Health Services (DMAHS) because it determined that H.K. had transferred real property for less than fair market value within thirty-six months of the date that she applied (the “look-back” period). This appeal turns on whether DMAHS was correct as to when the real property transfer was effective for purposes of the look-back.

DMAHS concluded that the effective date of transfer was the date that the conveying deed was recorded, not the date that it was executed. The Appellate Division deferred to the agency’s determination as DMAHS is the administrative agency responsible for deciding contested cases involving entitlement to Medicaid [371]*371benefits. We now reverse. Although DMAHS is entitled to deference in respect of its statutory expertise, that deference is unwarranted in this matter because DMAHS misapplied the law governing conveyances of real property.

I.

This matter was the subject of several hearings in the Office of Administrative Law (OAL). We recite the facts developed in those proceedings as well as procedural twists and turns in the history of this administrative appeal.

H.K.’s father, L.O., died on May 22,1996, and conveyed property located at 171 25th Street in Avalon (the Avalon property) to H.K. in his will. H.K. moved into the Avalon property in 1997, and was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s Disease later that year.

On July 27 or 28, 1998, H.K.’s children, D.K., T.K., and T.K., met with Ronald Wagenheim, a tax attorney, to explore transferring the Avalon property into the children’s names.1 Wagenheim testified that the children wanted to discuss “the tax consequences associated with the transfer” of the Avalon property. The children consulted Wagenheim after they were told by H.K.’s sister that L.O.’s estate was subject to significant estate taxes upon L.O.’s death and that they should take steps to minimize the tax consequences that would flow from H.K.’s estate upon her demise. Wagenheim was retained to provide estate planning assistance to the family. As part of his representation of H.K., Wagenheim conferred with her about transferring the Avalon property, and reviewed her will, her existing power of attorney, and her need for a living will.

[372]*372After his initial consultation with the children, and in order to be sure that H.K. wished to transfer the property to her children, Wagenheim took two steps. He sent a letter to H.K. explaining that he had met with her children and detailing what they had discussed. At Wagenheim’s request, H.K. signed and returned the letter, stating that she was “in agreement that [Wagenheim] should prepare a deed transferring [her] ownership in the [Avalon property] to [her] three children.” Wagenheim also met with H.K. in person, outside the presence of her children, to determine whether H.K. truly intended to convey the property to her children and whether she was competent to do so. After satisfying himself in respect of both issues, Wagenheim prepared for H.K. a new power of attorney, a durable power of attorney, and a living will. Another attorney from his office prepared a deed to convey the Avalon property to H.K.’s children.

On July 30, 1998, H.K. executed the deed (the H.K. deed) conveying the Avalon property as a gift to her children. Wagenheim gave the deed to H.K.’s daughter, D.K., on August 3, 1998, with instructions to coordinate the filing of the H.K. deed with the filing of the deed from L.O.’s estate that granted the Avalon property to H.K. (the L.O. deed). Wagenheim instructed D.K. to add the recording information from the L.O. deed to the front page of the H.K. deed before she filed the H.K. deed for recording purposes. In a separate letter to H.K. on that same date, Wagenheim informed H.K. that the deed had not yet been recorded, but that “[a]s a matter of law, the transfer is complete as of July 30,1998 and the recording is just further evidence of that fact as against other creditors or lienholders.”

The next significant event occurred in November 1999, when H.K.’s son, T.K., telephoned the County Clerk’s Office in Cape May County to inquire about recording the H.K. deed. He was informed that the L.O. deed had not been recorded and that the Avalon property had to be transferred into H.K.’s name before the deed transferring the property to H.K.’s children could be recorded. The children contacted their aunt, who was executrix of the [373]*373L.O. estate, and the attorney who was handling the L.O. estate, to obtain a copy of the L.O. deed for recording purposes. Eventually, the children received a copy of the deed from their aunt; however, its filing was overlooked. Due to miscommunieation between T.K. and D.K., each thought the other had filed the deed. T.K. testified that he “may have forwarded” the deed to his sister, or he may have been the one that “dropped the ball;” but, what is certain is that he was unaware of what happened to the deed at that point in time. D.K. also admitted that the deed apparently “got misplaced or misfiled,” leading her “at one point [to think that her] brother was handling it, [while] he thought [she] was handling it.”

Sometime in July 2000, D.K.’s husband stumbled across the L.O. deed lodged between pages of a cookbook in the Avalon property. Realizing then that the L.O. deed had not been recorded, H.K.’s children had D.K.’s husband bring the deed to the Cape May County Clerk’s Office for recording only to have it rejected for lack of a proper acknowledgement and an Affidavit of Consideration. They sent the L.O. deed back to the attorney handling L.O.’s estate who, in turn, in late July 2000, mailed back to D.K.’s husband the signed and acknowledged L.O. deed, dated July 24, 2000, and an Affidavit of Consideration, dated July 13, 2000. With that in hand, D.K.’s husband had both the L.O. deed and the H.K. deed recorded at the Cape May County Clerk’s Office on August 9, 2000.

In the meantime, H.K. continued to live in the Avalon home until September or October 2001, when she moved in with D.K. because H.K. “needed more attention” due to her deteriorating condition. As her disease progressed, H.K.’s care became more difficult. On April 9, 2002, H.K. disappeared for several hours. Members of the local police and fire department participated in the search for her, eventually finding her hiding in a ear. That night, H.K. exhibited heightened anxiety, telling her daughter that she was hearing voices that “were scaring her.” H.K. told D.K. that “[t]hey want me to hurt [D.K.’s son] Michael, the voices, the [374]*374dirty voices are telling me to hurt Michael.” The next day, D.K. took her mother to the Atlantic City Medical Center where she was held overnight for observation in a crisis center. Later she was transferred for care at a behavioral center and remained there for approximately one month, until she was released to D.K.’s care.

On April 12, 2002, D.K. applied for Medicaid assistance on H.K.’s behalf, listing as her disabilities, Alzheimer’s Disease, diverticulitis, and H.K’s use of a pacemaker. The application was submitted nearly forty-five months after the H.K. deed was executed and twenty months after it was recorded.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
877 A.2d 1218, 184 N.J. 367, 2005 N.J. LEXIS 927, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hk-v-state-nj-2005.