Hollman v. South Dakota Department of Social Services

2015 SD 21, 862 N.W.2d 856, 2015 S.D. LEXIS 54, 2015 WL 1737054
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 2015
Docket27183
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2015 SD 21 (Hollman v. South Dakota Department of Social Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hollman v. South Dakota Department of Social Services, 2015 SD 21, 862 N.W.2d 856, 2015 S.D. LEXIS 54, 2015 WL 1737054 (S.D. 2015).

Opinion

ZINTER, Justice.

[¶ 1.] The Department of Social Services (DSS) provided Medicaid benefits to Darlene Hollman while she was in a nursing home. At that time, Hollman had an interest in real estate. DSS did not record a lien on the property for the benefits it had provided until after Hollman died. Hollman’s children contested the lien’s validity. The circuit court granted summary judgment for DSS, ruling that the lien had attached to Hollman’s interest in the property even though the lien was not recorded until after her death. The court concluded that the lien recording requirement related to the question of priority between claimants rather than lien attachment. Holl-man’s heirs appeal. We reverse.

Facts and Procedural History

[¶ 2.] Thomas White owned real estate in Yankton County. Upon White’s death in 2001, Hollman, White’s stepdaughter, inherited a one-fifth interest in the property subject to a life estate in her mother Lydia White. In 2005, Hollman began receiving Medicaid benefits from DSS for nursing home care. Hollman died intestate in 2008, while her mother was still alive. At the time of Hollman’s death, DSS had paid $101,850.09 for her care. Hollman’s children and DSS were apparently unaware of Hollman’s remainder interest. The interest had never been disclosed to DSS, and her estate was not initially probated.

[¶3.] However, when Lydia died in 2012, Hollman’s remainder interest became a present interest, and a probate was then opened to transfer Hollman’s interest to her two children. DSS was given notice of the probate on February 12, 2013. On February 22, 2013, DSS filed a claim against the estate for the nursing home benefits it had provided. On March 11, 2013, the estate disallowed the claim because the three-year statute of limitations for creditor’s claims had expired. That determination was not appealed by DSS. Instead, on March 21, 2013, DSS recorded a medical assistance lien on the property *858 for the Medicaid benefits it had provided. The personal representative later executed a deed conveying Hollman’s interest to her children, and the probate was closed without payment of DSS’s claim.

[¶ 4.] Because Hollman’s children wanted to sell their interest in the property, DSS released its lien in the amount of $101,850.09 and that sum was placed in escrow pending a judicial determination whether the lien was valid. A declaratory action was commenced, and both Holl-man’s children and DSS moved for summary judgment based on stipulated facts. The circuit court concluded that an enforceable medical assistance lien was created on the property at the time the nursing home assistance was provided. The court further concluded that Hollman’s interest in the property transferred at death to the children subject to the lien. The court granted summary judgment in favor of DSS for the amount of the lien plus prejudgment interest.

[¶ 5.] Hollman’s children appeal arguing, among other things, that medical assistance liens authorized in SDCL 28-6-24 and -25 do not “attach” to any particular real property until the lien is recorded. They also argue that under SDCL 29A-3-101, Hollman’s interest vested in her children immediately upon her death. Because the lien was not recorded until four years after Hollman’s death, her children contend that Hollman had no property interest to which the DSS lien could have attached. DSS, however, argues that the lien attached when DSS provided the assistance. DSS contends that a statutory recording requirement is intended to regulate priority rather than attachment. Therefore, DSS contends that its lien attached before Hollman’s death and the transfer to her children was subject to the lien. 1

Decision

[¶ 6.] SDCL 28-6-24 provides: “Any payment of medical assistance by or through the Department of Social Services to an individual ... is a debt and creates a medical assistance lien against any real property in which the individual has any ownership interest.... The lien so created shall be perfected against real estate as provided in § 28-6-25.” SDCL 28-6-25 provides: “The register of deeds shall ... record the medical assistance real estate lien in the real estate records, at which time the hen will attach to the real property interest of the recipient^]” (Emphasis added.) Therefore, although SDCL 28-6-24 creates (and provides for perfection of) medical assistance liens, SDCL 28-6-25 specifically provides that the lien does not attach to real property until the hen is recorded. 2

[¶ 7.] The circuit court correctly recognized that the “perfection” provisions of SDCL 28-6-24 and -25 are relevant in priority disputes between competing interests. But that analysis does not address the predicate question of when, under this statutory scheme, a hen attaches to an interest. That omission is significant because hens authorized by statute do not necessarily attach. See Muhlenkort v. Union Cnty. Land Trust, 530 N.W.2d 658, 662 (S.D.1995) (“ [Although [the] Judge ... granted Muhlenkort a statutory hen *859 on all real estate which Henry Muhlenkort had an interest, that lien never attached because Henry no longer had any real property interests”). See also SDCL Title Standards 11-01 (“A medical assistance lien created under SDCL 28-6 becomes a lien against real property only from the time the lien is filed with the Register of Deeds.”).

[¶ 8.] DSS, however, argues that a statutory lien may “attach” merely by operation of statute. DSS cites the example of SDCL 10-59-11, a tax lien statute interpreted in State ex rel. Dep’t of Revenue v. Karras, 515 N.W.2d 248, 250 (S.D.1994) (“A sales tax lien attaches to the property of the taxpayer at the time the tax is due and delinquent and becomes perfected when Department records the lien with the register of deeds in the county where the taxpayer’s property is located.”). We acknowledge the distinction between perfection and attachment. But DSS’s reliance on this example is misplaced. Unlike the medical assistance lien statutes at issue in this case, the tax lien statute construed in Karras

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2015 SD 21, 862 N.W.2d 856, 2015 S.D. LEXIS 54, 2015 WL 1737054, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hollman-v-south-dakota-department-of-social-services-sd-2015.