94-20629. Supplemental Security Income for the Aged, Blind, and Disabled; Treatment of Promissory Notes in Home Replacement Situations  

  • [Federal Register Volume 59, Number 162 (Tuesday, August 23, 1994)]
    [Unknown Section]
    [Page 0]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 94-20629]
    
    
    [[Page Unknown]]
    
    [Federal Register: August 23, 1994]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
    
    Social Security Administration
    
    20 CFR Part 416
    
    [Regulations No. 16]
    RIN 0960-AD61
    
     
    
    Supplemental Security Income for the Aged, Blind, and Disabled; 
    Treatment of Promissory Notes in Home Replacement Situations
    
    AGENCY: Social Security Administration, HHS.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: This regulation explains how the Social Security 
    Administration treats promissory notes and similar installment sales 
    contracts and the proceeds generated therefrom when received as a 
    result of the sale of a home which is excluded from resources under the 
    supplemental security income (SSI) program. This regulation provides 
    for application of the ``home replacement exclusion'' in situations 
    where timely reinvestment of the installments into another home, which 
    is similarly excludable as the principal place of residence, is made.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: This final regulation is effective August 23, 1994.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Regarding this Federal Register 
    document--Henry D. Lerner, Legal Assistant, Office of Regulations, 
    Social Security Administration, 6401 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 
    21235, (410) 965-1762; regarding eligibility or filing for benefits--
    our national toll-free number, 1-800-772-1213.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
        Section 1613(a)(1) of the Social Security Act (the Act) excludes an 
    individual's home from resources for purposes of determining 
    eligibility for SSI payments. Further, Sec. 416.1212(d) of our 
    regulations allows the proceeds from the sale of an excluded home to be 
    excluded from resources to the extent the proceeds are intended to be 
    used and are, in fact, used within 3 months of the date of their 
    receipt to purchase a replacement home which is similarly excluded. 
    When that regulation was published in 1975, conventional financial 
    arrangements were the norm. It was reasonable to expect an individual 
    to receive the full purchase price of the former home in cash and to 
    reinvest fully and immediately all cash proceeds from the sale. 
    Therefore, no provision was included in the regulations for the 
    treatment of home purchase financing other than full cash payment at or 
    near the time of sale. Over the years, however, less conventional 
    arrangements involving proceeds other than cash (such as promissory 
    notes or installment sales contracts) have become more common.
        Under our regulations defining resources in the SSI program at 
    Sec. 416.1201, promissory notes or installment sales contracts received 
    as proceeds from the sale of a home are considered resources as long as 
    the SSI claimant owns them and has the legal right to convert them to 
    cash to be used for his or her support and maintenance. Such 
    instruments can be excluded, however, under Sec. 416.1212(d) if they 
    are converted to cash and used for the purchase of a replacement home 
    within 3 months of receipt of the note or contract. In fact, prior to 
    September 1989, we required that they be so converted in order to be 
    considered an excluded resource. Accordingly, under this 
    interpretation, the claimant's options were limited to selling the 
    house for cash (possibly below market value) or liquidating the 
    promissory note or installment sales contract likely at a substantial 
    loss. Either of these options could have jeopardized the opportunity to 
    acquire or maintain a replacement home without losing SSI eligibility.
        On September 11, 1986, the United States Court of Appeals for the 
    Ninth Circuit rejected this interpretation of Sec. 416.1212(d) in the 
    case of Hart v. Bowen, 799 F.2d 567. The Hart case involved an 
    individual who sold her home under an installment sales contract. She 
    applied the downpayment she received toward the downpayment on a new 
    home. She also applied each of the monthly installment payments she 
    received toward the mortgage on the new home. Her SSI benefits were 
    terminated because the installment contract from the sale of her former 
    home constituted an excess resource. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals 
    found that the current market value of an installment sales contract 
    resulting from the sale of an individual's excluded home is part of the 
    value of the replacement home and thus excluded from countable 
    resources, provided the payments generated by the contract were 
    reinvested timely in the excluded replacement home. In May 1987, as a 
    result of the decision rendered by the Ninth Circuit in Hart v. Bowen, 
    we issued Acquiescence Ruling AR 87-3(9) to comply with the decision in 
    the Ninth Circuit States.
        In September 1989, we changed our national practice and published 
    Social Security Ruling SSR 89-5p, effective September 6, 1989. The 
    ruling explained that the value of an installment sales contract 
    constitutes a ``proceed'' from the sale of an excluded home which can 
    be excluded from resources under Sec. 416.1212(d) if: (a) the contract 
    results from the sale of an individual's home as described in 
    Sec. 416.1212(a); (b) within 3 months of receipt (execution) of the 
    contract, the individual purchases a replacement home which also fits 
    the description in Sec. 416.1212(a); and (c) all contract generated 
    sale proceeds are reinvested in the replacement home within 3 months of 
    receipt of such proceeds. In addition, the ruling provided that when 
    payments against the principal that result from the installment sales 
    contract are being reinvested timely (i.e., within 3 months of receipt) 
    in a new home, such payments are also excluded from resources. The 
    ruling further provided that if the home replacement exclusion is not 
    applicable because one or more installment payments have not been 
    timely reinvested, the exclusion may be applied effective with the 
    month following the month of receipt of a timely reinvested payment.
        This regulation codifies SSR 89-5p and reflects more completely our 
    policy on the treatment of proceeds from the sale of an excluded home 
    by designating the existing text in Sec. 416.1212 paragraph (d) as 
    paragraph (d)(1), and adding two new paragraphs (d)(2) and (d)(3), to 
    explain the conditions under which the value of a promissory note or 
    similar installment sales contract, and other proceeds from the sale, 
    consisting of the downpayment and monthly installment payments towards 
    the principal, will be excluded from being considered SSI resources. In 
    addition, we are adding new paragraphs (e), (f), and (g) to 
    Sec. 416.1212 to explain the effects on SSI eligibility of failure to 
    reinvest installment payments timely and the receipt of interest 
    payments. When this final rule is published both SSR 89-5p and AR 87-
    3(9) will be rescinded.
    
    Public Comments
    
        We published the proposed rule with a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking 
    (NPRM) in the Federal Register on October 13, 1993 (58 FR 52943). 
    Interested persons and organizations were given 60 days to comment. The 
    comment period closed on December 13, 1993. We received comments from 
    only one commenter.
        We considered carefully all of the comments which this individual 
    made on the proposed rule. However, for the reasons stated below, we 
    did not adopt any of them. Accordingly, the final rule is the same as 
    the proposed rule. A summary of the comments and our responses are 
    provided below.
        Comment: The commenter disagreed with the policy to allow a person 
    only 3 months to reinvest the proceeds from the sale of an excluded 
    home into another home since the purchase of a home generally 
    represents one of the largest transactions a person may make, one which 
    would require time to make a wise decision. Thus, the commenter 
    believes that it makes sense to give a person more time. The period 
    should be increased from 3 months to 6 months similar to the time 
    allowed for the disposal of other resources, such as retroactive title 
    II or title XVI payments.
        Response: We do not plan to change the 3-month time period for 
    reinvestment. The substance of our regulatory revision focuses on how 
    to evaluate as resources certain noncash proceeds from the sale of an 
    excluded home and not on the time period of reinvestment. The time 
    period has been longstanding program policy which was not questioned in 
    the Hart decision. We would expect that individuals selling their homes 
    would arrange for the purchase of a new home before the former home is 
    sold. In addition, we have no evidence to support the commenter's 
    contention that the current time period for reinvestment is too short.
        Comment: The commenter criticized the proposed policy to count as a 
    resource the value of the note as well as any proceeds not timely 
    invested as being an ``overly harsh penalty.'' Because the individual 
    has immediate access only to the proceeds of the note that are ``on 
    hand'' to meet his or her basic needs and not the value of the note 
    itself, the commenter believed that only the proceeds should be 
    considered a resource.
        Response: This policy is consistent with the relevant provisions of 
    the Act and other related regulations. Under section 1611(a) of the 
    Act, Congress specifically has established resource limits for an 
    individual's eligibility for the needs-based benefits in the SSI 
    program in addition to income limits. As was stated above, promissory 
    notes or installment sales contracts received from the sale of an 
    excluded home are resources, as described in Sec. 416.1201, as long as 
    the owner has the legal right to liquidate or convert the resource to 
    cash which could be used for support and maintenance. In general, while 
    it is true that some resources may not be available to be used 
    immediately to meet an individual's daily needs, Congress has 
    recognized that such resources have value in that they can be sold or 
    ``cashed out'' and the money received can be used by the individual for 
    his or her support and maintenance.
        Comment: The commenter stated that the NPRM does not explain how 
    the Agency will determine the value of a promissory note or similar 
    installment sales contract.
        Response: We provide general guidance on resource valuation 
    procedures in paragraphs (b) and (c) of Sec. 416.1201 of our 
    regulations. These paragraphs explain how we evaluate liquid and 
    nonliquid resources according to their equity value. For purposes of 
    this evaluation, the equity value of a resource is defined as the price 
    for which an item can reasonably be expected to sell on the open market 
    in the particular geographic area involved minus any encumbrances. The 
    value of a promissory note or installment sales contract will be 
    determined by using this procedure.
    
    Regulatory Procedures
    
    Executive Order 12866
    
        We have consulted with the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) 
    and determined that this rule does not meet the criteria for a 
    significant regulatory action under E.O. 12866. Thus, it was not 
    subject to OMB review.
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        This regulation imposes no reporting/recordkeeping requirements 
    requiring OMB clearance.
    
    Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        We certify that this regulation will not have a significant 
    economic impact on a substantial number of small entities because this 
    regulation affects only individuals and States. Therefore, a regulatory 
    flexibility analysis as provided in Pub. L. 96-354, the Regulatory 
    Flexibility Act of 1980, is not required.
    
    (Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance Program No. 93.807, 
    Supplemental Security Income).
    
    List of Subjects in 20 CFR Part 416
    
        Administrative practice and procedure, Aged, Blind, Disability 
    benefits, Public assistance programs, Reporting and recordkeeping 
    requirements, Supplemental Security Income.
    
        Dated: July 5, 1994.
    Shirley Chater,
    Commissioner of Social Security.
        Approved: August 16, 1994.
    Donna E. Shalala,
    Secretary of Health and Human Services.
        For the reasons set out in the preamble, Part 416 of Chapter III of 
    Title 20, Code of Federal Regulations, is amended as follows:
    
    PART 416--[AMENDED]
    
        1. The authority citation for Subpart L of Part 416 continues to 
    read as follows:
    
        Authority: Secs. 1102, 1602, 1611, 1612, 1613, 1614(f), 1621 and 
    1631 of the Social Security Act; 42 U.S.C. 1302, 1381a, 1382, 1382a, 
    1382b, 1382c(f), 1382j and 1383; sec. 211 of Pub. L. 93-66; 87 Stat. 
    154.
    
        2. Section 416.1212 is amended by redesignating the existing text 
    in paragraph (d) as paragraph (d)(1), adding new paragraphs (d)(2) and 
    (d)(3), and adding new paragraphs (e), (f) and (g) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 416.1212  Exclusion of the home.
    
    * * * * *
        (d) Proceeds from the sale of an excluded home.
        (1) * * *
        (2) The value of a promissory note or similar installment sales 
    contract constitutes a ``proceed'' which can be excluded from resources 
    if--
        (i) The note results from the sale of an individual's home as 
    described in Sec. 416.1212(a);
        (ii) Within 3 months of receipt (execution) of the note, the 
    individual purchases a replacement home as described in 
    Sec. 416.1212(a) (see paragraph (e) of this section for an exception); 
    and
        (iii) All note-generated proceeds are reinvested in the replacement 
    home within 3 months of receipt (see paragraph (f) of this section for 
    an exception).
        (3) In addition to excluding the value of the note itself, other 
    proceeds from the sale of the former home are excluded resources if 
    they are used within 3 months of receipt to make payment on the 
    replacement home. Such proceeds, which consist of the downpayment and 
    that portion of any installment amount constituting payment against the 
    principal, represent a conversion of a resource.
        (e) Failure to purchase another excluded home timely. If the 
    individual does not purchase a replacement home within the 3-month 
    period specified in paragraph (d)(2)(ii) of this section, the value of 
    a promissory note or similar installment sales contract received from 
    the sale of an excluded home is a countable resource effective with the 
    first moment of the month following the month the note is executed. If 
    the individual purchases a replacement home after the expiration of the 
    3-month period, the note becomes an excluded resource the month 
    following the month of purchase of the replacement home provided that 
    all other proceeds are fully and timely reinvested as explained in 
    paragraph (f) of this section.
        (f) Failure to reinvest proceeds timely. (1) If the proceeds (e.g., 
    installment amounts constituting payment against the principal) from 
    the sale of an excluded home under a promissory note or similar 
    installment sales contract are not reinvested fully and timely (within 
    3 months of receipt) in a replacement home, as of the first moment of 
    the month following receipt of the payment, the individual's countable 
    resources will include:
        (i) The value of the note; and
        (ii) That portion of the proceeds, retained by the individual, 
    which was not timely reinvested.
        (2) The note remains a countable resource until the first moment of 
    the month following the receipt of proceeds that are fully and timely 
    reinvested in the replacement home. Failure to reinvest proceeds for a 
    period of time does not permanently preclude exclusion of the 
    promissory note or installment sales contract. However, previously 
    received proceeds that were not timely reinvested remain countable 
    resources to the extent they are retained.
    
        Example 1. On July 10, an SSI recipient received his quarterly 
    payment of $200 from the buyer of his former home under an 
    installment sales contract. As of October 31, the recipient has used 
    only $150 of the July payment in connection with the purchase of a 
    new home. The exclusion of the unused $50 (and of the installment 
    contract itself) is revoked back to July 10. As a result, the $50 
    and the value of the contract as of August 1, are included in a 
    revised determination of resources for August and subsequent months.
        Example 2. On April 10, an SSI recipient received a payment of 
    $250 from the buyer of his former home under an installment sales 
    contract. On May 3, he reinvested $200 of the payment in the 
    purchase of a new home. On May 10, the recipient received another 
    $250 payment, and reinvested the full amount on June 3. As of July 
    31, since the recipient has used only $200 of the April payment in 
    connection with the purchase of the new home, the exclusion of the 
    unused $50 (and of the installment contract itself) is revoked back 
    to April 10. As a result, the $50 and the value of the contract as 
    of May 1 are includable resources. Since the recipient fully and 
    timely reinvested the May payment, the installment contract and the 
    payment are again excludable resources as of June 1. However, the 
    $50 left over from the previous payment remains a countable 
    resource.
    
        (g) Interest payments. If interest is received as part of an 
    installment payment resulting from the sale of an excluded home under a 
    promissory note or similar installment sales contract, the interest 
    payments do not represent conversion of a resource. The interest is 
    income under the provisions of Secs. 416.1102, 416.1120, and 
    416.1121(c).
    
    [FR Doc. 94-20629 Filed 8-22-94; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4190-29-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
8/23/1994
Published:
08/23/1994
Department:
Social Security Administration
Entry Type:
Uncategorized Document
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
94-20629
Dates:
This final regulation is effective August 23, 1994.
Pages:
0-0 (1 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Federal Register: August 23, 1994, Regulations No. 16
RINs:
0960-AD61
CFR: (3)
20 CFR 416.1212(a)
20 CFR 416.1201
20 CFR 416.1212