Yesterday my boy turned three. Wow, time flies. My wife has the details.
Henry Lee
So, I e-mail a buddy of mine this Doghouse Riley post about the recent troubles of Henry Lee Summers. The post shows a picture of Henry Lee looking pretty rough and discusses Henry Lee’s recent arrest for “DUI in a Southside trailer park after he careened through the park, bouncing off cars, trucks, and at least one home, elbowed a Sheriff’s deputy in the head, and was Tasered.” My buddy responds:
Oh, Henry Lee. Pretty generic, but he did have a couple of good rockers in a period noted for its bad music. Having lived in Bloomington for seven years, I did have
occasion to see him free (he would play parties, festivals, Little 500, etc), and he tried hard to entertain, anyway. I also used to go to Broad Ripple during my Indy days, and there would occasionally be a pretty decent cover band with a dumb name like the Lizards, or the Crocodiles, or some such thing. Anyway, he was their drummer, oddly enough. Anyway…In fairness to Henry Lee–if you’re in Indy long enough, you will eventually be at some point in a trailer park on the south side. And the only way to deal with that is to stay in your car, and be drunk.
Just thought I’d share that pearl of wisdom.
CLE – Update on Indiana Law
Today I’m spending in Indianapolis at day 2 of a two day Continuing Legal Education seminar that attempts to provide an update in what has been going on in most areas of Indiana law. The seminar is much larger than I anticipated in terms of number of lawyers in attendance. They pretty much fill up Room 501 of the Convention Center. I guess it’s: a) useful; and b) a cost effective way to get most of one’s CLE credits in one shot. Here are some notes from the seminar. If I’ve misstated something, chalk it up to speed, careless note taking, and/or my ignorance of what is being said, not to any fault of the speaker.
Prof. Jegen – Tax law. First segment spent talking about the upcoming election and tax law efforts. Recent efforts have been eroding the middle class. Heritage Foundation is about the only group who doesn’t seem to think the deficit is an issue. Thinks the exemptions will probably go up to something like $5 million per spouse and this will take care of the vast bulk of lawyer’s clients. Another important issue is the effect of the estate tax on the deficit. We won’t know what’s going to happen until after the election. Something will almost certainly happen because if nothing is done, the law is that the estate tax will revert to the way it was 10 years prior.
Great move to deal with the AMT. It’s spreading – was originally supposed to affect the very wealthy but now it’s getting to people it was never designed to affect.
Recommends Roth IRA – money has to be in for at least 5 years and can only be taken out for prescribed reasons, mostly because you’re between 59.5 years old and 70.5 years old. If done properly, money is tax free. Recently has allowed roll over retirement plan into Roth IRA – have to pay income tax on the retirement plan funds, but then it can go into the Roth.
Congress has given Dept. of Treasury the authority to adopt regulations to govern deductions for donations of household goods. These deductions amount to $9 billion per year. Apparently the federal government thinks a lot of these donations are of essentially worthless items.
Can get deductions for FMV of books donated to schools if certified by donor and recipient that the books will actually be used by students.
Charitable remainder trust has to have specific instructions as to exactly how much will be paid out to the individual before the trust qualifies for a deduction.
Charitable deduction for donation of land up to 50% and with a 15 year carryover.
Deficit went down some, not because tax rates were helpful – this is a tax cut finance deficit – but because there was a 2 year window for corporations to bring foreign money back into the country at a very low tax rate.
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Elder Law Update – Robert Fechtman.
Medicaid – Assets/Resources; Income; Transfer of Assets.
Resources: Single – $1,500 at first day of first month.
Couples – $2,250 if both are in the community or in a nursing home. For married couple where one spouse is at home, $1,500 for applicant plus add’l allowance for spouse at home. General rule is the community spouse can keep half of assets of couple above $19,908 and below $99,540.
Assets that are excluded from computation are a home (capped at equity value of $500,000) to which applicant intends to return; irrevocable pre-paid burial arrangement; furniture, household goods, and personal effects; one automobile with $4,500 equity value for single applicant or any value for applicant with a community spouse, rental real estate producing a positive cash flow; assets held in certain forms of trusts.
There are spousal allocation rules where, if the spouse at home gets less than $1,650/month (up dot $2,489), the spouse can get an allowance from the income of the Medicaid recipient.
Lookback period has been extended to 5 years. Eligibility for Medicaid doesn’t start now until, essentially, you’re out of money and in a nursing home.
Federal law provides that a transfer penalty does not apply when assets were transferred solely for purposes other than qualifying for medical assistance. Usually this means assets that were exempt in deterimining eligibility. However, Indiana has adopted rules to say that Medicaid applicants would also have to show that they were not, at least in part, attempting to avoid Medicaid estate recovery or a Medicaid lien.
Annuities have been changed for asset calculation. No more annuities from private parties (family members, particularly). No more annuities with balloon payments at the end – the idea being to have the big payment come after the applicant is dead and the heirs receive the money. Another provision requires that the state be named as remainder beneficiary on annuities purchased on or after 2/8/06 or the purchase will be considered to be a transfer of an asset for less than fair market value.
Where a child lives in the parents’ home and provides care to the parent that keeps the parent out of a nursing home for 2 years or more, the parent can transfer the house to the child without a transfer of asset penalty.
Rental property is exempt from asset calculation but only if fair market rent is being charged (no renting out to family members for nominal sums.)
A transfer penalty will be imposed for failure to take action to receive assets which one is entitled to receive by law. Example is where a spouse disinherits the medicaid applicant, most likely to avoid having the estate go to Medicaid. If the spouse then fails to attempt to take against the will, the applicant will get a transfer penalty. However, in the case of a surviving spouse who fails to take a statutory share of a deceased spouse’s estate, no penalty will be imposed if the deceased spouse has made other equivalent arrangements to provide for a spouse’s needs. “Other equivalent arrangements†include but is not limited to a trust established for the benefit of the surviving spouse.
Estate recovery has been increased to include a great deal of non-probate assets. There had been an exemption of $125,000 so that applicants could leave something to their kids. That’s been scaled back and now eliminated. The State has now been going against even very small amounts, such as in bank accounts.
Estate has been expanded to include any interest in real estate that the medicaid recipient held as a joint tenant with rights of survivorship, if the joint tenancy was created after 6/30/02. These kinds of trends that erode spousal protections could have the effect of returning us to the days of spouses getting divorces simply to protect the community spouse from becoming impoverished because of the applicant’s need for Medicaid.
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Terry Farmer – Contracts, Business, and Banking Law
Statute of Frauds – Writings where parties were still negotiating did not satisfy the writing requirement where contract could not be performed within a year and promissory estoppel did not remove it from the Statute because reliance injury was not independent from benefit of bargain, resulting instead from incidental expenses and inconveniences; and not so substantial as to consitutte an unjust ans unconscionable injury.
Condition precedent – Where a condition precedent remains in control of one of the parties, that party has a duty to make a reasonable and good faith effort to satisfy the condition. Therefore, where a contract required final approval by a board of directors and the employees never brought the contract before the board, the court held that a breach of the contract had occurred.
Business organization in Indiana has been undergoing a process designed to make changes sufficient to encourage businesses to locate and remain in Indiana rather than moving to more “business friendly†states. A recent Act (HEA-1306) is designed to “modernize and streamline†Indiana business law by broadening the persons who may sign documents which must be filed with the SOS; excluding from the definition of ‘distribution†amounts paid to shareholders for services, retirement benefits, or payment of gauranty fees; expanding the definition of “other entity†to include virtually any other busines entity other than a corporation; providing for business entity type conversions performed by foreign entities to be easily recognized in Indiana; broadening the ability for non-corporations to convert into other non-corporate business forms; and providing for springing member LLCs to allow for possibility of the continuation of the LLC after its last member dies.
Small loan remedies – Payday lender loans money; Check is written and held as security for the loan; when loan is due and unpaid, check gets cashed. If check bounces, then lender uses treble damage aspect of bad check. To take advantage of the treble damages, actual fraud in issuing of check has to be proven. Legislature has since come along and amended IC 24-4.5-7-406 to say that treble damages aren’t available for these kinds of loans and to restrict recovery on these loans in other ways.
Receiverships – a borrower, a joint venture, and a lender met during a foreclosure procedure and agreed to the appointment of a receiver who would take control of real property on behalf of the bank. During a break in the meeting, the borrower called his controller and directed a large transfer of rent proceeds from the borrower’s bank account to the joint venture account. The bank sued but the court disallowed the claims because the bank failed to object to a receiver’s final report which made no mention of rents, did not show any assets that could be considered equivalent to rent proceeds, and failed to list any accounts receivable. So, a creditor must object to a receivers report within 30 days otherwise it could lose big.
BREAK: I have to say, the lack of easily available free WiFi in downtown Indianapolis is seriously annoying. The convention center doesn’t offer any in its seminar rooms and within the convention center itself, they want to charge you $10 per day to access the Internet. Similarly, the Starbucks in the Hyatt offers a Tmobile connection that also costs $10/day. If Indy wants to present a tech friendly face, I’d suggest that visitors ought to be able to open their notebooks anywhere in the downtown area and get a signal. Sure, my opinion here is colored by what would be convenient to me personally, but I think it has some merit objectively as well. At this stage of the game, I regard Internet access as being about as basic as plumbing. I’d steer clear of any two bit town that made me pay to use the toilet.
Now I’ve moved a bit. Kudos to the Ah Barista Café across from the RCA Dome for hooking me up with a bagel and an Internet connection. I’ll go ahead and post this entry now while I have the chance. No idea if I’ll have the time or inclination to update the entry with notes from the second half of the day
IN-09: Sodrel renegs on debate promise
Dr. Eric Schansberg, Libertarian candidate for the 9th Congressional District, issued a press release accusing incumbent Mike Sodrel of reneging on a debate promise.
[Schansberg] criticized Representative Mike Sodrel for back-tracking on his earlier commitment to debate Schansberg and Baron Hill in New Albany on October 1st. Sodrel’s camp has offered the excuse that Congress might be in session on that day. But the likelihood of congressional activity on a Sunday—especially on the evening of Yom Kippur—seems quite remote. . . . Schansberg said, “After the first debate, I can certainly see why Sodrel would want to avoid as many debates as possible. But it’s a shame that he’s not communicating with the other candidates, ignoring a reasonable debate proposal, and breaking his word. His excuse doesn’t hold any water—and even if it did, it shows an inability to do long-term planning.”
IN-08: Mud flies in the bloody Eighth
The National Republican Congressional Committee has been airing ads attacking Brad Ellsworth, trying to paint him as a zombie who will serve his liberal San Francisco liberal masters if elected to Congress. As a counterattack, the Ellsworth campaign has come up with an interesting approach to turning one of Hostettler’s traditional “positives” into a “negative.”
Hostettler traditionally foregoes PAC money and raises very little money of his own with which to campaign. Normally, this is seen as a good thing. Not beholden to special interests, close to his constituents, etc. etc. Trouble is that, as a consequence of his minimal campaign funds, he owes a lot of his electoral activity to money spent by the National Republican Congressional Committee which uses money that is decidedly more tainted than the money raised by Hostettler personally. Ellsworth is raising ads that suggest Hostettler shouldn’t get a free ride simply because the money spent on behalf of his campaign is first laundered through the NRCC. Instead, the Ellsworth campaign is attempting to tag Hostettler with all of the sins of the NRCC, links to convicted Republican felon superlobbyist Jack Abramoff and the spreading scandal involving Congressmen such as convicted Rep. Duke Cunningham (R-CA), indicted Rep. Tom DeLay (R-TX), and convicted Rep. Bob Ney (R-OH). (See the Grand Old Docket for a rundown of criminal activity involving prominent politicians.)
IN-02: Republican pollster has Chocola up by 5% over Donnelly
James Wensits, writing for the South Bend Tribune, has a story reporting that a Republican polling outfit by the name of Mercury Public Affairs claims that Chocola has a 5% lead over Donnelly, specifically, their numbers have Chocola up 45.5% versus 40.5% with 13.9% undecided. The sample included 39.7% Republicans, 37% Democrats, and 18.2% independent. (Which, out of a sample of 300 people, means 119 Republicans, 111 Democrats, and 70 independents.)
This contrasts with the poll numbers in another story written by Mr. Wensits featuring the WSBT/South Bend Tribune poll (conducted by Research 2000 of Rockville Maryland) sampling 400 likely voters, showing Donnelly ahead 50% to 42% with 8% undecided and a 5% margin of error.
Both pollsters “stand by their numbers.” I didn’t see the break down of voter affiliation in the South Bend Tribune poll. In any case, if conventional wisdom holds up, Chocola is in some trouble even with his poll numbers. He’s below 50% approval and there are 13% undecideds. The conventional wisdom is that undecideds typically break significantly toward the challenger.
IN-02: Donnelly’s lead over Chocola increasing
A WSBT/South Bend Tribune poll indicates that Chocola is falling further behind challenger Joe Donnelly to represent Indiana’s Second Congressional District. The story doesn’t give overall numbers but indicates Donnelly’s 5% lead has increased to 8% while the undecideds have shrunk from 13% to 8%. Chocola has apparently been wasting his time by barraging potential voters with attacks on Donnelly over some tardiness in paying state property taxes. 71% of poll respondents said that that information would not make them less likely to vote for Donnelly.
Kreg Battles Blog
I just came across the blog of Kreg Battles, the Democrat opposing Troy “I’ll never vote for it” Woodruff to represent Indiana’s 64th House District. His official website is here. Woodruff and hopefully his defeat are of special interest to me given his position as a legislator who promised his constituents that he would never vote for Daylight Saving Time only to turn around and become the legislator who gave DST its one vote margin of passage.
AG sues Electronic Freedom Fund for anti-Hill robocalls
An article from Mary Beth Schneider indicates that Attorney General Steve Carter has sued a California-based group called the “Electronic Freedom Fund” for automated phone calls attacking IN-09 Democratic Congressional candidate Baron Hill.
The group has apparently agreed to stop making the calls, but Carter has said that the State will continue to seek an injunction against the “Electronic Freedom Fund” in a Brown County Court. Carter says that the group said that their vendor said that the calls were “legal so long as they were placed from out of state.” Where they got that, I don’t know. The relevant statute is IC 24-5-14 which states:
A caller may not use or connect to a telephone line an automatic dialing-announcing device unless:
(1) the subscriber has knowingly or voluntarily requested, consented to, permitted, or authorized receipt of the message; or
(2) the message is immediately preceded by a live operator who obtains the subscriber’s consent before the message is delivered.
Violating the law constitutes a deceptive act under IC 24-5-0.5 which means that the attorney general can bring an action. An individual subjected to the violation may also bring suit personally and cash in a little bit. But, if the Attorney General decides to be hard core about this, he could really bring some cash into the State’s coffers under IC 24-5-0.5-8:
Sec. 8. A person who commits an incurable deceptive act is subject to a civil penalty of a fine of not more than five hundred dollars ($500) for each violation. The attorney general, acting in the name of the state, has the exclusive right to petition for recovery of such a fine, and this fine may be recovered only in an action brought under section 4(c) of this chapter.
In the definitions section, we find that “‘Incurable deceptive act’ means a deceptive act done by a supplier as part of a scheme, artifice, or device with intent to defraud or mislead.”
I’d say there is a pretty strong argument to be made that the calls were intended to mislead voters about Baron Hill’s voting record. For example, I’d be surprised if a court would agree that the “Electronic Freedom Fund” was accurately characterizing Hill’s voting record when they state that “Baron Hill voted to allow the sale of a broad range of violent and sexually explicit material to minors.”
I haven’t heard how many automated calls were made, but it wouldn’t take long before $500 per call started adding up to some real money, even for an organization bankrolled by Bob Perry, the Houston millionaire responsible for the “Swiftboat Veterans For Truth” lies about John Kerry’s military record that caused Kerry so much trouble when he was running against George Bush.
IN-02: Chocola not “blindsided”
Jack Colwell has a good column in the South Bend Tribune on Indiana’s Second Congressional race where he debunks the notion that Chocola is struggling in his race against Joe Donnelly because he was blindsided or took his re-election for granted. That’s apparently the “common wisdom” developing among the Beltway commentariat. Colwell points out that Chocola was raising money early, has put out television ads early, and has seemed perfectly well aware that he would have trouble because, among other things, he is strongly associated with an unpopular Governor, an unpopular President, and an unpopular Republican Congress in a Congressional District that isn’t nearly as Republican as everybody seems to think.
If Chocola gets beat, it won’t be because he let a sure thing slip away through hubris or inattentiveness. Rather, it will be because he tried as hard as he could, and the citizens of the District still didn’t want him to represent them.
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