Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of Indiana:
time of death that was conveyed to the individual's survivor
through joint tenancy with right of survivorship, if the joint
tenancy was created after June 30, 2002;
(3) any real or personal property conveyed through a nonprobate
transfer; and
(4) any sum due after June 30, 2005, to a person after the death of
a Medicaid recipient that is under the terms of an annuity contract
purchased after May 1, 2005, with the assets of
(A) the Medicaid recipient. or
(B) the Medicaid recipient's spouse.
(b) As used in this chapter, "nonprobate transfer" means a valid
transfer, effective at death, by a transferor:
(1) whose last domicile was in Indiana; and
(2) who immediately before death had the power, acting alone, to
prevent transfer of the property by revocation or withdrawal and:
(A) use the property for the benefit of the transferor; or
(B) apply the property to discharge claims against the
transferor's probate estate.
The term does not include transfer of a survivorship interest in a
tenancy by the entireties real estate or payment of the death proceeds
of a life insurance policy.
SECTION 4. IC 12-15-9-1, AS AMENDED BY P.L.246-2005,
SECTION 108, IS AMENDED TO READ AS FOLLOWS
[EFFECTIVE JULY 1, 2012]: Sec. 1. (a) Subject to subsection (b),
Upon the death of a Medicaid recipient, or upon the death of a
deceased Medicaid recipient's spouse, the total amount of Medicaid
paid on behalf of the recipient after the recipient became fifty-five (55)
years of age must be allowed as a preferred claim against the estate of
the recipient or the recipient's spouse in favor of the state. The affidavit
of a person designated by the secretary to administer this section is
evidence of the amount of the claim and is payable after the payment
of the following in accordance with IC 29-1-14-9:
(1) Funeral expenses for the recipient, and the recipient's spouse,
not to exceed in each individual case three hundred fifty dollars
($350).
(2) The expenses of the last illness of the recipient and the
recipient's spouse that are authorized or paid by the office.
(3) The expenses of administering the estate, including the
attorney's fees approved by the court.
(b) If a recipient's spouse remarries, the part of the estate of the
recipient's spouse that is attributable to the subsequent spouse is not
subject to a claim for Medicaid paid on behalf of the recipient.
However, if a natural parent or previous adopting parent marries the
adopting parent before the testator's death, the adopted person shall
also be considered the child of such natural or previous adopting
parent. Any person adopted after the person's twenty-first birthday by
the testator shall be considered the child of the testator, but no other
person shall be entitled to establish relationship to the testator through
such child.
(e) In construing a will making a devise to a person described by
relationship to the testator or to another, a person born out of wedlock
shall be considered the child of the child's mother, and also of the
child's father, if, but only if, the child's right to inherit from the child's
father is, or has been, established in the manner provided in
IC 29-1-2-7.
(f) A will shall not operate as the exercise of a power of
appointment which the testator may have with respect to any real or
personal estate, unless by its terms the will specifically indicates that
the testator intended to exercise the power.
(g) If a devise of real or personal property, not included in the
residuary clause of the will, is void, is revoked, or lapses, it shall
become a part of the residue, and shall pass to the residuary devisee.
Whenever any estate, real or personal, shall be devised to any
descendant of the testator, and such devisee shall die during the
lifetime of the testator, whether before or after the execution of the will,
leaving a descendant who shall survive such testator, such devise shall
not lapse, but the property so devised shall vest in the surviving
descendant of the devisee as if such devisee had survived the testator
and died intestate. The word "descendant", as used in this section,
includes children adopted during minority by the testator and by the
testator's descendants and includes descendants of such adopted
children. "Descendant" also includes children of the mother who are
born out of wedlock, and children of the father who are born out of
wedlock, if, but only if, such child's right to inherit from such father is,
or has been, established in the manner provided in IC 29-1-2-7. This
rule applies where the parent is a descendant of the testator as well as
where the parent is the testator. Descendants of such children shall also
be included.
(h) Except as provided in subsection (m), if a testator in the
testator's will refers to a writing of any kind, such writing, whether
subsequently amended or revoked, as it existed at the time of execution
of the will, shall be given the same effect as if set forth at length in the
will, if such writing is clearly identified in the will and is in existence
both at the time of the execution of the will and at the testator's death.
of attorney for an incapacitated principal, the specific devisee has the
right to a general pecuniary devise equal to the net sale price, the
amount of the unpaid loan, the condemnation award, the insurance
proceeds, or the recovery.
(m) A written statement or list that:
(1) complies with this subsection; and
(2) is referred to in a will;
may be used to dispose of items of tangible personal property, other
than property used in a trade or business, not otherwise specifically
disposed of by the will. To be admissible under this subsection as
evidence of the intended disposition, the writing must be signed by the
testator and must describe the items and the beneficiaries with
reasonable certainty. The writing may be prepared before or after the
execution of the will. The writing may be altered by the testator after
the writing is prepared. The writing may have no significance apart
from the writing's effect on the dispositions made by the will. If more
than one (1) otherwise effective writing exists, then, to the extent of a
conflict among the writings, the provisions of the most recent writing
revoke the inconsistent provisions of each earlier writing.
(n) A will of a decedent who dies after December 31, 2009, and
before January 1, 2011, that contains a formula referring to:
(1) the unified credit;
(2) the estate tax exemption;
(3) the applicable credit amount;
(4) the applicable exclusion amount;
(5) the generation-skipping transfer tax exemption;
(6) the GST exemption;
(7) the marital deduction;
(8) the maximum marital deduction;
(9) the unlimited marital deduction;
(10) the inclusion ratio;
(11) the applicable fraction;
(12) any section of the Internal Revenue Code:
(A) relating to the:
(i) federal estate tax; or
(ii) generation-skipping transfer tax; and
(B) that measures a share of:
(i) an estate; or
(ii) a trust;
based on the amount that can pass free of federal estate taxes
or the amount that can pass free of federal generation-skipping
transfer tax law; or
for any other purpose and is subject to all rules governing the
admission of wills to probate.
SECTION 8. IC 29-1-14-9, AS AMENDED BY P.L.161-2007,
SECTION 39, IS AMENDED TO READ AS FOLLOWS [EFFECTIVE
JULY 1, 2012]: Sec. 9. (a) All claims shall be classified in one (1) of
the following classes. If the applicable assets of the estate are
insufficient to pay all claims in full, the personal representative shall
make payment in the following order:
(1) Costs and expenses of administration.
(2) Reasonable funeral expenses. However, in any estate in which
the decedent was a recipient of public assistance under IC 12-1-1
through IC 12-1-12 (before its repeal) or any of the following, the
amount of funeral expenses having priority over any claim for the
recovery of public assistance shall not exceed the limitations
provided for under IC 12-14-6, IC 12-14-17, and IC 12-14-21:
TANF assistance.
TANF burials.
TANF IMPACT/J.O.B.S.
Temporary Assistance to Other Needy Families (TAONF)
assistance.
ARCH.
Blind relief.
Child care.
Child welfare adoption assistance.
Child welfare adoption opportunities.
Child welfare assistance.
Child welfare child care improvement.
Child welfare child abuse.
Child welfare child abuse and neglect prevention.
Child welfare children's victim advocacy program.
Child welfare foster care assistance.
Child welfare independent living.
Child welfare medical assistance to wards.
Child welfare program review action group (PRAG).
Child welfare special needs adoption.
Food Stamp administration.
Health care for indigent (HCI).
ICES.
IMPACT (food stamps).
Title IV-D (ICETS).
Title IV-D child support administration.
Title IV-D child support enforcement (parent locator).
and the alternate standby guardian, if any.
(2) The following information concerning each minor child or
protected person for whom a standby guardian is designated by
the declaration:
(A) The person's full name as it appears on the birth certificate
or as ordered by a court.
(B) The person's date of birth.
(C) The person's Social Security number, if any.
(3) A statement that the declaration becomes effective upon the
death or incapacity of the declarant.
(4) A statement that the declaration terminates ninety (90) days
after becoming effective unless the standby guardian files a
petition for a guardianship of the minor or protected person
during that ninety (90) day period.
(c) A declaration executed under this section must be signed by the
declarant in the presence of a notary public.
(d) A declaration executed under this section becomes effective
upon the death or incapacity (as defined in IC 29-3-1-7.5) of the parent
or guardian and terminates ninety (90) days after the declaration
becomes effective. However, if the designated standby guardian files
a petition for a guardianship of the minor or protected person during
that ninety (90) day period, the declaration remains in effect until the
court rules on the petition.
(e) A declaration executed under this section must be considered by,
but is not binding upon, the department of child services, a probation
department, or a juvenile court for purposes of determining the
placement of a child who is the subject of:
(1) an allegation of child abuse or neglect under IC 31-33;
(2) an open child in need of services case under IC 31-34; or
(3) an open delinquency case under IC 31-37.
(f) A standby guardian shall have all the powers granted to a
guardian under this article.
SECTION 10. IC 30-2-8.5-33 IS AMENDED TO READ AS
FOLLOWS [EFFECTIVE JULY 1, 2012]: Sec. 33. (a) A person
nominated under section 18 of this chapter or designated under section
24 of this chapter as custodian may decline to serve by delivering a
valid disclaimer to the person who made the nomination or to the
transferor or the transferor's legal representative. If:
(1) the event giving rise to a transfer has not occurred; and
(2) no substitute custodian able, willing, and eligible to serve was
nominated under section 18 of this chapter;
the person who made the nomination may nominate a substitute
custodian under section 18 of this chapter. Otherwise the transferor or
the transferor's legal representative shall designate a substitute
custodian at the time of the transfer from among the persons eligible to
serve as custodian for that kind of property under section 24(a) of this
chapter. The custodian designated has the rights of a successor
custodian.
(b) A custodian at any time may designate a trust company or an
adult other than a transferor under section 19 of this chapter as
successor custodian by executing and dating an instrument of
designation before a subscribing witness other than the successor. If the
instrument of designation does not contain or is not accompanied by
the resignation of the custodian, the designation of the successor does
not take effect until the custodian resigns, dies, becomes incapacitated,
or is removed.
(c) A custodian may resign at any time by delivering written notice
to the minor if the minor is at least fourteen (14) years of age and to the
successor custodian and by delivering the custodial property to the
successor custodian.
(d) If a custodian is ineligible, dies, or becomes incapacitated
without having effectively designated a successor and the minor is at
least fourteen (14) years of age, the minor may designate as successor
custodian, in the manner prescribed in subsection (b), an adult member
of the minor's family, a guardian of the minor, or a trust company.
Except as provided in subsection (g), if the minor is less than
fourteen (14) years of age or fails to act within sixty (60) days after the
ineligibility, death, or incapacity, the guardian of the minor becomes
successor custodian. If the minor has no guardian or the guardian
declines to act, the transferor, the legal representative of the transferor
or of the custodian, an adult member of the minor's family, or any other
interested person may petition the court to designate a successor
custodian.
(e) A custodian who declines to serve under subsection (a) or
resigns under subsection (c), or the legal representative of a deceased
or incapacitated custodian, as soon as practicable, shall put the
custodial property and records in the possession and control of the
successor custodian. The successor custodian by action may enforce
the obligation to deliver custodial property and records and is
responsible for each item as received.
(f) A transferor, the legal representative of a transferor, an adult
member of the minor's family, a guardian of the minor, or the minor if
the minor is at least fourteen (14) years of age may petition the court to
remove the custodian for cause and to designate a successor custodian
other than a transferor under section 19 of this chapter or to require the
custodian to give appropriate bond.
(g) If the custodial property, including a custodial account, is
worth less than ten thousand dollars ($10,000), a guardian does not
need to be appointed as set forth in IC 29-3-3-1.
SECTION 11. IC 30-4-1-4 IS AMENDED TO READ AS
FOLLOWS [EFFECTIVE UPON PASSAGE]: Sec. 4. (Application of
the Article with Respect to Pre-Existing Trusts) (a) Except as provided
elsewhere in this article, the rules of law contained in this article shall
apply to all trusts created prior to September 2, 1971, unless to do so
would:
(1) adversely affect a right given to any beneficiary;
(2) give a right to any beneficiary which he the beneficiary was
not intended to have when the trust was created;
(3) impose a duty or liability on any person which was not
intended to be imposed when the trust was created; or
(4) relieve any person from any duty or liability imposed by the
terms of the trust or under prior law.
(b) Except as provided elsewhere in this article, an amendment
to the rules of law contained in this article applies to all trusts
created prior to the effective date of the applicable amendment
unless to do so would:
(1) adversely affect a right given to any beneficiary;
(2) give a right to any beneficiary that the beneficiary was not
intended to have when the trust was created;
(3) impose a duty or liability on any person that was not
intended to be imposed when the trust was created; or
(4) relieve any person from any duty or liability imposed by
the terms of the trust or under prior law.
SECTION 12. IC 30-4-2.1-13 IS REPEALED [EFFECTIVE JULY
1, 2012]. Sec. 13. (a) A trust of a decedent who dies after December 31,
2009, and before January 1, 2011, that contains a formula referring to:
(1) the unified credit;
(2) the estate tax exemption;
(3) the applicable credit amount;
(4) the applicable exclusion amount;
(5) the generation-skipping transfer tax exemption;
(6) the GST exemption;
(7) the marital deduction;
(8) the maximum marital deduction;
(9) the unlimited marital deduction;
(10) the inclusion ratio;
death transfers created prior to the effective date of the applicable
amendment.
SECTION 14. IC 32-17-14-21, AS ADDED BY P.L.143-2009,
SECTION 41, IS AMENDED TO READ AS FOLLOWS [EFFECTIVE
UPON PASSAGE]: Sec. 21. (a) A trustee of a trust may be a
designated beneficiary regardless of whether the trust is amendable,
revocable, irrevocable, funded, unfunded, or amended after the
designation is made.
(b) Unless a beneficiary designation provides otherwise, a trust that
is revoked or terminated before the death of the owner is considered
nonexistent at the owner's death.
(c) Unless a beneficiary designation provides otherwise, a legal
entity or trust that does not:
(1) exist; or
(2) come into existence effective as of the owner's death;
is considered nonexistent at the owner's death.
(d) For purposes of this section, an owner's testamentary trust
is considered to have come into existence as of the owner's death if
the owner's last will and testament is admitted to probate.
SECTION 15. IC 32-17-14-26, AS AMENDED BY P.L.36-2011,
SECTION 16, IS AMENDED TO READ AS FOLLOWS [EFFECTIVE
UPON PASSAGE]: Sec. 26. (a) If an agreement between the owner and
a transferring entity is required to carry out a transfer on death transfer
as described in section 7 of this chapter, a transferring entity may not
adopt rules for the making, execution, acceptance, and revocation of a
beneficiary designation that are inconsistent with this chapter. A
transferring entity may adopt the rules imposed by subsection (b) in
whole or in part by incorporation by reference.
(b) Except as otherwise provided in a beneficiary designation, a
governing instrument, or any other applicable law, The following rules
apply to a beneficiary designation:
(1) A beneficiary designation or a request for registration of
property in beneficiary form must be made in writing, signed by
the owner, dated, and, in the case of a transfer on death deed,
compliant with all requirements for the recording of deeds.
(2) A security that is not registered in the name of the owner may
be registered in beneficiary form on instructions given by a broker
or person delivering the security.
(3) A beneficiary designation may designate one (1) or more
primary beneficiaries and one (1) or more contingent
beneficiaries.
(4) On property registered in beneficiary form, a primary
beneficiary is the person shown immediately following the
transfer on death direction. Words indicating that the person is a
primary beneficiary are not required. The name of a contingent
beneficiary in the registration must have the words "contingent
beneficiary" or words of similar meaning to indicate the
contingent nature of the interest being transferred.
(5) Multiple surviving beneficiaries share equally in the property
being transferred unless a different percentage or fractional share
is stated for each beneficiary. If a percentage or fractional share
is designated for multiple beneficiaries, the surviving
beneficiaries share in the proportion that their designated shares
bear to each other.
(6) A transfer of unequal shares to multiple beneficiaries for
property registered in beneficiary form may be expressed in
numerical form following the name of the beneficiary in the
registration.
(7) A transfer on death transfer of property also transfers any
interest, rent, royalties, earnings, dividends, or credits earned or
declared on the property but not paid or credited before the
owner's death.
(8) If a distribution by a transferring entity under a transfer on
death transfer results in fractional shares in a security or other
property that is not divisible, the transferring entity may distribute
the fractional shares in the name of all beneficiaries as tenants in
common or as the beneficiaries may direct, or the transferring
entity may sell the property that is not divisible and distribute the
proceeds to the beneficiaries in the proportions to which they are
entitled.
(9) On the death of the owner, the property, minus all amounts
and charges owed by the owner to the transferring entity, belongs
to the surviving beneficiaries and, in the case of substitute
beneficiaries permitted under section 22 of this chapter, the lineal
descendants of designated beneficiaries who did not survive the
owner are entitled to the property as follows:
(A) If there are multiple primary beneficiaries and a primary
beneficiary does not survive the owner and does not have a
substitute under section 22 of this chapter, the share of the
nonsurviving beneficiary is allocated among the surviving
beneficiaries in the proportion that their shares bear to each
other.
(B) If there are no surviving primary beneficiaries and there
are no substitutes for the nonsurviving primary beneficiaries
under section 22 of this chapter, the property belongs to the
surviving contingent beneficiaries in equal shares or according
to the percentages or fractional shares stated in the
registration.
(C) If there are multiple contingent beneficiaries and a
contingent beneficiary does not survive the owner and does not
have a substitute under section 22 of this chapter, the share of
the nonsurviving contingent beneficiary is allocated among the
surviving contingent beneficiaries in the proportion that their
shares bear to each other.
(10) If a trustee designated as a beneficiary:
(A) does not survive the owner;
(B) resigns; or
(C) is unable or unwilling to execute the trust as trustee and
no successor trustee is appointed in the twelve (12) months
following the owner's death;
the transferring entity may make the distribution as if the trust did
not survive the owner.
(11) If a trustee is designated as a beneficiary and no affidavit of
certification of trust or probated will creating an express trust is
presented to the transferring entity within the twelve (12) months
after the owner's death, the transferring entity may make the
distribution as if the trust did not survive the owner.
(12) If the transferring entity is not presented evidence during the
twelve (12) months after the owner's death that there are lineal
descendants of a nonsurviving beneficiary for whom LDPS
distribution applies who survived the owner, the transferring
entity may make the transfer as if the nonsurviving beneficiary's
descendants also failed to survive the owner.
(13) If a beneficiary cannot be located at the time the transfer is
made to located beneficiaries, the transferring entity shall hold the
missing beneficiary's share. If the missing beneficiary's share is
not claimed by the beneficiary or by the beneficiary's personal
representative or successor during the twelve (12) months after
the owner's death, the transferring entity shall transfer the share
as if the beneficiary did not survive the owner.
(14) A transferring entity has no obligation to attempt to locate a
missing beneficiary, to pay interest on the share held for a missing
beneficiary, or to invest the share in any different property.
(15) Cash, interest, rent, royalties, earnings, or dividends payable
to a missing beneficiary may be held by the transferring entity at
interest or reinvested by the transferring entity in the account or
in a dividend reinvestment account associated with a security held
for the missing beneficiary.
(16) If a transferring entity is required to make a transfer on death
transfer to a minor or an incapacitated adult, the transfer may be
made under the Indiana Uniform Transfers to Minors Act, the
Indiana Uniform Custodial Trust Act, or a similar law of another
state.
(17) A written request for the execution of a transfer on death
transfer may be made by any beneficiary, a beneficiary's legal
representative or attorney in fact, or the owner's personal
representative.
(18) A transfer under a transfer on death deed occurs
automatically upon the owner's death subject to the requirements
of subdivision (20) and does not require a request for the
execution of the transfer.
(19) A written request for the execution of a transfer on death
transfer must be accompanied by the following:
(A) A certificate or instrument evidencing ownership of the
contract, account, security, or property.
(B) Proof of the deaths of the owner and any nonsurviving
beneficiary.
(C) An inheritance tax waiver from states that require it.
(D) In the case of a request by a legal representative, a copy of
the instrument creating the legal authority or a certified copy
of the court order appointing the legal representative.
(E) Any other proof of the person's entitlement that the
transferring entity may require.
(20) On the death of an owner whose transfer on death deed has
been recorded, the beneficiary shall file an affidavit in the office
of the recorder of the county in which the real property is located.
The affidavit must be endorsed by the county auditor under
IC 36-2-11-14 in order to be recorded. The affidavit must contain
the following:
(A) The legal description of the property.
(B) A certified copy of the death certificate certifying the
owner's death.
(C) The name and address of each designated beneficiary who
survives the owner or is in existence on the date of the owner's
death.
(D) The name of each designated beneficiary who has not
survived the owner's death or is not in existence on the date of
the owner's death.
IC 25-5.2-1-2) is void if the athlete agent obtained the consent as the
result of an agency contract that:
(1) was void under IC 25-5.2-2-2 or under the law of the state
where the agency contract was entered into;
(2) was voided by the student athlete under IC 25-5.2-2-8 or a
similar law in the state where the agency contract was entered
into; or
(3) was entered into without the notice required under
IC 35-46-4-4 or a similar law in the state where the agency
contract was entered into.
(c) A written consent for an endorsement contract (as defined in
IC 35-46-4-1.5) is void if notice is not given as required by
IC 35-46-4-4 or a similar law in the state where the endorsement
contract is entered into.
SECTION 19. IC 35-45-6-1, AS AMENDED BY P.L.182-2011,
SECTION 11, IS AMENDED TO READ AS FOLLOWS [EFFECTIVE
JULY 1, 2012]: Sec. 1. (a) The definitions in this section apply
throughout this chapter.
(b) "Documentary material" means any document, drawing,
photograph, recording, or other tangible item containing compiled data
from which information can be either obtained or translated into a
usable form.
(c) "Enterprise" means:
(1) a sole proprietorship, corporation, limited liability company,
partnership, business trust, or governmental entity; or
(2) a union, an association, or a group, whether a legal entity or
merely associated in fact.
(d) "Pattern of racketeering activity" means engaging in at least two
(2) incidents of racketeering activity that have the same or similar
intent, result, accomplice, victim, or method of commission, or that are
otherwise interrelated by distinguishing characteristics that are not
isolated incidents. However, the incidents are a pattern of racketeering
activity only if at least one (1) of the incidents occurred after August
31, 1980, and if the last of the incidents occurred within five (5) years
after a prior incident of racketeering activity.
(e) "Racketeering activity" means to commit, to attempt to commit,
to conspire to commit a violation of, or aiding and abetting in a
violation of any of the following:
(1) A provision of IC 23-19, or of a rule or order issued under
IC 23-19.
(2) A violation of IC 35-45-9.
(3) A violation of IC 35-47.