You have asked for our assistance in determining the irrevocability of a trust designated
                  as the "ELIZABETH R. G~ IRREVOCABLE TRUST." Bonnie L. O~ (also known as Bonnie T~),
                  the mother of Elizabeth R. G~ (Elizabeth), has requested reconsideration of the Field
                  Office decision that the G~ Trust Agreement is revocable. We believe that a Kansas
                  court would find the G~ Trust is irrevocable.
               
               I. TRUST PROVISIONS
               The Trust Agreement indicates that Bonnie L. O~ is Conservator of Elizabeth's estate
                  and, in addition, names Bonnie L. O~ as grantor of the trust. Bonnie L. O~ and Bonnie
                  J. S~, Esquire, are named as co-trustees. The Trust Agreement, executed on May 21,
                  1999, and signed by the co-trustees, names Elizabeth R. G~ as the Trust Beneficiary.
                  Elizabeth is described as the Grantor's child who is disabled as defined in 42 U.S.C.
                  § 1382c(a)(3). Trust Agreement, Introduction and Article I.C. The Trust Agreement
                  specifies that the trust is irrevocable and the Trustee agrees to hold and administer
                  the Trust Estate for the sole benefit of the Beneficiary. Trust Agreement, Articles
                  I and VI.
               
               To establish the Trust, the "Grantor" provided the sum of ten dollars ($10) and "such
                  other property, if any," as was described on an attached schedule (no schedule was
                  attached to the copy we received). This property constituted the initial trust estate
                  which was to be held by the Trustee "for the benefit of the Beneficiary and the Beneficiary's
                  descendants." Trust Agreement, Introduction.
               
               The Trust Agreement provides that,
               "[u]pon the death of the Beneficiary, the Trustee shall be required to pay back to
                  the State of Kansas Social Rehabilitation Services (SRS), pursuant to 42 U.S.C. §
                  1396p(d)(4)(A) and governing SRS regulations, all amounts remaining in the trust up
                  to an amount equal to the total medical assistance paid on behalf of the Beneficiary.
                  The remaining trust estate shall be distributed by the Trustee, in the Trustee's sole
                  discretion, either to the Personal Representative of the Beneficiary's estate, or
                  to the same persons or entities and in the same manner and proportions such distributions
                  would have been made had such remaining trust estate been distributed to the Personal
                  Representative of the Beneficiary's estate.
               
               Trust Agreement, Article I.C.
               The Trust Agreement provides that to the extent that the Trustee has discretion to
                  distribute income or principal for the Beneficiary's health, education, support, or
                  maintenance,such trust income or principal shall be supplemental to any resources
                  available for such needs from any local, regional, state or federal government or
                  agency or from private agencies, it being the Grantor's express purpose and intent
                  that such trust income or principal not be utilized for such purposes to the extent
                  such needs are otherwise provided for from such other resources.
               
               Trust Agreement, Article IV.F.
               II. TRUSTS AS RESOURCES
               Generally, if trust principal is available to the trust beneficiary, it will be considered
                  a resource to him for purposes of determining his eligibility to SSI benefits. Regulations
                  define resources for SSI eligibility as follows:
               
               (a) Resources; defined. For purposes of this subpart L, resources means cash or other
                  liquid assets or any real or personal property that an individual . . . owns and could
                  convert to cash to be used for his or her support and maintenance.(1) If the individual
                  has the right, authority or power to liquidate the property or his or her share of
                  the property, it is considered a resource. If a property right cannot be liquidated,
                  the property will not be considered a resource of the individual[.]
               
               20 C.F.R. § 416.1201(a)(1). Regulations further define resources as liquid or nonliquid.
                  Liquid resources are resources in the form of-
               
               cash or other property which can be converted to cash within 20 days . . . . Examples
                  of resources that are ordinarily liquid are stocks, bonds, mutual fund shares, promissory
                  notes, mortgages, life insurance policies, financial institution accounts (including
                  savings, checking, and time deposits, also known as of deposit) and similar items.
                  Liquid resources, other than cash, are evaluated according to the individual's equity
                  in the resources[.]
               
               Id. at § 416.1201(b).
               
               The Commissioner has further construed the meaning of "resource," by issuing interpretive
                  guidelines in the Program Operation Manual System (POMS). With respect to trust instruments,
                  the POMS provides that-
               
               if an individual (claimant, recipient or deemor) has the legal authority to revoke
                  the trust and then use the funds to meet his food, clothing or shelter needs, or if
                  the individual can direct the use of the trust principal for his/her support and maintenance
                  under the terms of the trust, the trust principal is a resource for SSI purposes.
               
               POMS SI 01120.200D.1.a (emphasis in original). However,
               
               [i]f an individual does not have the legal authority to revoke the trust or direct
                  the use of the trust assets for his/her own support and maintenance, the trust principal
                  is not the individual's resource for SSI purposes.
               
                     [t]his Trust is established pursuant to the 1993 Omnibus Reconciliation Act[,]
                  469 NAC 2.009.07A5B (4) and Neb. Rev. Stat. 68-1047. This trust is not for the support
                  of Kyle D. S~. It is the intent of the Grantor to make provisions in this Trust Agreement
                  to provide funds necessary to Kyle D. S~'s happiness over and above the essential,
                  primary support and services otherwise available to him. This Trust is not to replace
                  or make unnecessary any public or private assistance that Kyle D. S~ may now or in
                  the future qualify to receive. It is the intent to provide resources for non-support
                  purposes including comfort over and above the essentials provided by any state or
                  federal government agency or program. The supplemental resources provided through
                  this Trust may include, but shall not be limited to education, personal care needs,
                  attendants, entertainment, and other goods and services not otherwise provided by
                  public aid or private sources, but which are reasonable and necessary for the rehabilitation
                  and special non-support needs of the Beneficiary.
               
               Trust Agreement, Article 2. In addition, the Trust Agreement provides that-
                     [w]hile it is the intention that the Trustee have broad and effective powers
                  to carry out the provisions of this Trust Agreement, no power conferred upon any Trustee
                  by this article, shall be exercised in such a manner that it deprives the Trust of
                  an otherwise available tax exemption, deduction, exclusion or credit, nor to deprive
                  the Beneficiary of any public or private assistance as described above. This Trust
                  is intended to qualify under 42 U.S.C. § 1396p(d)(4)(A) and the Trustee shall have
                  no power which is inconsistent with such law and its regulations, and all provisions
                  of this Trust shall be interpreted in a manner consistent with such law.
               
               Trust Agreement, Article 2.
               Concerning the Trustee's powers, the Trust Agreement provides that—
                     [t]he Trustee may distribute income or principal or both, . . . [and] in its
                  sole and absolute discretion, shall apply and distribute such part, all or none of
                  the net income and principal of the Trust estate in such amounts and proportions as
                  the Trustee, in the Trustee's absolute discretion, deems necessary or appropriate
                  for Kyle D. S~'s best interest, [but only after exhausting] all other resources available
                  . . . from all sources other that his trust including, without limitation, payments,
                  services and programs administered, provided or sponsored by any governmental (federal,
                  state or other), private or institutional agency, authority or provider, any rule
                  or regulation of such agency, authority or provider to the contrary notwithstanding.
               
               Trust Agreement, Article 2. The Trust Agreement also includes a spendthrift clause
                  intended to prohibits creditors from attaching the assets of a trust. Trust Agreement,
                  Article 8.
               
               The Trust Agreement provides that the trust terminates upon Kyle's death and "any
                  remaining undistributed income or principal . . . shall be first paid to the State
                  of Nebraska, and to any other state who has made payments under Title XIX" on Kyle's
                  behalf. "In the event that either principal or income remain [after the State is reimbursed],
                  it shall be paid over and distributed pursuant to the intestacy laws of the State
                  of Nebraska." Trust Agreement, Article 11.
               
               II. TRUSTS AS RESOURCES
               Generally, if trust principal is available to the trust beneficiary, it will be considered
                  a resource to him for purposes of determining his eligibility to SSI benefits. Regulations
                  define resources for SSI eligibility as follows:
               
               (a) Resources; defined. For purposes of this subpart L, resources means cash or other liquid assets or any
                  real or personal property that an individual . . . owns and could convert to cash
                  to be used for his or her support and maintenance. (1) If the individual has the right,
                  authority or power to liquidate the property or his or her share of the property,
                  it is considered a resource. If a property right cannot be liquidated, the property
                  will not be considered a resource of the individual[.]
               
               20 C.F.R. § 416.1201(a)(1). Regulations further define resources as liquid or nonliquid.
                  Liquid resources are resources in the form of-
               
                    cash or other property which can be converted to cash within 20 days . . . .
                  Examples of resources that are ordinarily liquid are stocks, bonds, mutual fund shares,
                  promissory notes, mortgages, life insurance policies, financial institution accounts
                  (including savings, checking, and time deposits, also known as of deposit) and similar
                  items. Liquid resources, other than cash, are evaluated according to the individual's
                  equity in the resources[.]
               
               Id. at § 416.1201(b).
               The Commissioner has further construed the meaning of "resource," by issuing interpretive
                  guidelines in the Program Operation Manual System (POMS). With respect to trust instruments,
                  the POMS provides that-
               
                    if an individual (claimant, recipient or deemor) has the legal authority to revoke
                  the trust and then use the funds to meet his food, clothing or shelter needs, or if
                  the individual can direct the use of the trust principal for his/her support and maintenance
                  under the terms of the trust, the trust principal is a resource for SSI purposes.
               
               POMS SI 01120.200D.1.a (emphasis in original). However,
               
                     [i]f an individual does not have the legal authority to revoke the trust or
                  direct the use of the trust assets for his/her own support and maintenance, the trust
                  principal is not the individual's resource for SSI purposes.
               
               POMS SI 01120.200D.2 (emphasis in original). The revocability of a trust and the ability to use the trust
                  principal is determined by the terms of the trust and/or by State law. POMS SI 01120.200D.1.a and SI 01120.200D.2. "Most States follow the general principle of trust law that if a grantor is also
                  the sole beneficiary of a trust, the trust is revocable regardless of language in
                  the trust document to the contrary." POMS SI 01120.200D.3 (emphasis in original).
               
               A trust is generally irrevocable if the grantor fails to reserve the power to revoke
                  or modify it. Restatement (Second) of Trusts §§ 330 and 331 (1957). Nevertheless,
                  the general law of trusts recognizes an exception to this rule when the grantor is
                  the sole beneficiary of the trust agreement. Where the grantor is the sole beneficiary
                  of a trust, he may amend or terminate the trust, even without having reserved the
                  power to do so. Id. at § 339.
               
               Although the laws of Nebraska have not specifically addressed this issue, we believe
                  that Nebraska would follow the general rule. While the Trust Agreement at issue here
                  names the Court as Grantor, the consideration funding the trust belonged to Kyle.
                  Thus, Kyle is the grantor and, if Kyle is the sole beneficiary of the trust, it is
                  revocable notwithstanding the Trust Agreement language to the contrary. However, if
                  the grantor is not the sole beneficiary, the trust would not be revocable.
               
               The trust herein appears to be a "Medicaid Special Needs Trust," a trust created by
                  means other than a will, and which includes a Medicaid payback provision upon termination
                  of the trust or the death of the individual. SSA's policy is that the Medicaid trust
                  "affects the individual's eligibility for Medicaid only, and has no effect on the
                  SSI income and resource determinations." POMS SI 01120.200H.1.a (emphasis in original). In addition, the POMS provide that-
               
                    [a]ccording to the law in most States, the State is not considered a residual
                  or contingent beneficiary, but is a creditor and the reimbursement is payment of a
                  debt. This law may or may not apply in your State . . . .
               
               POMS SI 01120.200H.1.b. .
               
               Our research indicates that the purpose of including the State reimbursement provision
                  in the special needs trust (SNT) is to qualify the beneficiary for medical assistance
                  from the State. If the SNT meets the exception set out in 42 U.S.C. § 1396p(d)(4)(A)
                  and State requirements, the State does not consider the trust to be a resource and
                  the grantor/beneficiary is eligible for medical assistance. Previously we indicated
                  that a trust provision for repayment of Medicaid funds to a Region VII state represents
                  repayment of a debt and does not make the State a trust beneficiary. G.C. Opinion,
                  Iowa,
                     Kansas, Missouri, and Nebraska State Law on Grantor Trusts; SSI
                     Resource Issue, dated June 16, 1999. Our advice is consistent with the definition of a beneficiary
                  in the Restatement (Second) of Trusts (1959) § 127 (Restatement Second) as "[t]he
                  person for whose benefit property is held in trust." None of the property in a Medicaid-qualifying
                  trust is held for the "benefit" of the State.
               
               You ask whether the language in Article I.C of the Trust Agreement, see
                     supra at page 2, makes the trust irrevocable. We previously discussed this issue at length
                  in G.C. Opinion, Determination of
                     Irrevocability of a Nebraska Trust, dated February 23, 2000. We also reviewed our prior advice about the revocability
                  of grantor trusts in Region VII states. Id. We believe it will be helpful to the Kansas Field Office to repeat part of our prior
                  opinion.
               
               The Restatement (Second) provides that at common law there was a rule of the law of
                  real property that the owner of land could not, by a conveyance inter vivos (between
                  living parties), create a remainder interest in his heirs. An attempt to do so created
                  a reversionary interest in the owner, rather than a remainder interest in his heirs.
                  However, there is no longer any such rule of law. There is only a question of construction.
                  Restatement (Second) § 127 cmt. b (1957).
               
               If the owner manifests an intention to create a contingent interest in remainder,
                  legal or equitable, in the persons who on his death may become his heirs, he can do
                  so. In the absence of evidence of a contrary intent, however, the inference is that
                  he does not intend to create a remainder interest in his heirs. The Restatement (Second)
                  provides that if the beneficial interest is limited to the grantor for life and on
                  his or her death the property is to be conveyed to his or her "children, or issue,
                  or descendants" then he or she is not the sole beneficiary of the trust and a remainder
                  interest is created in his or her children, issue, or descendants. Id. at § 127 cmt. b. Where the owner of property, however, transfers it in trust to pay
                  the income to himself or herself for life and upon his or her death to pay the principal
                  to "his heirs or next of kin," in the absence of a manifestation of a contrary intention,
                  "the inference is that he is the sole beneficiary of the trust, and that he does not
                  intend to create any interest in the persons who may become his or her 'heirs or next
                  of kin.'" Id.
               Likewise, the inference is that the grantor is the sole beneficiary where the income
                  is to be paid to the grantor for life and upon his or her death the principal is to
                  be paid "as he may by deed or will appoint, and in default of appointment to his heirs
                  or next of kin." If he or she reserves power to appoint by will alone, and in default
                  of appointment the property is to be conveyed to his or her heirs or next of kin,
                  the Restatement (Second) indicates that this is some indication that the grantor intended
                  to confer an interest on his or her heirs or next of kin of which they could be deprived
                  only by a testamentary appointment, "but this is not of itself sufficient to overcome
                  the inference that he intended to give them no such interest but intended to be the
                  sole beneficiary of the trust." Id.
               If the grantor "manifests an intention to create a vested or contingent interest in
                  others, as for example, his children, or the persons who may be his heirs or next
                  of kin on his death, he is not the sole beneficiary unless such intended interests
                  are invalid. . . ."  Id.at § 339 cmt. b. Thus, the question is whether the language of a trust creates a valid
                  remainder interest. If no valid remainder interest is created, the grantor is the
                  sole beneficiary of the trust, the trust is revocable, and the trust principal is
                  a resource.
               
               In summary, we concluded that you would be justified in finding that the words "child,"
                  "children," "issue," "descendants," or "words of similar import" create a residual
                  beneficiary and make a grantor trust irrevocable. If the grantor uses the words "heirs,"
                  "heirs-at-law," "next-of-kin," or "by intestate succession,"we concluded that you
                  would be justified, in most cases, in finding that a residual beneficiary was not
                  created and a grantor trust is revocable. Accord G.C. Opinion, Accessability of Discretionary Support Trust Fund
                     as a Resource for Supplemental Security Income Purposes in Nebraska
                     Where Grantor Is also the Sole Beneficiary, dated March 17, 1997. However, if considering the document as whole indicates that
                  the grantor had a different intention, the trust may be irrevocable despite use of
                  the words "heirs," "heirs-at-law," or "next-of-kin." Our research reveals that words
                  such as "heirs" do not have a precise meaning and are interpreted inconsistently by
                  the courts, depending upon how the court perceives the grantor's intent. We are not
                  able to provide a general rule that will apply to all trusts.
               
               Where State law is silent, Kansas courts "have often turned to the guidance of the
                  Restatement of Trusts[.]" In the
                     Matter of the Estate of Sanders, 929 P.2d 153 (Kan. 1996). Accord Neeley v. Neeley, ___ P.2d ___, 2000 W.L. 45835 at *1 (Kan. App.). Although it was not dispositive
                  in the case, in Daughters of the American Revolution of Kansas, Topeka
                     Chapter v. Washburn College, 164 P.2d 128, 132 (Kan. 1945), the Kansas Supreme Court acknowledged the Restatement
                  rule that a trust is revocable when the grantor is the sole beneficiary. The court
                  did not indicate that the rule was improper or would not be followed in Kansas. Although
                  we found no Kansas statute or case applying the grantor trust rule in Kansas, Kansas
                  law does provide that all gifts and conveyances of goods and chattels (but not land)
                  to a trust made for the use of the person making the trust are valid and effective
                  except as to all past, present or future creditors and a nonconsenting wife's statutory
                  rights. See Kan. Stat. Ann. § 33-101 (1993). See also Newman v.
                     George, 755 P.2d 18, 20 (Kan. 1988); Ackers v.
                     First National Bank of Topeka, 192 Kan. 319(1963), as
                     modified at rehearing, 192 Kan. 471 (1964). A trust is irrevocable unless the power to amend or revoke
                  is reserved in the trust agreement. Kan. Stat. Ann. § 58-2417 (1994).
               
               In considering only Article I.C of the G~ trust, it includes no named heir and, initially,
                  one could conclude that the trust was revocable. However, consistent with the Restatement
                  (Second), Kansas law holds that the primary consideration in the construction of trusts
                  is the intention of the grantor as evidenced by an examination of the entire document.
                  See In the Matter of the Estate
                     of Sam Saroff, 625 P.2d 458, 465 (Kan. 1981). We believe that, because the Trust Agreement Introduction
                  indicates that it was created for the benefit of the Beneficiary and the Beneficiary's
                  "descendants," a Kansas court would conclude the use of the word "descendants" was
                  sufficient to demonstrate the grantor's intent to create a residual beneficiary. For
                  example, in the case of In
                     re Watts, 162 P.2d 82, 87 (Kan. 1945), in interpreting whether the corpus of a discretionary
                  spendthrift trust created by will could be reached by a judgment for alimony due the
                  beneficiary's ex-spouse, a county district court made the testator's "unknown heirs"
                  parties to the litigation. The trustee argued that, if the beneficiary never showed
                  himself capable of handling the trust property, upon his death any remaining property
                  would go to the testator's heirs. Upon appeal, the Kansas Supreme Court held that,
                  in order to determine the meaning and effect of the trust provisions, the unknown
                  heirs were properly made parties to the litigation. However, because it found that
                  the beneficiary had no current vested interest in the trust which could be reached
                  by the ex-spouse's judgment, the court did not have to decide at that time who might
                  receive any remaining trust property upon the beneficiary's death. 162 P.2d at 86-87.
                  The Kansas Supreme Court also has found that "'the same rules that apply to [the]
                  construction [of wills] apply to trusts and most other written documents.'" In the Matter of the
                     Estate of Sanders, 929 P.2d at 158, quoting In
                     re Estate of Hauck, 223 P.2d 707 (Kan. 1950).
               
               For the reasons set out above, we believe a Kansas court would find that the G~ Trust
                  is irrevocable.
               
               Frank V. S~ III
Chief Counsel
               
               By_________
C. Geraldine U~
Assistant Regional Counsel