The claimant filed a claim for Supplemental Security Income (SSI) payments. More than
a year before she filed the claim, she invested in a life settlement investment (or
viatical investment) with a monthly income option. You requested information about
viatical investments and guidance on how to treat the individually-held account set
up as part of the investment and any withdrawals made from that account. We will first
explain viatical investments and then discuss the specifics of the claimant's investment.
In a typical viatical investment, the viator assigns his or her life insurance policy
to a viatical settlement broker in exchange for a lump-sum cash payment in an amount
less than the death benefit. An investor purchases the viatical settlement based on
the estimated life expectancy of the viator, who usually has a life-threatening or
catastrophic illness or condition that prompts the need for immediate cash. In essence,
the investor puts up the money that is paid to the viator. The investor also becomes
an irrevocable beneficiary on the permanent records for that death benefit, and receives
the death benefit when the viator dies. The death benefit should be more than just
the investment principal. If the viator lives beyond his or her estimated life-expectancy,
the investor may have to pay additional premiums to maintain the policy.
Another key feature of the viatical investment is the fixed rate of return the investor
will receive on his or her total investment. If the investor elects to receive a monthly
income option, this will yield a lower return; no monthly income option will yield
a higher return. See, e.g., <http://www.sec.gov/ answers/viaticalsettle.htm>; http:/www.insurance.ca.gov/0100-consumers/0100-insurance-guides/0200-life-series/viatical.
Here, the claimant invested $25,000 in a life settlement contract with a 48-monthly
income option through Nationwide Consultants, Inc. Of her total investment, $17,606.00
was "invested" in a 36-month life expectancy policy. The claimant is the irrevocable
beneficiary on this policy, and is expected to receive her investment principal of
$25,000 upon the death of the insured person (who was not named in the agreement).
Premiums on this life expectancy policy will be paid by an escrow company for the
estimated life expectancy (36 months) plus 12 months.
According to the Monthly Income Agreement, the claimant elected the monthly income
option, which will provide her a 7.6% fixed rate return. Using the remaining investment
amount ($7,394.00), Nationwide Consultants established the monthly income option by
depositing an amount equal to 48 payments of $158.33 into a trust account at Ford
Motor Credit/Northern Trust Company. Each month for 48 months, $158.33 is paid out
of the trust account to the claimant, and these payments will continue even if the
viator dies before the full 48-monthly income option is satisfied. The claimant is
allowed to withdraw funds from this trust account "in any increments, up to the entire
balance, without penalty or surrender charges."
Assuming that monthly payments specified in the Monthly Income Agreement have been
paid to the claimant on the first of each month since April 2005, there have been
at most eighteen payments of $158.33, totaling $2,849.94. Assuming she has not withdrawn
any additional amounts from the trust account, the remaining balance in the trust
account is $4,544.06.
DISCUSSION
An aged, blind, or disabled individual with no eligible spouse is eligible for SSI
payments if his or her nonexcludable resources do not exceed $2,000 after January
1, 1989, and all other eligibility requirements are met. 20 C.F.R. §§ 416.1205(a)
and (c). The regulations define resources as 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 or maintenance. 20 C.F.R. § 416.1201(a). If the individual
has the right, authority or power to liquidate the property, it is considered a resource.
20 C.F.R. § 416.1201(a). If a property right cannot be liquidated, the property will
not be considered a resource. Id.
Liquid resources are cash or other property that generally 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
certificates of deposit) and similar items. Liquid resources, other than cash, are
evaluated according to the individual's equity in the resources. 20 C.F.R. § 416.1201(b);
Program Operations Manual System (POMS) SI 01110.300(A).
The portion of the claimant's investment that established the 36-month life expectancy
policy ($17,606.00) is not accessible to the claimant. The death benefit on that policy
will not be paid until the insured dies, and there is no established secondary market
for viatical investments. See NASAA Guidelines Regarding Viatical
Investments, 12A Blue Sky Law Appendix H § VIII.C.2.i. Accordingly, this part of the claimant's
investment is not a countable resource. When the viator dies, the claimant will receive
the death benefit, which may be considered unearned income. 20 C.F.R. § 416.1121(e).
The Monthly Income Agreement gives claimant the right to withdraw at any time the
entire balance of the trust account established for purposes of the monthly income
option. Because she can withdraw from this account and use the funds for her support
or maintenance, the account is a countable resource. See 20 C.F.R. § 416.1208 (funds held in financial institution accounts are countable resources);
POMS SI 01140.200(A)(5). Because the monthly payments of $158.33 come from the trust account, which
is a countable resource, any portion of such payments that the claimant has retained
is also a countable resource. See 20 C.F.R.§ 416.1103(c).