You requested a legal opinion from each Regional Chief Counsel addressing specific
                  issues raised by the Associate Commissioner of the Office of Program Benefits (OPB)
                  related to the purchase of property by minors and by representative payees on behalf
                  of minors. Below is Region VII's response to the specific issues raised. In response
                  to the April 21, 1999 video conference call, we have revised our January 12, 1999
                  legal opinion to remove any reference to the Uniform Transfers to Minors Act.
               
               MISSOURI
               1.Does the State permit a minor to hold title to real property or personal property
                  such as an automobile?
               
               Yes. Mo. Ann. Stat. § 442.080 (West 1997) states that:
               All deeds, mortgages, deeds of trust and other instruments affecting title to real
                  estate hereafter executed by any person under the age of eighteen shall be binding
                  upon such person under the age of eighteen unless he shall file a deed or other instrument
                  duly acknowledged in the office of the recorder of deeds where the land is situate,
                  disaffirming the same, within two years after the disability of the minority is removed.
               
               Further, Mo. Ann. Stat. § 442.060 (West 1997) provides various methods of ratification
                  by a minor after attaining the age of 18. Case law in Missouri also states that a
                  minor may acquire and own property in his or her name alone, and his or her parent
                  may not sell the minor's interest in property except as provided by law. Kubatzky v. Ramada Inns, Inc., 632 S.W. 2d 73, 75 (Mo. 1982); Nilges v. Nilges, 610 S.W. 2d 58 (Mo. 1980).
               
               2. If so, are there any property restrictions as to age of the minor or the types
                  of property that can be held.
               
               No restrictions as to age or property type were found. The types of property at issue
                  in Kubatzky and Nilges included shares of stock in a closely held corporation, horses,
                  and a motorcycle. In Gross v. Gross, 625 S.W. 2d 655 (Mo. 1981) the property at issue was the corpus of a trust.
               
               3. Are there any specific requirements on how the property should or must be held
                  to show the minor as the titleholder?
               
               Again, no specific requirements were found. As indicated above, the minor may hold
                  property in his or her own name.
               
               4. If a State does not permit a minor to hold title to property or does not permit
                  the property to be titled or registered in the minor's name, what is the preferred
                  method(s) of titling the property to reflect or protect the minor's interest in the
                  property and satisfy SSA's regulatory requirements.
               
               Not applicable.