“I hereby declare that I own and am possessed and occupy the
premises as a residence and homestead under Massachusetts
General Laws Chapter 188, as amended.”
The above is a core statement to be made in a homestead filing
and for a Massachusetts homeowner, could preserve equity
in his or her residence of up to $500,000. The Massachusetts
Homestead Act was enacted as a legal safeguard for a
homeowner and his or her family by protecting the family’s
primary residence against the claims of creditors. The Act
stands for the idea that the family home should be protected
regardless of the homeowner’s financial condition. In today’s
turbulent economic times, where many families are suffering
from mounting fiscal difficulties, more homeowners should be
taking advantage of the protection of the Homestead Act.
The Homestead Act permits a homeowner who occupies a
house as his/her principal residence to shield up to $500,000
in equity in that house from the claims of future creditors. The
Act currently permits only one spouse to file a Declaration of
Homestead with the Registry of Deeds if each spouse has an
ownership interest in the home. A disabled or elderly person
(62 years of age and older) is entitled to even greater protection
because a husband and wife who own a home together can
each file for the $500,000 protection. Debts excepted from
homestead protection include taxes, pre-existing mortgages,
debts incurred prior to the acquisition of the homestead estate,
alimony and child support obligations, and debts incurred in
connection with the purchase of the home. Nevertheless, a
properly recorded Declaration of Homestead is very often a
prudent, effective, and inexpensive means by which to put one’s
home beyond the reach of potential creditors.
Many homeowners file their Declaration of Homestead at
the time they purchase their home. The homestead can be
released by any conveyance of the property without reserving
homestead protection, by a written recordable release, by
the abandonment or cessation of use of the property as a
principal residence, by failure to qualify for protection, or
by the acquisition of a subsequent homestead. Homestead
termination raises the question of whether a person should
file a new homestead after refinancing his or her home. Most
lenders include a clause in their mortgage documents that
specifically waives any existing homestead protection in order
to perfect the mortgage on the property. Yet, this requirement
seems rather backward as it may force a homeowner to
file a new Homestead Declaration even though a perfectly
sound prior homestead exemption may have already been
declared. Termination of the first homestead exemption would
expose homeowners to any debts that incurred after the first
Declaration but before the second. As a result, homeowners
can often inadvertently release their homestead protection, and
what was once a future excepted debt can suddenly become a
prior unprotected debt to a newly filed Declaration.
To address such ambiguities in existing homestead law, a
series of new amendments to the Homestead Statute have
been proposed by the Homestead Subcommittee of the Real
Estate Bar Association’s Legislative Committee. Following
these changes, a second Homestead Declaration on the same
primary residence would “relate back” to the first Homestead
Declaration to avoid the problems embedded in the example
above. Any mortgage clause terminating previously-filed
homesteads would be construed to effect a subordination,
not a termination, of the homestead and would prohibit
mortgage lenders from requiring a release of homestead in
connection with the making and recording of any mortgage.
The subsequent homestead would not terminate the coverage
of the prior Declaration but would rather relate back to the first
Declaration to maintain a continuous stream of protection.
This concept would also apply when a person has filed a regular
homestead but then subsequently files a homestead as an
elderly or disabled person.
Another series of proposed changes would result in the
creation of an “automatic homestead,” which provides for
homestead protection without ever having to file a formal
Declaration. For owners who occupy, or intend to occupy, their
homes as a primary residence, these amendments would afford
an automatic protection of $125,000. These changes would help
those people who are unfamiliar with the Homestead Act. The
new automatic provision would at least give the homeowner a
baseline of protection in the event of a financial crisis so that
they can protect their homes from the collection efforts of
creditors.
With the automatic homestead baseline in place, the
amendments allow for homeowners to increase the amount
of the exemption to $500,000 by filing a formal Declaration
of Homestead. Another portion of the amendments concerns
the filing requirements of a formal Declaration. The proposed
changes would eliminate the confusing constraint of the
existing statute that only one spouse may sign the Declaration.
Co-owning, married persons residing together would both
need to sign their names on the Homestead Declaration, now
paralleling the double-signature requirement present in all
other title documents.
Absent enactment of these amendments by the state
legislature, a homeowner needs to take caution in declaring
a new homestead following a refinancing. A homeowner
should check to see if the lenders’ contract waives homestead
protection as to that mortgage lender alone or whether the
waiver applies to all creditors. If the waiver applies to the one
mortgage lender, the homeowner is advised not to file a new
homestead as the timing of the protection provided by the
initial homestead filing would be lost as to other creditors.
If the waiver applies to all lenders, then filing another
Homestead Declaration could be a prudent decision. However,
take note of the fact that any debts incurred in the interim
between the first Homestead Declaration and the second
will not be protected. Due to the strong endorsement of the
Real Estate Bar Association, the Boston Bar Association, and
the Massachusetts Bar Association, the amendments have
received unprecedented, coordinated support. The changes
would resolve these confusing aspects of homestead law, and a Declaration of Homestead would become an even more straightforward process. As it stands today, homestead
protection remains a smart and inexpensive way to protect
the family home in these uncertain economic times. We
recommend taking advantage of the protection offered by the
Homestead Act, and homeowners should consider it as they
execute any real estate or estate planning documents.