Bill

Bill > HF816


IA HF816

IA HF816
A bill for an act relating to creation of transfer on death deeds and to disclaimers of an interest in real property.


summary

Introduced
03/06/2025
In Committee
03/06/2025
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead

Introduced Session

91st General Assembly

Bill Summary

This bill provides that an individual may execute a transfer on death deed which transfers real property outside of probate to one or more beneficiaries effective at the transferor’s death. To be valid, a transfer on death deed must contain the essential elements and formalities of a properly recordable inter vivos deed, state that the transfer to the designated beneficiary is to occur at the transferor’s death, and be recorded before the transferor’s death in the office of the county recorder. A transfer on death deed is revocable, even if the deed states that the deed is irrevocable. A transferor may revoke a transfer on death deed by acknowledging and recording an inconsistent transfer on death deed, or an instrument of revocation or inter vivos deed that expressly revokes the deed. A transfer on death dead is nontestamentary, and the capacity required to make or revoke a transfer on death deed is the same capacity required to make a will. A transfer on death deed is effective even if the beneficiary does not receive notice or delivery of the deed during the transferor’s lifetime, and even if the transferor does not receive consideration for the deed. During the transferor’s lifetime, a transfer on death deed does not affect the transferor’s interest in the property, including the right to transfer or encumber the property, nor does the transfer on death deed create a legal or equitable interest in favor of the designated beneficiary or subject the property to claims of a creditor of the designated beneficiary. If the transferor transfers the property that is the subject of a transfer of death deed before the transferor’s death, the transfer on death deed is of no effect at the death of the transferor. At the death of the transferor, subject to Code sections 633.238 (elective share of surviving spouse), 633.523 (uniform simultaneous death act), and 633.535 (felonious death), the property is transferred to the designated beneficiary if the designated beneficiary is alive. If the designated beneficiary predeceases the transferor, the interest of the designated beneficiary lapses. Subject to Code section 558.41 (recording), a beneficiary who takes property under a transfer on death deed takes the property subject to all conveyances, encumbrances, assignments, contracts, mortgages, liens, and other interests to which the property is subject at the transferor’s death. If the transferor owns the property as a joint tenant or as a tenant by the entirety, the transfer on death deed is only effective if the transferor is the last surviving joint tenant or tenant by the entirety. A beneficiary may disclaim all or part of the beneficiary’s interest as provided by Code chapter 633E (uniform disclaimer of property interest Act). To the extent that the transferor’s probate estate is insufficient to satisfy an allowed claim against the estate or a statutory allowance to a surviving spouse or child, the estate may enforce the liability against property transferred at the transferor’s death by a transfer on death deed. The bill provides an optional form of a transfer on death deed and an optional form for the revocation of a transfer on death deed. The bill does not affect any deed executed and recorded prior to the effective date of the bill and applies to a transfer on death deed made before, on, or after the effective date of the bill by a transferor dying on or after the effective date of the bill. The bill makes conforming changes.

AI Summary

This bill creates a legal framework for "Transfer on Death Deeds" (TOD deeds), which allow property owners in Iowa to transfer real estate directly to designated beneficiaries upon their death without going through probate court. The bill establishes that a TOD deed must be properly recorded before the owner's death, is fully revocable at any time, and does not affect the owner's rights to sell or encumber the property during their lifetime. The deed requires the same mental capacity as creating a will and is effective even without the beneficiary's knowledge or acceptance. During the owner's life, the deed does not create any legal interest for the beneficiary and does not impact the owner's ability to transfer or use the property. Upon the owner's death, the property transfers to the beneficiary subject to any existing liens or encumbrances, and if the designated beneficiary dies before the owner, their interest lapses. The bill also provides optional standard forms for creating and revoking TOD deeds, and allows the owner's estate to use the transferred property to satisfy creditor claims if the probate estate is insufficient. Importantly, the bill applies to TOD deeds made before, on, or after its effective date, for owners dying on or after that date, and is designed to provide a uniform approach to such property transfers across jurisdictions.

Committee Categories

Justice

Sponsors (1)

Last Action

Introduced, referred to Judiciary. H.J. 540. (on 03/06/2025)

bill text


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