A decision from the New Jersey Appellate Division published June 17, 2025 (In the Matter of G.W.) has clarified a critical and previously unsettled area of law concerning public benefit liens. The court held that a lien issued by the Division of Developmental Disabilities (DDD) is immediately enforceable, while a Medicaid lien cannot be collected until the beneficiary’s death — a distinction with significant consequences for estate planning.
The Background
Gabrielle W., an adjudicated incapacitated adult, received residential services funded by both DDD and Medicaid. When she inherited $600,000 from her sister’s estate, Arc of Bergen and Passaic Counties, her court-appointed property guardian, sought to protect her Medicaid eligibility by transferring those funds to a special needs trust. But standing in the way was a $1,052,304 lien from DDD for the cost of her care — a lien DDD sought to enforce immediately.
The trial court declined to enforce the DDD lien, ruling instead that Medicaid’s future estate recovery rights had priority. The court reasoned it was in Gabrielle’s best interest to preserve her Medicaid eligibility and protect the trust. But on appeal, the Appellate Division disagreed.
The Court's Holding
The Appellate Division reversed the lower court’s order, emphasizing that DDD liens are enforceable immediately under N.J.S.A. 30:4-80.1. These liens attach to the property of a living person who receives services from DDD. On the other hand, Medicaid liens can only be asserted posthumously, pursuant to N.J.S.A. 30:4D-7.2, and only against the estate of the deceased Medicaid recipient.
The court concluded there is no statutory conflict: both liens can coexist, but they operate on distinct timelines. In the case of a living person like Gabrielle, DDD had the only legally viable lien. Medicaid’s recovery rights would not ripen until Gabrielle’s death.
Why This Matters
This case is a clear warning to guardians, trustees, and estate planners: Inherited assets cannot be shielded from DDD repayment obligations simply by invoking Medicaid's future claim rights. If a client receives services from DDD and comes into money, the DDD lien must be addressed promptly — either by repayment or through the statutory compromise process. The court also made clear that a “best interests” argument cannot override a legislatively mandated lien. Courts must enforce the statutes as written.
Planning Tip
If you have a loved one who receives public benefits like Medicaid or services from DDD, careful estate planning is essential. Leaving them an inheritance outright — even with good intentions — can jeopardize their benefits and trigger immediate repayment obligations. Instead, consider using special needs trusts or other protective planning tools to ensure their continued eligibility and long-term care without exposing them to liens or disruptions in services.
The G.W. case illustrates precisely what happens when protective planning is absent. Gabrielle's sister died intestate — without a will — which meant the $600,000 passed to Gabrielle outright under New Jersey's laws of intestate succession. There was no will directing those funds into a Special Needs Trust, no advance coordination with an elder law attorney, and no mechanism to receive the inheritance in a protected form. The result was an immediate lien enforcement proceeding that consumed the entirety of the inheritance and left nothing for Gabrielle's ongoing care needs.
Had Gabrielle's sister executed a will with proper special needs planning, she could have directed her estate — or the portion intended for Gabrielle — into a third-party Special Needs Trust. Unlike a first-party trust funded with the beneficiary's own assets, a third-party SNT is established with someone else's money and carries no Medicaid payback requirement at death. Gabrielle would have received the benefit of those funds without triggering the DDD lien, and without disrupting her Medicaid eligibility.
This is one of the most important and underappreciated points in elder law and disability planning: the person doing the planning is often not the disabled individual, but the family member who intends to leave them something. A parent, sibling, or other relative who has a loved one receiving public benefits should have a will — and that will should account for the beneficiary's disability. Leaving assets outright to a Medicaid or DDD recipient, however well-intentioned, can do more harm than good.