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The bill for the person being cared for in the nursing home was paid for by Medicaid. They already got their money. Medicaid might want to see a receipt from a pre-paid funeral contract that was done before the person went on Medicaid, but that is in no way owed to the nursing home.
All the legal documentation a nursing home needs to see is a person's POA and proof that they are executor of the person's will who passed away. Even if they don't have any property or money.
If the nursing home owes money be it funds deposited in a resident trust account that was used for things like haircuts, sundries, getting nails trimmed, etc... then whoever is the executor collects that. If they owe money back because the deceased person's funds paid for days that were paid for by Medicaid, that money is owed back to Medicaid, not the nursing home.
The business end of all nursing homes will try to shakedown people to get money they are not owed and will pull every underhanded and shady trick in the book to get more. You don't owe them any explanation or any receipts. Medicaid paid them for the care. The money left over in a resident account is owed back to the estate.
Call the NH to find out what they need and County Probate to confirm what I have said.
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They are not owed receipts for anything. It's none of their business. If someone was on Medicaid, it's their business because they are the ones who were paying the bill.