401k r/o distribution check deposited into Inherited IRA
I recently took over an Inherited IRA account from another advisor.
It seems that earlier in the year the advisor accidentally had the client deposit her personal 401k rollover monies into a decedent inherited IRA. The client is a non-spouse beneficiary. The client is also 62 y/o.
I checked with my BD and since the deposit was done at the beginning of the year nothing can be done to cure the error.
what are my options with these monies? Can I distribute them and put them into a new R/O IRA to avoid the tax?
Is there any way to cure this?
Thanks in advance.
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Wed, 2017-09-20 15:12
Was this a newly created inherited IRA? How is the inherited IRA titled and who shows as the decedent?
Permalink Submitted by Geoffrey Kasher on Sat, 2017-09-23 13:42
The inherited was created mid-2016. The uncle shows as the decedent and titled with clients name
Permalink Submitted by David Mertz on Sat, 2017-09-23 14:52
Permalink Submitted by Geoffrey Kasher on Mon, 2017-09-25 13:46
Thanks DMx. The previous Rep had the client include a letter of instruction telling Pershing to make the deposit. Pershing is saying that because of the letter they can’t reverse the transaction. Doesnt seem right to me either. The R/O monies have been in a MM account since it was deposited.
Permalink Submitted by David Mertz on Mon, 2017-09-25 15:40
While Pershing might not be able to treat it as a mere bookkeeping error and make the correction on their books without any reportable transactions, I don’t see why they would not be able to treat it as an excess contribution and make the reportable corrective distribution, then deposit the money in a proper, owned traditional IRA as a reportable rollover contribution (albeit late under self-certification) as I mentioned.
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Tue, 2017-09-26 19:14
Pershing has not done any tax reporting yet for 2017, so I do not understand why they could not re deposit this rollover along with any earnings in an owned IRA account. That would be easier and more direct, but you could also fall back on the excess contribution treatment as Plan B if they would only recognize that option. Some questions – 1) What was the payee wording on the direct rollover check? It could not have reflected an inherited account, so it should not have been deposited into an inherited account. For a non spouse an inherited account can only accept a direct rollover for a beneficiary, not an owner. An error was made, but it is not clear who caused it. Some of these situations start with an error which is then aggravated by others completing the transaction such as this advisor or Pershing itself by accepting instructions not allowed under the tax code. 2) Now that Pershing has accepted this contribution, what do they intend to report to the IRS on Form 5498? The recipient’s name will not match up to the name on the 1099R which might cause additional IRA issues.