Forgotten Retirement Account
Facts:
– Account owner forgot about a company retirement account
– Account Owner died in 2011 at age 83, never had taken any distributions. The estate was not probated
– Spouse died in 2012. They never assumed the account.
– Children discovered account in 2017.
– Small Balance ($30,000). Claimed Account via a Small Estate Affidavit
– Company issued a check to the decedents estate after withholding 20% (net check issued is $24,000)
– Company alerted family they may have to the 50% Excise Tax since no distributions were ever taken.
Their CPA believes if they can deposit the check into an Estate held IRA account they can reclaim the 20% withheld and deposit as well. In the mean-time the family can file to have the 50% Excise Tax waived. After all of this settles they can distribute the funds to each of the 3 heirs into Inherited IRA accounts.
Does all of this sound reasonable and should be able to be accomplished? Are we missing anything? How fatal is the 20% Withholding to still characterizing the dollars as retirement account dollars? Someone I spoke to has said they believe since the 20% has been withheld it cannot be considered retirement funds any longer (income tax paid) thus cannot be rolled-over/ deposited into an Estate held IRA Account.
I will appreciate your input and guidance. Thank you, Ed
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Tue, 2017-11-14 02:42
Permalink Submitted by Ed Farmer on Tue, 2017-11-14 14:00
Alan- This distribution is from a Defined Benefit Plan. It sounds like even if we use the same dollar amount for year-end balance there should be a different calculated amount each year based upon life expectancy. We are thinking it is best to hold the funds until the family receives the IRS Waiver Letter(s) just in case they do not waive the excise tax. Is there any benefit to using the 5 Year Rule in this situation? One 5329 for the final year of distribution—2017? Since the 20% Withholding was incorrectly withheld the family could reclaim it, but you believe only if they run the claim back through the Surviving Spouses Estate? So, filing it through the decedent’s estate will not work? If the family just simply distributes the funds “as is” they will be running afoul of IRS Regs and will one day receive a letter from the IRS demanding funds—taxes, interest, penalties. At that point it would be difficult to get out the tight spot I suspect? This is not a pleasant situation for them to fix. I appreciate your help. -Ed
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Tue, 2017-11-14 16:01
Permalink Submitted by Ed Farmer on Tue, 2017-11-14 17:11
Additional facts to answer questions: – Decedent had not worked for this large U.S. Based international company since early/ mid 1990’s and had not been actively working for many years. They had forgotten about this retirement benefit account. – Family received an escheat notice from the company. The daughter lives in parent’s former home & received the letter. – The company had no record of a beneficiary other than the Estate of the Deceased Former Employee. – The company did not complain or inquire when they filed the claim under the Deceased Employees Estate (Small Estate Affidavit) and EIN. – The 20% was withheld and sent to IRS under the Deceased Employees Estate EIN–not the Spouses Estate. – We do not know any of the Plan’s provisions. – The check was made payable to the Deceased Employees Estate—not the Spouses Estate. After reviewing this information with the CPA he is thinking (since this appears to be turning into a convoluted mess) he will have the Estates Representative give him authorization to talk with the IRS on their behalf to see what can be worked out rather than returning funds, re-opening another estate, attempting to claim the 20% attributed to another estate, then filing multiple 5329’s. Surely, at this point there must be a cut to the chase solution. I appreciate your input. This is one reason we impress upon our clients to name beneficiaries on ALL accounts where needed and keep track of all acounts. Thank you, Ed
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Tue, 2017-11-14 18:43
Yes, so convoluted by a series of foul ups that the usual solutions will not fly. Under ERISA, if client was married at the time of his death and spouse did not sign a waiver, the surviving spouse would be the automatic beneficiary of this plan, not his estate. Then surviving spouse took no action so surviving spouse’s estate would inherit the plan.It is surprising that a large company with professional account administrators would blow this in multiple areas. As is obvious, just one of these errors is enough to send the account entirely off the road into a bad chain of events. At this time some improvised and compromised solution is required. If the beneficiaries of each will or intestate provisions will be the same either way, there should not be any beneficiaries contesting these actions. And other than being named a direct beneficiaries, there was not much of a stretch left that was lost based on the ages of the decedents. The CPA would know better what risks would arise from just reporting the distribution to the decedent’s estate per the anticipated 1099R. Hopefully, some internal audit of the plan would not identify ERISA and RMD errors that would cause the plan to reform what they have already done. Meanwhile, the 50% penalty is probably the least of the potential problems because the IRS apparently does not levy this on estates. The IRS would likely approve the 5329 forms without concern of the respective amounts for each year as long as the explanation shows that the entire balance was distributed. 1099R should also indicate a total distribution. I assume the re opened decedent’s estate would then pass through the distribution on a K 1 to each beneficiary, and it would be taxable in 2017.