Termination of Trust – IRA RMD going forward
We have a trust that will terminate this year. The trust has, as beneficiaries, the widow of the trustor and the children of the trustor (who are all adults). The trustor died late last year. He named the trust as the beneficiary of his IRAs. There is also some cash held by the trust. The trust provisions are such that the trust will continue for the life of the widow, and will pay out the cash for her care during her life, but if she dies before all the cash has been paid out, the remaining amount, if any, will be paid the to trustor’s children. A small portion of one of the IRAs will also be drawn by the trust to add to the total cash, to make up the pecuniary amount specified by the trust to be paid for the care of the widow. The residue, which consists of the IRAs (net of the amount drawn to bring the total cash up to the pecuniary amount for the widow) , will be transferred immediately to the children, before any distributions to the children are made. Because the decedent-trustor had received his RMD for 2017 before he died, there is no RMD to be paid to the estate of the decedent. In effect, the trust will terminate with regard to the children. The widow is only entitled to the cash, and not to the IRAs. The question is whether, under these circumstances, the widow’s age is to be taken into account in determining the RMDs from the IRAs to the children, going forward.
Incidentally, if relevant, the trustee has not yet re-titled the IRAs to the name of the trust. He is considering spinning off a separate trust to hold the cash for the benefit of the widow, and only after completing the spinoff re-titlng the IRAs (or at least the IRAs other than the one from which the extra cash is drawn to complete the pecuniary amount for the widow).
Thanks for any information you can provide.
Barry H. Sacks
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Wed, 2018-01-17 01:51
Barry, this is a real brain buster, at least for me. Hopefully, Bruce Steiner, an estate attorney will see this and comment. What is unique here is that the IRA itself will be removed from the trust before the beneficiary determination date of 9/30, leaving the IRA with NO named beneficiary. I think this has the same result as if the trust had been terminated by that date, even though we know it wasn’t. With the IRA assigned to the children before that date, if there is NO beneficiary as a result, the applicable RMD distribution period would be the remaining life expectancy of the decedent, which might be roughly comparable to the remaining life expectancy of widow. That would leave the children with either an inherited IRA or separate inherited IRA accounts under which each child would have to take RMDs using the decedent’s life expectancy. It should not matter when the IRAs are retitled or if the trust is split into a subtrust.