IRA Disclaiming
Interesting fact pattern that I have not come across – all help is appreciated
T-IRA owner dies leaving the account to her suriving spouse
Husband makes a qualifed disclaimer
3 sons inherit (they were contingents) due to dad disclaiming
one of three sons died (unsure when – before/after mom passing). Son has no family besides his dad and siblings.
Unsure if the beneficiary forms were per stirpes or per capita
Question:
Who inherits the deceased sons share?
I would assume if the beneficiary language is per capita – his two siblings aborb his share. However I am uncertain what to do if the assets pass per capita
Thank you
Permalink Submitted by Bruce Steiner on Wed, 2018-05-02 20:45
Permalink Submitted by Ben Meyer on Thu, 2018-05-03 00:25
There seems to be a possible corner case here. If the son survived the IRA owner and then died, and if he didn’t designate any beneficiaries, the IRA would probably go to his estate. Since the deceased son has no family besides his dad and siblings, the intestacy law of his state probably designates the father as his heir under intestacy. If the father disclaims the IRA of his wife after the death of his son, is the disclaimer valid? Under section 2518 the disclaimant can’t receive any benefit as when he becomes the heir of his son and becomes entitled to the same IRA funds under intestacy. So it looks like he needs to disclaim the IRA of his son as well. Likewise, if the father disclaims the IRA of his wife before the death of his son, is he then obligated to disclaim the son’s IRA later, after the son passes? If the father doesn’t disclaim the son’s IRA, does that invalidate the disclaimer of his wife’s IRA to the extent that the same funds will come back to him from his son’s estate?
Permalink Submitted by Bruce Steiner on Thu, 2018-05-03 02:29