401k Accounting Error – Reclaim Efforts
The client was laid off December 2017. The employer miscalculated his severance package and funded an additional $2,903 into his 401k. His total contribution for the year was still well below the threshold, but he was not due this additional money. The company has contacted him via phone/mail asking him to return the funds.
Problem: At termination, he rolled his 401k into an IRA at the same plan custodian. He has since transferred the IRA away from the original custodian to a new custodian.
So the employer cannot “reclaim” the funds from the original plan custodian b/c the account no longer exists there.
The client is over 59 1/2 and would have to WITHDRAW the funds from his current IRA and re-imburse the employer. This would create a taxable event at the current IRA custodian. He would then have to “explain away” the situation on his 1040 (if this is even possible.)
I’ve contacted the plan administrator at the previous employer and she says there’s no “Tax Exempt Document” she’s aware of and really doesn’t know what to do under the circumstances. She says she’s been counseled that there really is no recourse the company can take and , if the parties can’t work out a viable solution, then the company will just write off the incident.
Any ideas?
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Wed, 2018-10-24 16:55
Many such incidents of overpayment are written off after an initial request is not complied with. However, if client wants to comply they need to know what the 401k plan intends to do regarding 1099R forms. Some of these overpayment reimbursements end up with participants being taxed on amounts they eventually returned to the plan. Client would need to find out if the plan will correct the 1099R already issued for the direct rollover into two forms, one for the allowed amount and another for the amount the plan wants returned. At the end of the day client would have to convince the IRA custodian to treat the amount returned as an excess regular IRA contribution and return it either with earnings or without depending on the year the rollover was received by the first IRA custodian. Is the plan asking for both a return of cash severance in addition to the overpaid 401k contributions? Note that the tax filing mess obviously involves the IRS and in some cases can cause participants more tax related headaches than for the actual loss of funds.
Permalink Submitted by Mitch on Wed, 2018-10-31 14:54
Alan, as always, thank you for your thoughtful expertise. A quick follow up….(1) the employer is not asking for severance back as they somehow corrected this issue before final payment.(2) The current IRA custodian (2nd after 2 transfers away from 401k) will code the withdrawal as “excess contribution.”(3) Regarding the corrected 1099-R’s from the 401k plan,… you say the plan would need to re-issue one in the allowed amount and a second for the amount they want returned. This would account for the first “direct rollover” to the first IRA. Would the 1st IRA custodian need to also re-issue the same set of “corrected 1099-R’s” to account for the “direct transfer” from IRA custodian one to IRA custodian 2?
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Thu, 2018-11-01 00:41
Permalink Submitted by Mitch on Thu, 2018-11-01 17:14
Alan, your original comment proves to be true,….”Many such incidents of overpayment are written off after an initial request is not complied with.” I spoke with the plan administrator and she explained that the man hours already spent plus the prospect of additional efforts involving the plan custodian to correct 1099s, etc. prove to be more costly than the dollars involved in the reclaim effort itself. So the company has decided to write off the matter. Alan, as always, I sincerely appreciate the support you provide to the community and the professionalism with which you approach your advice. All the best!!!!