Did you ever notice how it's difficult to
get some people to say what they REALLY THINK! (Or how
difficult it is to get SOME people to just THINK!).
LISI Commentators certainly don't have
either problem!
Natalie B. Choate, a/k/a/ the
fabulous Ms. "N", author of two giant sellers,
LIFE AND DEATH PLANNING FOR RETIREMENT BENEFITS - 6TH
EDITION (800 247 6553) (See our review in
Estate Planning Newsletter 1035) and THE
QPRT MANUAL (1-800-247-6553) (See our review in
Estate Planning Newsletter # 757) asks the
question,
"How Do You Spell Arbitrary and Capricious?"
Executive summary:
The IRS has a long-standing policy of
allowing a surviving spouse to roll over benefits that are
left to her through the estate (or a trust) of her deceased
spouse. 2006 PLRs have continued that policy. However, the IRS
has to date refused to put this policy into any form that
taxpayers can rely on (such as a regulation or Revenue
Ruling). That continued in 2006 as well, prompting this author
to say: Shame on the IRS for its get-tough on widows policy,
and for continuing to issue these nonsensical and
self-contradictory PLRs!
FACTS:
Background:
How stressful is it to have your husband
or wife die? I think most would agree that the death of a
spouse is one of life's most traumatic events.
Is that traumatic situation made more or
less stressful if the deceased had not done proper estate
planning—for example, if the decedent's IRA is payable to his
estate because he never bothered to name a beneficiary?
I think most people would say that the
loss of a spouse is even more stressful if that spouse did not
leave his financial affairs in proper order.
But widows and widowers in that difficult
situation see a light at the end of the tunnel: Thanks to a
longstanding, wise, and generous IRS policy, even though the
decedent forgot to name the surviving spouse as beneficiary,
the widow or widower can still salvage the situation by using
a spousal rollover:
THE SOLUTION IS EASY - OR IS IT?
IF the widow or widower is the
beneficiary of the estate (or trust) that is the beneficiary
of the IRA, all he/she has to do is distribute the IRA or
retirement plan money to him/herself as beneficiary of the
estate (or trust), then roll it over to his/her own plan or
IRA, and all is well! Right?
Wrong!
Yes that IS the IRS policy - provided
certain conditions are met.
The conditions are that the spouse must
have the right, as beneficiary, without the consent of any
third party, to cause those benefits to be distributed to
him/herself. If the allocation and/or distribution of the
benefits to the surviving spouse (through the estate or trust)
is subject to the discretion of a third party, this condition
is not met—unless the surviving spouse him/herself is
the fiduciary who holds that discretion.
But even if these conditions ARE met,
this longstanding, wise, and generous IRS policy is not
embodied in a form that taxpayers can rely upon, such as a
regulation or Revenue Ruling. Rather it appears only in
private letter rulings.
POLICY YES, RELIABILITY NO!
This IRS policy has been consistent for
at least 17 years (see PLR 8911006); PLRs to this effect have
been issued steadily through all three versions of the
proposed and final minimum distribution regulations. See ¶
3.2.08 of Life and Death Planning for Retirement Benefits (6th
ed., 2006;
www.ataxplan.com ), where a couple dozen such rulings
are listed. But it is not in any regulation or Revenue
Ruling!
ONE LAST TAX TO PAY!
Thus, cautious taxpayers often seek their
own PLRs to support such a rollover (or an IRA provider may
require such a PLR to allow the rollover). Which means the
already-traumatized widow or widower must incur a $9,000 IRS
"user fee," plus legal fees. The IRS has turned these
taxpayers' trauma into a money-making machine for the IRS.
IRS CAN'T MAKE UP ITS MIND!
2006 has seen two particularly egregious
examples of this outrageous IRS behavior. In these two PLRs
the IRS piously quotes its own policy to the effect
that a particular rollover is NOT allowed…then turns around
and allows the rollover anyway!
One involves a trust and one involves an
estate:
The trust: PLR: 200644028: The
participant ("P") died in 2005, after his RBD, leaving his IRA
to a trust. The surviving spouse ("S") was sole beneficiary
and sole trustee of the trust, with the power to withdraw all
of the trust's assets and distribute them to herself.
First, the IRS quotes its own regulation:
"Section 1.408-8 of the regulations,
Question and Answer 5, provides that a surviving spouse of an
IRA owner may elect to treat the spouse's entire interest as a
beneficiary in an individual's IRA as the spouse's own IRA. In
order to make this election, the spouse must be the sole
beneficiary of the IRA and have an unlimited right to withdraw
amounts from the IRA. If a trust is named as
beneficiary of the IRA, this requirement is not
satisfied even if the spouse is the sole beneficiary of
the trust." Emphasis added.
But then, the IRS rules exactly the
opposite of what its own regulation provides!
The IRS rules that "…[Y]ou are to be
treated as the payee and beneficiary of IRA X for purposes of
Code sections 408(d)(1) and 408(d)(3).…For purposes of Code
section 408(d)(3) and section 1.408-8 Question & Answer - 5 of
the Income Tax Regulations…you may be treated as the
beneficiary of Decedent A's IRA X so that the IRA X account
balance may be transferred from Decedent A's IRA X into an IRA
set up and maintained in your name…."
So, when a trust is named as beneficiary,
the spousal election under § 408(d)(3) to treat the inherited
IRA as her own is not available even if the surviving spouse
is the sole beneficiary and trustee of the trust…except
"when we the gods of the IRS declare that it really is
available after all!"
[One more interesting note about this
PLR: Both spouses were past their RBDs, but the PLR does not
mention who if anyone took the 2005 and 2006 MRDs or how the
2006 MRD was computed. Thus, the IRS passed up the opportunity
to clarify how the MRD for the year after the year of the
participant's death is calculated when the surviving spouse,
in that year, elects to treat the decedent's IRA as her own
IRA and the spouse has passed her own RBD.]
We know that, for MRD purposes, her
election is retroactive to the beginning of the year, so she
calculates the MRD for that year as "owner" rather than as
"beneficiary."
What we don't know is whether she
calculates the MRD for that year using the account's actual
prior year-end balance (even though the account belonged to
the decedent as of the prior year-end; this would be the
conservative interpretation), or whether the prior year-end
account balance is "zero" because she didn't own the account
as of the prior year-end (which seems like an unlikely rule,
since it would allow the spouse to completely skip a year of
MRDs). See Reg. § 1.408-8, A-5(a), fifth and sixth sentences,
and ¶ 1.6.06(B) of Life and Death Planning for Retirement
Benefits.]
The estate: PLR 200644031 : This
PLR is equally outrageous.
P died after his RBD, leaving his IRA to
his estate. S was the sole executrix and sole residuary
beneficiary. The legacies of all pre-residuary beneficiaries
could be satisfied from the nonIRA assets.
As executrix, S had the authority to
decide which beneficiary received which assets; she intended
to allocate the entire IRA to herself in partial fulfillment
of her residuary share, and then take distribution of it and
roll it over to her own IRA.
From the ruling:
"Although not specifically stated in
the regulations, a surviving spouse may not elect to treat the
IRA of a decedent as his/her own if an estate is the
beneficiary of the IRA even if the spouse is both the sole
executor of the estate and also the sole beneficiary of the
estate."
Well at least that's clear!
But then the IRS says:
"The facts above indicate that you are
the sole executrix of Decedent A's estate and the
sole residuary beneficiary thereof. Thus, upon Decedent
A's death, pursuant to his will, you had the authority to pay
yourself all of Decedent A's residuary estate including
IRA X. Thus, no third party had any authority to preclude your
receiving Decedent A's IRA X. Under the facts stated above, it
is appropriate to treat you as the payee and beneficiary of
IRA X for purposes of sections 408(d)(1) and 408(d)(3) of the
Code." [Emphasis added.]
So being the sole executor and
beneficiary of the decedent's estate is not sufficient to
allow the surviving spouse to roll over the decedent's
retirement benefits that are payable to the estate…except that
actually it IS sufficient!
This nonlogic is the paradigm of
"arbitrary and capricious" action by a government agency. The
IRS is saying,
"We have a rule: no rollover through an
estate merely because spouse is sole beneficiary and executor.
But for you, we will make a special interpretation of the law,
that is 100% contradictory to our supposed rule, provided you
pay us our $9,000 user fee to obtain a PLR."
If that's not what they're saying,
then what are they saying?
Conclusion:
The bureaucratic flimflam represented by
the PLRs on spousal rollovers through an estate or trust has
gone on long enough! After 17 years, the IRS owes it to
taxpayers and practitioners to clean up its act and issue a
Revenue Ruling or regulation stating its long-standing policy
allowing spousal rollovers through an estate or trust in a
form that taxpayers can rely on.
Many bereaved widows and widowers left
trying to clean up the mess of an non-planned estate would
appreciate it.
HOPE THIS HELPS YOU HELP OTHERS MAKE A
POSITIVE DIFFERENCE!
Natalie Choate
Edited by Steve Leimberg
CITE AS:
Steve Leimberg's Employee Benefits and
Retirement Planning Newsletter # 397 (January 2, 2007) at
http://www.leimbergservices.com Copyright 2007 Leimberg
Information Services, Inc. (LISI). Reproduction in Any Form
or Forwarding to Any Person Prohibited - Except With Specific
Permission!
CITES:
PLRs 2006-44028 and 2006-44031