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Chapter 4: Inherited Benefits: Advising Executors and Beneficiaries

205

If the beneficiary does disclaim part of the account, see Rev. Rul. 2005-36 for elaborate

rules regarding how the “income” of the retirement plan must be apportioned between the portions

disclaimed and not disclaimed.

Taking a distribution would preclude a later disclaimer if the retirement benefit is not a

collection of “severable” property. For example, if the plan in question is a defined benefit plan

( 8.3.04 )

, and the death benefit is a life annuity of $100 per month, as soon as the beneficiary accepts

the first $100 check, he has accepted the entire benefit, because there is no way to “sever” the

annuity.

C.

Automatic deposit of benefits not acceptance.

It is common for a participant to arrange

his retirement plan so that periodic distributions are automatically deposited in his bank

account. If the bank account is a joint account co-owned with the retirement plan

beneficiary, the mere continuation of the automatic deposits after the participant’s death

would not, in itself, constitute acceptance of the retirement plan. Since there has been no

action by the beneficiary, it would not even constitute acceptance of the amounts deposited,

unless the beneficiary actually withdraws from the automatically-deposited amounts. See

PLR 2000-03023.

4.4.06

Deadline for qualified disclaimer

At first it appears the deadline for disclaimers of retirement benefits is simply stated: nine

months after the participant’s death. When stated with all its exceptions and wrinkles, however,

the deadline is more complicated.

A.

Nine months after participant’s death (or beneficiary’s 21st birthday).

§ 2518(b)(2)

states that a person’s qualified disclaimer must be delivered “not later than the date which

is 9 months after the later of--(A) the day on which the transfer creating the interest in such

person is made, or (B) the day on which such person attains age 21.”

Normally, in the case of retirement plan death benefits, the date of transfer is the date of

the participant’s death, so the deadline for a disclaimer is nine months after that date (or, if later,

the beneficiary’s 21st birthday). Reg

. § 25.2518-2(c)(3)(i) .

The fact that the deadline for finalizing

the identity of the Designated Beneficiary for minimum distribution purposes is September 30 of

the year after the participant’s death

( ¶ 1.8.03 )

does NOT mean that the deadline for making a

qualified disclaimer is extended to that date; the RMD rules have no effect on the deadline for a

qualified disclaimer.

If the deadline for delivering the disclaimer falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday

(see Reg.

§ 301.7503-1(b)

for definition), the deadline is extended to the next day which is not a

Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday. Reg.

§ 25.2518-2(c)(2) .

In rules borrowed from the deadline for filing tax returns, the IRS provides that “a timely

mailing of a disclaimer” to the correct person

( ¶ 4.4.07 )

“is treated as a timely delivery.” Reg.

§ 25.2518-2(c)(2) .

See Reg.

§ 301.7502-1(c)(1) , (2) ,

and

(d) ,

for requirements of “timely mailing.”

B.

Is the starting point ever earlier than the date of death?

A qualified disclaimer must be

made within a certain time period “after the...date of the transfer creating the interest” being

disclaimed. If a beneficiary acquires rights in the participant’s benefits earlier than the date

of death we need to consider whether the time starts earlier. An irrevocable designation of