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330

Life and Death Planning for Retirement Benefits

Transfer the plan itself, rather than a distribution.

In the Jody Example, the trustee

could transfer the 401(k) plan itself to Angelina, rather than withdrawing money from the

plan and distributing the money to Angelina. See

¶ 6.1.05 .

Such a transfer generates no

gross income at the trust level and accordingly the separate share rule for allocation of DNI

never comes into play. The problem of Reg.

§ 1.663(c)-2(b)(3)

is avoided. Se

e ¶ 6.5.07 .

Fund other shares first.

If the trustee wants to allocate a particular IRD-corpus item to

one beneficiary’s share, the trustee can distribute all the other assets first, fully funding all

the other beneficiaries’ shares before the year in which he withdraws funds from the plan.

Then he is left with only one asset, the retirement plan, which he cashes out in the later

year. This cash can only be used to fund one beneficiary’s share (because all other

beneficiaries have received their shares in full in previous years), so the distribution carries

out all the DNI.

6.5.07

Income tax effect of transferring plan

See

¶ 6.1.05

regarding the ability of a trust or estate to transfer an inherited IRA or plan to

the beneficiaries of the trust or estate. This

¶ 6.5.07

discusses the income tax effects of such a

transfer to a specific or residuary legatee. For transfer in fulfilment of a pecuniary bequest, see

6.5.08 .

The general rule is that the transfer of an inherited retirement plan “by the estate of the

decedent or a person who received such right by reason of the death of the decedent or by bequest,

devise, or inheritance from the decedent” triggers immediate realization of the income represented

by the retirement plan, because it is the transfer of a right to receive IRD

. § 691(a)(2) ,

first sentence;

see

¶ 4.6.03 .

However, this general rule does not apply to a “transfer to a person pursuant to the right of

such person to receive such amount by reason of the death of the decedent or by bequest, devise,

or inheritance from the decedent.”

§ 691(a)(2)

(second sentence). Thus, when a retirement benefit

is transferred out of an estate or trust to a beneficiary of the estate or trust, the transferring entity

is not taxed on the transfer (for exception see

¶ 6.5.08 )

. Instead, the transferee is taxable on the

IRD as and when it is paid to such transferee.

§ 691(a)(1)(C) ;

Reg.

§ 1.691(a)-4(b) .

Clothier Example:

Clothier’s IRA is payable to his estate. Clothier’s will leaves his personal

effects, automobile, and IRA to his sister Wanda, and leaves the residue of the estate to his brother.

Clothier’s executor transfers the personal effects, automobile, and IRA to Wanda. The transfer to

Wanda is not a taxable event. Wanda withdraws money from the IRA. The withdrawal is taxable

to Wanda as IRD. Reg.

§ 1.691(a)-4(b)(2) .

The “person” to whom the right-to-receive-IRD is transferred could be a charity (see PLRs

discussed at “B”), or a trust (see PLR 2008-26028), as long as the transferee is the beneficiary

entitled to receive that asset under the decedent’s trust or from the decedent’s estate.

A.

Transfer from trust to trust beneficiary.

If the right-to-receive IRD is distributed as a

specific bequest from a trust, or upon termination of the trust to a residuary legatee, the

beneficiary who is entitled to the item, and not the trust, bears the income tax. Reg.

§ 1.691(a)-2(a)(3) , (b) ,

Example 1;

§ 1.691(a)-4(b)(2) , (3) .

See PLRs 9537005 (Ruling 7),

and 9537011.