Legal Question in Wills and Trusts in Iowa
Disclaiming POD accounts
Can I disclaim a POD account from a decedent for Estate Tax purposes - & if so Who receives the account? Ia. law.
1 Answer from Attorneys
Re: Disclaiming POD accounts
Without a doubt. (Do not miss the 9-month deadline.
There is no extending it. A letter to your attorney is
not good enough to disclaim. A letter that arrives the
next day at the executor's office is not good enough.
This is a heavily litigated area of law and if you miss
the deadline due to some technicality, your disclaimer
is invalid.)
Who receives it? If (unlikely) other parties are
listed at the bank where the POD account is held, they
get it. If not, I think you look next to the decedent's
estate: a) if there's a will, then it goes according to
the will, as if your name were never on the account or [ better yet ]
you had predeceased; b) if there's no will, it goes according
to the laws of intestacy, only as if you had predeceased; that
usually means to your children, which, I assume, is the result
you want.
I know two real experts in this area of law in Indiana, both
in Evansville. Where do you reside? Do you want their names?
You should be cautioned that I'm not licensed in IA not only because
I haven't taken their bar exam or applied for a license there but
because I haven't studied their law ... in other words, I don't
necessarily know what I'm talking about!
The Federal disclaimer law (IRS code) requires you meet state requirements for
effective disclaimer, so usually a lawyer has to know the laws at both
levels. Some states have only a 6-month window, for example, though most
will give you the full 9-months that the IRS puts as a cap. Even my state has
a few wrinkles that make the state law requirement stricter than the IRS outside
requirements, and, again, both have to be met.
I've also assumed that you want to disclaim to reduce estate taxes in your own
estate. If we're talkin' serious money, you want to be sure that you're not
going to cause a GSTT (generation skipping tax) via your disclaimer
(but that requires something close to a million dollars to have been
given by the donor to each donee ... but maybe that's not a worry.
Tell me this, please: why do you want to disclaim?
Reply to [email protected] directly.
Stuart Williams
Law Offices of Stuart J. Williams
21 Walter St.
Newton, MA
02459-2509