Earlier this year, in Clark v. Rameker, 573 U.S. ___ (2014), the Supreme Court resolved a circuit split and delivered bad news for debtors, finding that a debtor's inherited IRA was includible in her bankruptcy estate.
Clark is an important decision because it clarifies that IRA assets inherited by adult children or other beneficiaries are exposed to creditor claims.
Because qualified retirement plans such as 401(k) accounts rolled into IRAs are a growing fraction of the wealth many families hold (including, particularly, those of high-earning professionals), Clark presents a non-tax reason for many families to consider using trusts for adult children in their estate planning.
It was fun to read the "Cliffs Notes" Clark provided on the subtleties of how various types of IRAs are treated. If that overview was good enough for "the Supremes", it's probably worthwhile sharing in summary form here.
- Qualified contributions to traditional IRAs are tax-deductible.
- Contributions to Roth IRAs are not tax deductible, but qualified distributions from Roth IRAs are tax-free.
- An inherited IRA is a traditional or Roth IRA that has been inherited after its owner's death. When the heir is the owner's spouse, the spouse may either "roll over" the IRA funds to his or her own IRA, or keep the IRA as an inherited IRA. When anyone other than the owner's spouse (such as an adult child) inherits the IRA, the heir may not roll over the funds; the only option is to hold the IRA as an inherited account.
- An individual may withdraw funds from an inherited IRA at any time, without paying a tax penalty. Further, the owner must either withdraw the entire balance in the account within five years of the original owner's death, or take minimum distributions on an annual basis. Additionally, in contrast to a traditional or Roth IRA, the owner of an inherited IRA may never make contributions to the account.
Clark's path to the Supreme Court featured dramatic reversals of fortune. The IRA in question was established by Ruth Heffron in 2000. When she died in 2001, the account (then worth approximately $450,000) passed by beneficiary designation to her daughter, Heidi Heffron-Clark. Heidi elected to take monthly distributions from the account. By the time Heidi and her husband filed a Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition in October 2010, the distributions had likely overtaken investment returns, and the account had shrunk (as most such accounts will) to approximately $300,000.
(I think it's a Frank Capra sort of moment when a $300,000 amount in controversy arrives at the Supreme Court, don't you?)
But this particular story didn't have a happy ending for the little guy. The debtors lost in Bankruptcy Court, which found that the inherited IRA was not exempt from the bankruptcy estate. The District Court for the Western District of Wisconsin reversed, but the Seventh Circuit in turn reversed the District Court. The Supreme Court granted "cert" to resolve the split between the Seventh Circuit's pro-creditor holding in Clark and the Fifth Circuit's pro-debtor position in In re Chilton, the Supreme Court granted "cert" and upheld the Seventh Circuit's finding against the debtor.
(In case you lost track, that's a final score of Debtor 1, Creditors 3, game to Creditors....)
To reach its finding, the Clark court used the plain meaning of "retirement funds" (the phrase in Section 522(b)(3)(C) relied upon by the debtors): sums of money set aside for the day an individual stops working. Rather than relying on a fact-specific review of the debtor's intent to use the account in retirement, the Court performed an objective review of contrasts it found meaningful between the inherited IRA and traditional or Roth IRAs.
It found three key features of inherited IRAs suggesting that they are not "retirement funds" within the meaning of the Bankruptcy Code:
- The holder of an inherited IRA may never invest additional money in the account
- Holders of inherited IRAs are required to withdraw money from such accounts, no matter how many years they may be from retirement
- The holder of an inherited IRA may withdraw the entire balance of the account at any time – and for any purpose – without penalty
The Court particularly focused on the ability to withdraw inherited IRA funds without penalty. While the purpose of the Bankruptcy Code's exemptions for traditional and Roth IRAs is to help ensure that debtors will be able meet their "basic needs" during their retirement years, providing bankruptcy protection for inherited IRAs that could be used after bankruptcy proceedings are complete to buy a "vacation home" or a "sports car" would convert the Bankruptcy Code's purposes into a "free pass".
The debtors argued heroically that the inherited IRA's status as a tax-favored account was the determinative issue, not whether the funds were "retirement funds". The Court determined that "not one but two conditions" must be satisfied in order to be exempt: the funds must be "retirement funds" and they must be held in a covered account. Further, the Court paid little heed to the possibility that the inherited IRA could be an important support for the debtors in retirement, because "the possibility that some investors may use their inherited IRAs for retirement purposes doses not mean that inherited IRAs bear the defining legal characteristics of retirement funds".
The Court's reasoning in Clark was sound, and it's valuable for clients and advisors to be able to plan with greater certainty as they coordinate beneficiary designations with the estate plan.
After Clark, in beneficiary designation planning, asset protection considerations for inherited IRAs now enter into a challenging calculus that also involves income tax planning and administrative simplicity.
No answer is likely to be universally correct, but for families with large IRA balances that will be a substantial portion of the wealth inherited by descendants, Clark provides a strong non-tax reason for continuing use of trusts, even in a planning environment with comparatively high estate tax exemptions.
The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.