By Lance Wallach, CLU,
ChFC, CIMC and Ronald H. Snyder, JD, MAAA, EA
For years, life insurance companies and agents have tried to
find ways of making life insurance premiums paid by business owners tax
deductible. This would allow them to sell policies at a “discount.”
The problem became acute a few years ago with outlandish
claims about how §§419A(f)(5) and (6) of the Internal Revenue Code (IRC)
exempted employers from any tax deduction limitations. Other inaccurate
assertions were made as well, until the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) finally
put a stop to such egregious misrepresentations in 2002 by issuing regulations
and naming such plans as “potentially abusive tax shelters” (or “listed
transactions”) that needed to be registered and disclosed to the IRS.
This appeared to put an end to the scourge of scurrilous
promoters, as many such plans disappeared from the landscape.
And what happened to the providers that were peddling
§§419A(f)(5) and (6) life insurance plans a few years ago? We recently found
the answer: Most of them found a new life as promoters of so-called “419(e)”
welfare benefit plans.
What does IRC §419(e) provide?
IRC §419(e) provides a definition of the term “welfare
benefit fund” and provides that it includes a trust or “organization described
in paragraph (7), (9), (17), or (20) of section 501(c)” or any taxable trust
that provides welfare benefits. Reference to IRC §419(e) is therefore
meaningless.
So what are “§419(e) Plans”?
We recently reviewed several so-called §419(e) plans. Many
of them are nothing more than recycled §§419A(f)(5) and (6) plans. Now many of
the same promoters simply claim that a life insurance policy is a welfare
benefit plan and therefore tax-deductible because it uses a single-employer
trust rather than a "10-or-more-employer plan". Many plans
incorrectly purport to be exempt from ERISA, from IRC §§414, 105, 505, 79,
4975, etc.
What are the problems with “§419(e) Plans”?
Vendors commonly claim that contributions to their plan are
tax-deductible because they fall within the limitations imposed under IRC §419;
however, §419 is simply a limitation on tax deductions. The deductions
themselves must be claimed under enabling sections of the IRC. Many fail to do
so. Others claim that the deductions are ordinary and necessary business
expenses under §162, citing Regs. §1.162-10 in error: There is no mention in
that section of life insurance or a death benefit as a welfare benefit.
Some plans claim to impute income for current protection
under the PS 58 rules. However, PS 58 treatment is available only to qualified
retirement plans and split-dollar plans. (None of the 419(e) plans claim to
comply with the split-dollar regulations.) Income is imputed under Table I to
participants under Group-Term Life Insurance plans that comply with §79. This
issue is addressed in footnotes 17 and 18 of the Neonatology case. Most
of the plans have various other flaws or mistakes.
The biggest problem that most
promoters ignore
Following
up on Congress’s lead, the IRS has fired another potentially fatal shot at
spurious welfare benefit plans. On April 10, 2007, the IRS issued Final
Regulations under §409A of the IRC.
If it wasn’t clear before, it is crystal clear now: Most of the so-called
“419(e)” plans are in violation of the law and subject to hefty penalties
because they provide deferred compensation without complying with §409A.
What does §409A do?
Code
Section 409A was enacted into law on October 10, 2004, to provide some uniformity
and to impose several requirements upon non-qualified deferred compensation
plans and similar arrangements.
Among new
rules imposed, it:
·
Requires
a written plan agreement.
·
Limits
payments to death, disability or retirement.
·
Requires
a substantial risk of forfeiture to avoid immediate taxation to the employee.
·
Imposes
timing limitations on benefit distributions.
What is deferred compensation?
Congress drafted §409A broadly to
include any payment to an employee after the year in which it was earned or after
termination of employment, unless the payment falls under one of the named
exceptions. (Exceptions include payments within 75 days, COBRA benefits, de
minimis cashouts paid in the year of termination of employment, etc.)
Why does this apply to welfare
benefit or life insurance plans?
§409A does
NOT apply to welfare benefits. In fact, several forms of welfare benefits are
specifically excluded under 409A. However, such excluded arrangements do not
permit transfer of property to the participant except for death, disability and
payments made upon retirement in accordance with the §409A rules.
Most of the
existing §419(e) and §419A(f)(6) welfare benefit plans do not comply with the
§409A rules relative to transfers of insurance policies or cash payments other
than upon death.
What are the penalties for failure
to comply?
Significant
penalties apply for non-compliance with §409A. In addition to having
compensation included in income, tax penalties equal to the IRS underpayment
rate plus 1% from the time the compensation should have been included in income
plus 20% of the compensation amount apply. Additional penalties may apply for
failure to report the arrangement appropriately.
When are the new rules effective?
When §409A was added, employers
and consultants scrambled to comply because the rules were effective for years
beginning after 2004 for all arrangements entered into after October 3, 2004. Existing
arrangements were given until the end of 2005 to comply. However, IRS granted
an extension for compliance for employers who made a “good-faith” effort to
comply with the rules. Under the final regulations, plans have until December
31, 2007, to be in full compliance.
What does this mean to sponsors of
419 plans?
Sponsors of
419 plans have two choices: totally eliminate distributions from their plans
(except death benefits and/or medical reimbursements), or comply with Code
§409A and the regulations thereunder.
What does this mean to professionals
who advise clients?
Under Circular 230 standards, a
CPA or attorney who advises his or her client about participating in a
non-compliant welfare benefit plan may be liable for fines and other sanctions.
We expect that opinion letters relative to such welfare benefit plans have
either been withdrawn or will be shortly. We admonish professionals carefully
to review all communications with clients relative to such plans. The IRS has
recently been successful in imposing huge fines on several law firms for
blessing questionable transactions.
What does this mean to employers
participating in 419 plans?
This means
that employers have until December 31, 2007, to be in compliance. Employers who
have adopted 419 plans must choose immediately whether to remain in their
current 419 plan, cancel their participation in such arrangement and have their
benefits distributed by December 31, or transfer to a plan that is fully
compliant with the new rules.
Conclusion
Time is of
the essence in making and implementing a decision as to what to do.
We have
only seen one or two plans that may be in compliance. We therefore recommend
that employers waste no time in contacting a tax professional to review their
welfare benefit plan participation to verify compliance with the new law and regulations.
Lance
Wallach, CLU, ChFC, CIMC, author of Bisk Education’s “CPA’s Guide to Life
Insurance,” speaks and writes extensively about financial planning, retirement
plans and tax reduction strategies. He speaks at more than 70 national
conventions annually and writes for more than 50 national publications. For
more information and additional articles on these subjects, visit www.vebaplan.com or call (516) 938-5007.
Ronald H. Snyder,
JD, MAAA, EA, is an ERISA attorney and enrolled actuary specializing in employee
benefit plans.
The information
contained in this article was taken from an article previously published in the
Enrolled Agents Journal and from another article
published in The Trusted Professional, both of which articles were
co-authored by Lance Wallach and Ron Snyder.
Note: Information contained in this article is not
intended as legal, accounting, financial or any other type of advice for any specific
individual or entity. You should contact an appropriate professional for
appropriate guidance with respect to tax matters.
Reprinted
with permission from the Virginia Society of CPAs.
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