Source: https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2010/06/18/2010-14741/uniformed-services-accounts-and-death-benefits
Timestamp: 2020-06-07 10:28:05
Document Index: 470825339

Matched Legal Cases: ['art 1604', '§\u20091604', 'art 1651', '§\u20091651', '§\u20091651', '§\u20091651', '§\u20091651', '§\u20091651']

Federal Register :: Uniformed Services Accounts and Death Benefits
Uniformed Services Accounts and Death Benefits
A Proposed Rule by the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board on 06/18/2010
75 FR 34654
2010-14741
Uniformed Services Accounts/Death Benefits—Agency's New Designation of Beneficiary Form and Related Requirements
Death Benefits—Designating a Custodian Under the Uniform Transfers to Minors Act
Death Benefits—Homicide
Death Benefits—Notarized Signature for Disclaimers
https://www.federalregister.gov/d/2010-14741
The Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board (Agency) proposes to make several changes to its death benefits regulations. In particular, it proposes to expand the requirements necessary in order for a designation of beneficiary form to be valid. This change would also allow participants holding both a uniformed services and civilian account to submit a single designation of beneficiary form which can be used to designate beneficiaries for both accounts. The Agency also proposes to amend its death benefit regulations to allow participants to designate a custodian under the Uniform Transfers to Minors Act as a beneficiary, to permit the Agency to defer to State law when a potential beneficiary is implicated in the death of a participant and is subsequently found not guilty by reason of insanity, and to require a notary to witness disclaimers of death benefits.
Comments may be sent to Thomas K. Emswiler, General Counsel, Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board, 1250 H Street, NW., Washington, DC 20005. The Agency's Fax number is (202) 942-1676.
Megan G. Grumbine at (202) 942-1644 or Laurissa Stokes at (202) 942-1645.
The Agency administers the TSP, which was established by the Federal Employees' Retirement System Act of 1986 (FERSA), Public Law 99-335, 100 Stat. 514. The TSP provisions of FERSA are codified, as amended, largely at 5 U.S.C. 8351 and 8401-79. The TSP is a tax-deferred retirement savings plan for Federal civilian employees and members of the uniformed services. The TSP is similar to cash or deferred arrangements established for private-sector employees under section 401(k) of the Internal Revenue Code (26 U.S.C. 401(k)).
The Agency proposes to amend its regulations to improve the process by which TSP participants designate beneficiaries for their TSP accounts.
In particular, the Agency, which has created a new optical character recognition (OCR) Form TSP-3, Designation of Beneficiary, proposes to expand its death benefits regulations to enumerate additional criteria the Agency requires in order for a designation of beneficiary form to be valid and accepted by the Agency. The Agency intends that this new form and its related requirements will guide participants through the important task of properly designating their account beneficiaries and greatly reduce potential ambiguities involved in the disposition of a participant's account upon his or her death.
Currently, the Agency's guiding statute and regulations provide that a designation of beneficiary form need only be signed, witnessed, and received by the Agency on or before the participant's date of death in order to be valid. See 5 U.S.C. 8424(d), 5 CFR 1651.3(c). However, the Agency often receives forms which meet these threshold requirements but omit critical details such as identifying information for the participant or the beneficiaries. In order to reduce the likelihood of error in processing the designation of beneficiary forms for its approximately 4.3 million participants, the Agency concluded it is necessary to expand the criteria required for a designation of beneficiary form to be valid.
Specifically, the Agency proposes to require that, in addition to being signed, properly witnessed, and received by the Agency on or before a participant's date of death, a designation of beneficiary form must also identify the participant in a manner so that the Agency can locate the participant's TSP account (e.g., provide the participant's full name and the participant's date of birth, TSP account number, or Social Security number), identify primary and contingent beneficiaries in a manner so that the Agency can identify the individual (e.g., provide a beneficiary's Social Security number or date of birth), link each contingent beneficiary to a primary beneficiary, provide shares for primary beneficiaries which equal 100 percent, and contain no substantive alterations.
In addition to ensuring accurate processing and payment, the new regulatory requirements will reduce processing time and save the Agency resources as these requirements allow the Agency to quickly and accurately match the information on the designation of beneficiary form to the proper participant and beneficiaries. Further, by having these additional regulatory requirements in place, if a participant submits a form with an omission or error, the Agency is poised to quickly reject the form and alert the participant via a notification that he or she must submit a new, valid form. These up-front, early rejections and notifications will save the Agency considerable resources as the Agency will no longer be required to conduct as much posthumous research, analysis, and legal review.
Additionally, these new designation requirements (e.g., requiring that each page be free of substantive alterations) ensure that the Agency is not receiving fraudulent or changed forms. Because a deceased participant's TSP account is an important asset to a participant's beneficiaries, the Agency believes these new requirements are critical to ensuring that the participant's wishes are properly realized.
The Agency has attempted to balance its new requirements with customer service. The new OCR Form TSP-3, for example, provides detailed instructions and allows participants with both a uniformed services and civilian account to use one form to designate the same beneficiaries for both accounts.
Further, the Agency proposes to add only those requirements it views as critical. For example, the Agency would not reject an otherwise valid designation if the contingent beneficiary shares do not equal 100 percent. Since the Agency infrequently relies on contingent beneficiary information to pay an Start Printed Page 34655account, and because the Agency has a mechanism by which it can determine the amount attributable to each beneficiary if the shares do not equal 100 percent, the Agency believes it is too onerous to invalidate a Form TSP-3 containing proper primary beneficiary designations solely due to the contingent beneficiary shares not equaling 100 percent.
All designation of beneficiary forms, including older versions of the Form TSP-3, submitted on or after the effective date of this regulation must meet these new regulatory requirements in order to be valid. This change is not retroactive and will not invalidate those forms which the Agency has received prior to the effective date of this regulation. The Agency's new designation of beneficiary form is available at http://www.tsp.gov.
The Uniform Transfers to Minors Act (UTMA) is a uniform act drafted and recommended by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws and subsequently enacted by most U.S. states and the District of Columbia. It allows an individual to make a financial transfer to a minor, but also to prevent the minor from having immediate access to the transferred property or funds. The person designated as custodian must manage the property or funds for the minor's benefit until the minor reaches the age of majority as determined by the governing state's law.
The Agency's proposed regulation would allow a participant to designate a custodian under UTMA as the beneficiary of his or her TSP account. To achieve consistent administration, the TSP will require the UTMA custodianship to be established under the laws of the District of Columbia.
Under the laws of District of Columbia, when the minor reaches 18 years of age or dies, a UTMA custodianship will automatically terminate, and the custodial relationship will cease to exist. Accordingly, if the minor reaches 18 years of age before the death benefit becomes payable, payment will be made directly to the minor and not to the designated custodian. An UTMA designation would only be valid if it is designated using the Agency's designation of beneficiary form. The Agency has created a sample UTMA designation which is available at http://www.tsp.gov.
Section 1651.12 of Title 5 of the Code of Federal Regulations governs the distribution of death benefits when a potential beneficiary causes the death of a participant. It currently provides that if a beneficiary is convicted of, or pleads guilty to, a crime in connection with the participant's death that would preclude the beneficiary from inheriting under State law, the beneficiary will not be entitled to receive any portion of the participant's account. It further provides that the Agency will follow the State law of the participant's domicile as that law is set forth in a civil court judgment.
As section 1651.12 currently reads, a potential beneficiary may be deprived of his or her entitlement to death benefits only if (1) he or she is convicted of a crime that would bar him or her from inheriting under the laws of the State in which the participant is domiciled at the time of death or (2) he or she is judged guilty in civil court of a crime that would bar him or her from inheriting under the laws of the state in which the participant is domiciled. The language of section 1651.12 is imperfect as applied to a criminal verdict declaring that the potential beneficiary is not guilty, by reason of insanity, of causing the participant's death. This proposed regulation would allow the Agency to defer to state law to determine the effect of a verdict of not guilty by reason of insanity on the potential beneficiary's entitlement to inherit from the deceased participant, notwithstanding that a verdict of not guilty by reason of insanity does not constitute a conviction.
The beneficiary of a TSP account may disclaim his or her right to receive all or part of a TSP death benefit. A valid disclaimer is irrevocable and the effect of a disclaimer is that the disclaimed share will be paid as though the beneficiary predeceased the participant.
The disclaimer must expressly state that the beneficiary is disclaiming his or her right to receive either all or a stated percentage of the death benefit payable from the TSP account of the named participant and must be: (1) Submitted in writing; (2) signed by the person (or legal representative) disclaiming the benefit; and (3) received before the TSP pays the death benefit. This proposed regulation would require the signature of the person (or legal representative) disclaiming the benefit to be witnessed by a notary. Because the effect of a disclaimer is to preclude an otherwise lawful beneficiary from taking either a portion or the whole amount of a TSP account, this added requirement is necessary to ensure that the Agency is receiving non-fraudulent disclaimers.
Pursuant to the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995, 2 U.S.C. 602, 632, 653, 1501 1571, the effects of this regulation on State, local, and tribal governments and the private sector have been assessed. This regulation will not compel the expenditure in any one year of $100 million or more by State, local, and tribal governments, in the aggregate, or by the private sector. Therefore, a statement under section 1532 is not required.
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Agency proposes to amend 5 CFR chapter VI as follows:
1. The authority citation for part 1604 continues to read as follows:
2. Amend § 1604.8, by removing the second sentence of paragraph (a).
3. The authority citation for part 1651 continues to read as follows:
4. Amend § 1651.3, by adding a fourth sentence to paragraph (b), and revising paragraph (c) to read as follows:
Start Printed Page 34656
(b) * * * A participant may designate a custodian under the Uniform Transfers to Minors Act provided that the custodianship is established under the laws of the District of Columbia and that the participant designates the custodianship using the Agency's designation of beneficiary form.
(c) Validity requirements. To be valid and accepted by the TSP record keeper, a TSP designation of beneficiary form must:
(1) Be received by the TSP record keeper on or before the date of the participant's death;
(2) Identify the participant in such a manner so that the Agency can locate his or her TSP account;
(3) Be signed and properly dated by the participant and signed and properly dated by two witnesses;
(i) The participant must either sign the form in the presence of the witnesses or acknowledge his or her signature on the form to the witnesses;
(ii) All submitted and attached pages must be signed by the participant, dated by the participant, and witnessed in the same manner (by the same witnesses) as the form itself and must follow the format of the TSP designation of beneficiary form;
(iii) A witness must be age 21 or older; and
(iv) A witness designated as a beneficiary will not be entitled to receive a death benefit payment. If a witness is the only named beneficiary, the designation of the beneficiary is invalid. If more than one beneficiary is named, the share of the witness beneficiary will be allocated among the remaining beneficiaries pro rata.
(4) Designate primary beneficiary shares which when summed equal 100%;
(5) Contain no substantive alterations (e.g., struck-through shares or scratched-out names of beneficiaries);
(6) Designate each primary and each contingent beneficiary in such a manner so that the Agency can identify the individual or entity; and
(7) Match each contingent beneficiary to a primary beneficiary.
5. Amend § 1651.12, by revising the second sentence to read as follows:
§ 1651.12
* * * If the beneficiary is implicated in the death of the participant and the beneficiary would be precluded from inheriting under State law, the beneficiary will not be entitled to receive any portion of the participant's account. * * *
6. Amend § 1651.17, by revising paragraph (b)(2) to read as follows:
§ 1651.17
(2) Signed or acknowledged, in the presence of a notary, by the person (or legal representative) disclaiming the benefit; and
[FR Doc. 2010-14741 Filed 6-17-10; 8:45 am]