Guest RMM Posted December 23, 1999 Posted December 23, 1999 Sections 401(a)(11)(D) and 417(d) of the Code have a optional one-year hold out rule which allows a plan not to treat a participant as married unless the participant have been married for a year. If a plan does not utilize this one-year holdout rule, will amending the plan result in a prohibited 411(d)(6) cutback of an protected benefit? The regs say that a protected benefit may not be eliminated merely b/c it is payable to a spouse. The regs also allow the elimination or reduction of a protected benefit if it has not already accrued. Therefore, assuming (for the sake of argument) it is a protected benefit, it could be applied to all future plan participants who get married. Correct? [This message has been edited by RMM (edited 12-27-1999).]
Guest Posted December 27, 1999 Posted December 27, 1999 It certainly could be applied on a prospective basis to future participants.
Dowist Posted December 28, 1999 Posted December 28, 1999 What accrued benefit would be cut back? The spouse's right to payment on the death of the participant is not an accrued benefit - 1. the pt hasn't died, and 2. a beneficiary's contingent benefit doesn't make the beneficiary a participant (not exactly on point but analagous). Also, death benefits that are greater than the mandatory ERISA death benefits are "ancillary" benefits, which can be eliminated. I would think you could change the rules for anyone who hasn't died yet. However, if you have a situation where someone who has just married is on his deathbed, I wouldn't do it (that would be asking for trouble).
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now