Beyond the Bar
Retirement Plan Benefits - Part 2
by Joel Brandes
In last month's first installment, Mr. Brandes, a
nationally renowned matrimonial and family law attorney, introduced his
comprehensive article on retirement plan benefits. This month's installment
offers the continuation, and in next month's conclusion, case law and court
interpretations will be the main focus. (Part 1 is available in the Beyond
the Bar archive).
TRANSFER OF SURVIVOR BENEFITS
Survivor benefits include both benefits payable to
surviving spouses and those that are payable after the participant's death.
These benefits can be awarded to an alternate payee.
A QDRO may provide for treatment of a participant's
former spouse with respect to all or a portion of the spousal survivor
benefits that must be provided under ERISA.16 Only a spouse or former spouse
of the participant can be treated as a spouse under a QDRO.
Retirement plans do not need to provide special
survivor benefits to the participant's surviving spouse unless the
participant is married for at least one year.17 If the retirement plan to
which the QDRO relates contains such a one-year marriage requirement, then
it cannot require that the alternate payee be treated as the participant's
spouse if the marriage lasted for less than one year.
FORM OF PAYMENT OF RETIREMENT AND SURVIVOR BENEFITS
ERISA requires that defined benefit plans and
certain defined contribution plans pay retirement benefits to participants
who were married on the participant's annuity starting date, which is the
first day of the first period for which an amount is payable to the
participant18, in a qualified joint and survivor annuity ("QJSA").19 Under a
QJSA, retirement payments are made monthly, or at other regular intervals,
to the participant for his or her lifetime. After the participant dies, the
plan pays the participant's surviving spouse an amount each month, or other
regular interval, in an amount at least one half the retirement benefit that
was paid to the participant.20 At any time that benefits are permitted to
commence under the plan, a QJSA must be offered commencing at the same time
and with an actuarial value at least as great as any other form of benefit
payable under the plan. A married participant can choose to receive
retirement benefits in a form other than a QJSA if the participant's spouse
agrees in writing to that choice.21
ERISA requires that defined benefit plans and
certain defined contribution plans pay a monthly survivor benefit to a
surviving spouse for the spouse's life when a married participant dies prior
to the participant's annuity starting date, to the extent the participant's
benefit is nonforfeitable under the terms of the plan at the time of his or
her death.22 This benefit is called a qualified preretirement survivor
annuity ("QPSA").23 An individual loses the right to the QPSA survivor
benefits when he or she is divorced from the participant. However, if a
former spouse is treated as the participant's surviving spouse under a QDRO,
the former spouse is eligible to receive the QPSA unless he or she consents
to the waiver of the QPSA.24 If the spouse does not waive the QPSA, the plan
may allow the spouse to receive the value of the QPSA in a form other than
an annuity.
ALTERNATE PAYEE TREATED AS SPOUSE
A QDRO may provide that an alternate payee who is a
former spouse of the participant will be treated as the participant's spouse
for some or all of the benefits payable upon the participant's death, so
that the alternate payee will receive benefits provided to a spouse under
the plan.25 To the extent that a former spouse is to be treated under the
plan as the participant's spouse pursuant to a QDRO, any subsequent spouse
of the participant cannot be treated as the participant's surviving
spouse.26
Under a defined benefit plan, or a defined
contribution plan that is subject to the QJSA and QPSA requirements, to the
extent the former spouse is treated as the current spouse, the former spouse
must consent to payment of retirement benefits in a form other than a QJSA,
or to the participant's waiver of the QPSA.27 For example, in a defined
benefit plan, the participant would not be able to elect to receive a lump
sum payment of the retirement benefits for which the alternate payee is
treated as the participant's spouse unless the alternate payee consents.
Similarly, the former spouse's consent might be required for any loan to the
participant from the plan that is secured by his or her retirement benefits.
In a defined contribution plan that is not subject to the QJSA and QPSA
requirements, to the extent the QDRO treats the former spouse as the
participant's spouse under the plan, the survivor benefits under the plan
must be paid to the former spouse unless he or she consents to have those
benefits paid to someone else.28
ERISA requires the plan to allow the participant to
elect at any time, during the applicable election period, to waive the
"qualified joint and survivor annuity" form of benefit or the "qualified
preretirement survivor annuity" form of benefit, or both29. However, the
participant cannot make the election or revoke it without the written
consent of his spouse. The definition of "spouse" has been construed to mean
the spouse of the participant at the time of the election. Thus, a waiver in
a pre-nuptial agreement of a surviving spouse's rights in a participant
spouse's ERISA-governed retirement plan is ineffective because the waiver is
not made by a person who is a spouse of the participant but merely a spouse
to be.30
If the participant retires and has elected a joint
and survivor annuity, his or her spouse will receive the survivor annuity
upon the death of the participant. If a participant dies, and has selected a
life-only pension, it is too late to provide the surviving spouse with
survivorship rights. If a participant retires and starts to collect payments
before a QDRO is approved, the plan may not make retroactive pension
payments to the former spouse.
These rules are based on the requirement of ERISA
that a pension plan (a) may not be required to provide any type or form of
benefit, or any option, not otherwise provided by the plan, (b) may not be
required to provide increased benefits (determined on the basis of actuarial
value), and (c) may not be required to make payment of benefits to an
alternate payee that are required to be paid to another alternate payee
under another order previously qualified as a qualified domestic relations
order.31
Case law developments in this area demonstrate that
these rules are unbending, and although counsel may obtain a QDRO in a state
court, it does not mean that it will be recognized or enforced by the
federal courts. [Case law will be discussed next month in Part 3]
16 29 USCA s 1056(d)(3)(B)
17 29 USCA s 1055(f)
18 29 USCA s 1055(h)(2)(A)
19 29 USCA s 1055(a)
20 29 USCA s 1055(d)
21 29 USCA s 1056(c)(1)(A)(i)
22 29 USCA s 1055(a)(2)
23 29 USCA s 1055(e)
24 29 USCA s 1055(c)(1)(A)(i)
25 29 USCA s 1056(d)(3)(B)
26 29 USCA s 1056(d)(3)(D)
27 29 USCA s 1055(c)(1)(A)
28 29 USC s 1055 (c)(1)(A); See Notice 97-11,
1997-2 I.R.B. 49, 1996 WL 747904 (I.R.S.)
29 See 29 USC s 1055(c)(1)(A)(i)
30 Hurwitz v Shur. 982 F2d 778 (2d Cir.,1992);
National Auto Dealers and Associates Retirement Trust v Arbeitman, 89 F3d
496 (8th Cir.,1996)
31 29 USC s 1056(d)(3)(D); IRC Section 414(p)(3).
Joel R. Brandes, a member of the New York Bar, a
Fellow of the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers, and a Fellow of the
International Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers, is the author of Law and the
Family New York, Second edition Revised, and co-authored Law and Family New
York Forms, both published by West Group. He also writes a monthly column,
"Law and the Family" for the New York Law Journal. He can be reached at
http://www.nysdivorce.com/
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