One of my closest friends died in a car wreck recently and died intestate. I have been asking several "estate" related tax questions, and this one is a doozy. Bits and pieces of various things are turning up clear evidence that there was no estate planning whatsoever.
Decendent divorced some 7-8 years ago and never remarried. At the time of divorce, he had listed his wife as beneficiary in the event of his death, and of course furnished her complete name, SS #, etc. His wife is now his EX-wife, and as such enjoys no survivorship rights. However, he never bothered to change the beneficiary and now the custodian of the IRA is wanting to either write a check to his ex-wife (only 55 years old), or continue to carry an IRA in her name.
She never really wanted the IRA, and would just as soon pass the IRA on to the kids. Can she do so without triggering the 10% penalty, creating a taxable distribution for herself, or triggering a gift tax? Can she refuse the IRA, and defer the ownership to his estate?
You guys (and gals) have been great thus far in answering questions. Thank you in advance.
Regards, Ron Jordan
Decendent divorced some 7-8 years ago and never remarried. At the time of divorce, he had listed his wife as beneficiary in the event of his death, and of course furnished her complete name, SS #, etc. His wife is now his EX-wife, and as such enjoys no survivorship rights. However, he never bothered to change the beneficiary and now the custodian of the IRA is wanting to either write a check to his ex-wife (only 55 years old), or continue to carry an IRA in her name.
She never really wanted the IRA, and would just as soon pass the IRA on to the kids. Can she do so without triggering the 10% penalty, creating a taxable distribution for herself, or triggering a gift tax? Can she refuse the IRA, and defer the ownership to his estate?
You guys (and gals) have been great thus far in answering questions. Thank you in advance.
Regards, Ron Jordan
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