Too Literal of an Interpretation: Mississippi and Preneed Taxes

The Mississippi Secretary of State seems to be taking a very proactive approach to the regulation of preneed and perpetual care funds. Over the course of the last few years, the Regulation and Enforcement Division of the Secretary of State’s office has averaged an enforcement proceeding per month. We were curious what type of enforcement proceedings they were pursuing, and picked one at random. The luck of draw involved a situation where the Mississippi regulators alleged the preneed seller’s preneed contract form did not adequately disclose to the consumer the tax consequences of their preneed trust. While the preneed contract form stated that income taxes may be withheld by the trust, the seller’s trustee reported the income to the contract purchaser. This did not set well with the Mississippi regulators, particularly when the consumer had no right to cancel the contract and receive a refund of the trust income.

The Mississippi regulators are not alone in their perception of the inequities of this situation. Nebraska preneed regulators are also questioning why income should ever be reported to consumers when they may never receive it. The answer is that the Internal Revenue Service forced this issue with Rev. Rul. 87-127, with the goal of requiring a single method of income reporting for preneed trusts.

The Service struggled with the situation that troubles the Mississippi and Nebraska regulators: how can the purchaser be the grantor if he/she is never entitled to a refund of the income (or even trust deposits) upon the contract’s cancellation. But, as between the consumer and the funeral home, the funeral home’s right to the trust corpus is dependent upon performance of the contract. While the consumer may never receive a refund, he/she can choose a different funeral home to service the contract. The value of that service satisfies the grantor rules of the tax code, and supports the IRS’ conclusions in the Ruling.

The inequity of the situation may have led to the passage of IRC Section 685. Given an alternative is available to the seller, the Mississippi regulators sought to force the seller to either change its contract or require the trustee to change its income reporting. But in doing so, the Mississippi regulators misstate IRC Section 685. Irrevocability is not a key characteristic of an IRC Section 685 qualified funeral trust. While the Section 685 election is viewed as irrevocable, the irrevocability of the preneed contract has no impact on Section 685. The Mississippi regulators also fail to acknowledge that Section 685 is the trustee’s election to make, not the funeral home’s. While the two need to work in concert, it is the trustee that has ultimate control over the trust’s income reporting.
 

October Chaos: Missouri Preneed Seller Renewals and Insurance Assignments

The staff for the Missouri State Board of Embalmers and Funeral Directors released the revised preneed renewal reports this week, and those revisions include a few new additional requirements.  Those requirements include a seller providing a ‘no tax due’ letter, proof of corporate status and any ‘doing business as’ filings.  However, the new requirement that will catch most funeral directors by surprise will be the new Section Q: preneed contracts funded by insurance assignments. 

Section Q seeks from the preneed seller information about each insurance assignment taken to fund a preneed contract.  Funeral directors will find the instructions somewhat confusing.  Those instructions advise that a report is to be prepared for each insurance company, but the spreadsheet format incorporated into the report suggests each column could be for a different insurance company.  The seller is also instructed to mark the spreadsheet with 'NA' if the section does not apply.  With the form instructions alluding to preneed contracts “sold” pursuant to Sections 436.400-436525 RSMo., most funeral homes will assume the assignment of an existing insurance policy is not covered by Chapter 436.  The instructions do not address policy beneficiary designations.

The staff scheduled an August 21st  State Board meeting that includes “renewal update” on the agenda.  With the renewal forms having only been published on August 17th, the staff hasn’t given the industry adequate time to provide input at the August 21st meeting.  This should make for an interesting September State Board meeting, and for October chaos for Missouri’s preneed sellers (and those funeral homes dependent upon third party sellers).     

 

Kansas Cemetery Trustees: Beyond the Call of Duty

The Kansas Secretary of State’s office bore the brunt of the criticism for a Hutchinson cemetery that siphoned off hundreds of thousands of dollars from its trust funds. That office has the responsibility of auditing cemetery trust funds (preneed merchandise and care funds). But, poor record keeping on the part of the cemetery industry has made the auditor’s work difficult, if not impossible. Accordingly, the KSOS office implemented a new reporting system last year that requires cemetery corporations to file quarterly reports regarding their sales of preneed and interment rights. These new reports are intended to enable the office to more closely monitor the cemetery’s trusting requirements. This reporting mechanism has another requirement that went into effect on January 1st: corresponding reporting by the banks and trust companies that administer the cemetery’s trust funds.

House Bill No. 2240 amends the cemetery merchandise law and the permanent maintenance fund law to impose several reporting duties on the trustee. For each type of fund, the trustee must prepare quarterly reports on formats approved by the Secretary of State’s office. With regard to merchandise funds, the trustee must also report its allocation of income to the merchandise and services sold by the cemetery.

For many of those banks and trust companies serving as cemetery fiduciaries, these reporting requirements will come as a rude awakening. Few cemetery fiduciaries are aware that these accounts are subject to a separate set of Kansas laws. Consequently, these banks often price their services as a custodial relationship. Many will not want the fiduciary relationship and its new reporting requirements. With the first fiduciary reports due May 1st, the upcoming Memorial Day will be hectic for Kansas cemeteries for more than the usual reasons.

Click the following hyperlinks to view the HB 2240 sections on reporting: merchandise or permanent maintenance.
 

Missouri Preneed Seller Renewal: Trick or Treat?

The licenses required to sell or service preneed in Missouri must be renewed annually, with the deadline for filing the required paperwork falling on October 31st. Technically, these licenses expire on Halloween unless the State Board staff has renewed them by that date. But, it is human nature to procrastinate, and many licensees wait until the final days to file their paperwork. With 545 licensed providers, 331 licensed sellers and 179 licensed preneed agents, the deadline paperwork handled by the State Board staff is substantial.

Regulation proposals discussed at the State Board’s September meetings underscore the frustrations the staff have with the licensing deadlines and the paperwork submitted by licensees. The proposals would add pressure to licensees having renewal paperwork filed weeks (instead of days) prior to Halloween (so that the staff would have more time to review the paperwork before renewing the license).

The ‘rub’ for the State Board staff is that SB1 sets Halloween as both the deadline for filing paperwork and the expiration date of the licenses. The law fails to provide a window for the administrative review of paperwork. Before dismissing this as the staff’s problem, sellers should consider that SB1 also allows a consumer to void his/her preneed contract if the seller did not have a license when the contract was sold.

The problem for the staff is that a number of sellers are submitting renewal reports that have not properly completed. Sellers who only use one form of funding are omitting the schedules for the funding vehicles they do not use. The renewal forms also require a summary of all contracts sold during the reporting period. If the summary is left blank, the staff has no way of knowing whether the fee accompanying the renewal is correct.

For the most part, the current renewal report form is the same as last year’s. However, sellers that use joint account funding need to recognize the report has a new Section M that requires information about the preneed contracts sold prior to the current reporting period. If the seller waits until October 31st to file the renewal, and omits the Section M report in error, the State Board letter received in November will seem like a late Halloween trick.
 

Preneed Reporting: drilling down to each consumer

For most Illinois funeral homes, March 15th is the due date for the filing of their preneed data with the Comptroller’s office. For those funeral homes that bolted from the IFDA after the master trust melt down, this has been an extremely frustrating process. The majority of funeral homes must file on line, with supporting documentation to be mailed no later than March 16th. Those funeral home operators of Irish descent will have reason to hoist an extra brew come St. Patty’s day: the Comptroller’s office has ample reason to change the contract reporting requirements yet again.

The 2010 reporting forms were changed to reflect SB1682’s elimination of depository accounts. However, the annual reports are still premised on the old IFDA master trust structure that credited consumer accounts with an amount of fixed interest. For each consumer preneed contract the funeral home is required to report beginning principal and interest, additions of principal and interest, withdrawals of principal and interest, and ending totals of principal and interest. In essence, the annual report views each consumer account as a passbook saving account.

No need to beat a dead horse, but the IFDA master trust was wrestled away from the association because the Comptroller determined the trust could not sustain itself. Contracts were being credited with interest rates greater than the trust’s investment return.

In response to the situation, the IFDA selected Fiduciary Partners to succeed Merrill Lynch as the master trust fiduciary. The switch to Fiduciary Partners includes a needed change in the investment strategy of the IFDA master trust: diversification through pooled funds.

To determine whether the IFDA master trust (or score of master trusts spawned in the mass exodus) will be self sustaining, the Comptroller’s office will need to revamp its annual report to track such contract issues as sales price, deposits to trust, and market value allocations. In light of the IFDA’s past use of insurance vehicles, Illinois fiduciaries should anticipate providing detail of their trusts’ investments and transactions.

Other states’ preneed regulators are also drilling down to the individual contract with new reporting requirements. Most notably, Nebraska revised its 2010 annual report to include new disclosures regarding market values, with all preneed sellers to provide individual contract data in an Excel format. The data must also be backed up with trust asset listings and transaction reports. Missouri has also implemented individual contract reporting, and Kansas has legislation pending that will impose similar requirements on cemeteries that sell preneed.
 

Delegating Preneed Prosecution

Maybe it’s a response to shrinking state budgets, or the fact that the tracking of preneed funds is becoming more effective, but state and local prosecutors are assuming an expanding role in the enforcement of preneed laws.

While a recent report released by the Missouri State Board of Embalmers and Funeral Directors reflects a drop in the number of preneed complaints that it handled in 2010 (44 complaints after a spike in 187 complaints in 2008 and 127 complaints in 2009), the Missouri Attorney General’s Office reports having handled 887 preneed complaints in 2010. One of those complaints ended with a former Butler, Missouri funeral operator being sentenced to seven years in prison.

As previously reported in this blog, the new Illinois Comptroller responded very quickly to a preneed complaint by referring a funeral home to the State Attorney’s office for prosecution. In 2009, the Kansas cemetery regulator worked with local prosecutors when a Hutchinson cemetery acknowledged that funds were missing from both a preneed trust and a permanent maintenance trust.

Here in the Midwest, a death care operator could go years without an audit. While some states required some form of preneed reporting, there was little evidence those reports were being reviewed. Consequently, the operator who may have had trouble making payroll had little fear of prosecution so long as the preneed contracts were being serviced. That is changing.

Illinois, Missouri, Kansas and Nebraska have implemented (or will implement) new reporting requirements (and in some cases, audits). If trusts are found to be deficient or empty, regulators seem to be more willing to turn the matter over to a prosecutor who has a vested interest in protecting voters with an empty preneed account.
 

The Illinois Consumer Statement: Trust Expense Disclosures

If their preneed contract is trust funded, Illinois consumers should soon be receiving statements from the bank or trust company that administers their account. These statements are one of the new requirements imposed by SB1682. The contents of the statements are governed by Section 2.h of the Funeral or Burial Funds Act.

The Comptroller’s Office sought the consumer statement in part to require accountability for the fees and expenses being charged by the IFDA. The Comptroller has brought legal proceedings to force the Association to refund a portion of the fees charged to the master trust. The California Master Trust faces similar complaints from the Cemetery and Funeral Bureau.

One allegation common to both master trusts was the fact the fees being charged were based on a ‘value’ other than the trust’s market value. The regulators have also challenged the reasonableness of the fees.

Another emerging reform issue that could impact this new Illinois disclosure requirement is whether the fiduciary (or its affiliates) receives a 12b-1 fee.

Consequently, Illinois preneed fiduciaries have cause for being cautious when reporting how much the preneed trust arrangement is costing the consumer (and the funeral home).
 

Groundhog Day in Missouri: Preneed Exams before Spring

The start of Missouri’s new era of preneed oversight began when document requests were mailed to sellers on January 3rd. Sellers were requested to provide the following documents by January 28th:

· A current statement from your state or federally chartered financial institution’s authorized to exercise trust powers in Missouri of any preneed trust accounts that you have identifying the payments, earnings, and disbursements for each active preneed contract.

· A current statement from any/all applicable insurance companies with which you have insurance-funded preneed contracts for each active preneed contract.

· A current statement from your financial institution/s of preneed joint accounts for each active preneed contract.

· A copy of a ledger or computerized report showing all outstanding preneed contracts.

· Copies of agreement(s) with providers, agents, funeral director agents and if any contracts are funded by trust a copy of the trust agreement with the trustee.

· A copy of the trust agreement with financial institution for any preneed trust.

· A blank preneed contract currently used by you as a seller. 

If a seller established separate trusts for “Pre88” contracts, “Post88” contracts and “SB1” contracts, all trust agreements should be provided in response to the request. If the trustee has contracted for services (whether it be with the seller or with a third party), copies of the service agreements should be included. Sellers should have revised their preneed contracts since the passage of SB1, and so samples of relevant preneed contract forms should be provided.

From the trustee, the financial examiners will expect a report of the trust assets and a transaction report. The asset listing will be used to determine the trust’s compliance with the prudent investor rule, and the transaction report will be used to determine compliance with deposit requirements, distribution documentation and expenses charged to the trust.

Sellers should also anticipate that the financial examiners may request additional documents or reports before scheduling the on-site exam.
 

The Comptroller's Annual Report: a broken trail

This blog commented a few weeks ago on Dan Hynes’ failure to follow through on his own legislation. Since that post, the new Comptroller revised the Annual Report to eliminate references to self-trusted funds. However, funeral homes that transferred out of the IFDA master trust will still find the report difficult to complete.

The Comptroller’s Annual Report includes a schedule called the Annual Statement of Funeral or Burial Trust Funds, which requires the trust fund to be accounted for as though it were a depository account. The schedule seeks contributions, interest and withdrawals. The schedule doesn’t contemplate the losses suffered by the trust when Merrill Lynch liquidated the fund’s insurance investments.

For transferred accounts, the IFDA made those entries to the schedule required to ‘zero out’ the account. The ‘withdrawals’ reported by the IFDA will not reconcile to what the successor trustees received.

Ms. Topinka’s staff will find audit trail from Merrill Lynch to the new fiduciaries difficult to follow when relying upon the Annual Reports due March 15th.
 

Missouri's Trust Funded Report: perserving self regulation

The ‘deadline’ for Missouri preneed sellers to ‘voluntarily’ report their pre-SB1 trust funded sales is a mere two weeks away. Again, this is a voluntary report. As such, missing the ‘deadline’ or failing to use the Board’s form carries no penalty to the preneed seller. So, why file?

The reason expressed by one State Board member was that the report would give preneed sellers the opportunity to demonstrate their trust was appropriately funded. Funeral directors active before the 2009 Missouri Legislature advised their legislators that the actions of NPS were not reflective of the industry as a whole. Legislators were informed that the vast majority of funeral homes put the consumers’ funds in the bank.

Missouri preneed sellers have three funding options: joint accounts, trusts and insurance. The issue of whether joint accounts are properly funded was addressed with the first provider renewal reporting filed this past October 31st. With insurance premiums posted to an insurance carrier, the Board decided trust funding would be their second priority.

The voluntary trust report is the opportunity for those sellers to put their money where their mouth is. Granted, the financial examinations proposed by the Division are far more intrusive than what had been discussed. But, the failure to back up the talk to the legislature will ring hollow in the face of the Board’s initial efforts to back up the industry’s representations.

Individually, funeral homes need to approach the voluntary reporting as another step in organizing their records in a manner to expedite the eventual financial exam. The goal is to get the exam over with a minimum of disruption and problems.

While many sellers are professing to be ‘as clean as a whistle’, most sellers will have issues. In the absence of regular oversight and guidance, funeral directors were left to interpret the law on their own. Mistakes were made, and the State Board would rather help correct those mistakes than pursue disciplinary actions that clog the administrative hearings docket. Accordingly, sellers could use the voluntary trust report to identify any issues they may have, and to outline their own corrective plan. Be a problem solver.

For those sellers who decide to make the Board examiners earn their keep, the expense of oversight will be pushed higher. The $36 per contract fee will prove inadequate, and the discussion will turn to increased fees. If the data should prove that a disproportionate amount of examination time was spent on small sellers who made no effort to comply, the larger preneed sellers will force the cost of the system to be more equitable. Under Illinois law, the preneed regulator has the authority to tag such a seller with a $20,000 audit fee. That represents 555 preneed contract fees that must be borne by the seller, not the trust or the preneed consumers.
 

The Comptroller's Preneed Report: poor follow through

While the Comptroller succeeded in getting SB1682 passed, and into law this past February, the office hasn’t revised its annual preneed reporting form to reflect the law’s changes. The report contemplates depository accounts and self-trusted accounts, which were eliminated by SB1682.

Funeral directors, accustom to the IFDA’s assistance, may also find the trust report section confusing. The annual trust statement requests a break-down of trust funds by principal and interest. With diversified portfolios, the report would make more sense if it sought deposit balances, income and account values.

With transition at the Comptroller’s office, funeral homes will be forced to muddle through the upcoming report. The Comptroller’s office will need to be lenient with funeral homes attempting to comply. Eventually, the Comptroller’s office needs to step back from the old forms and procedures, and seek input on how to revise the annual report for easier compliance by the Illinois industry.
 

Missouri Cemetery Reform: New Year's Resolutions

In a move to remain autonomous from the funeral industry and its oversight, the Missouri cemetery industry met with its regulator during the summer of 2008 to discuss reform legislation. Disagreements precluded effective legislation from being passed in 2009, but extensive changes was passed in 2010, and became effective on August 28, 2010. Now, the Missouri cemetery regulator has the task of implementing the law, and notifying cemetery operators and trustees of the new requirements.

Missouri’s Cemetery Endowed Care Trust Law (Sections 214.270 et seq) is administered by the Office of Endowed Care Cemeteries. A brief summary of the new law’s requirements can be found on the OECC’s website.

The new law makes substantial changes to perpetual care trusts (Section 214.330), sales documents (Section 214.282) and the preneed merchandise sales (Section 214.387).
Some perpetual care trusts define capital gains as income.

The new law incorporates the uniform principal and income act, precluding capital gains from being treated as income. This change is being imposed retroactively to existing trusts, thus forcing many cemeteries to amend their trust agreements. But, the new law does authorize fixed distributions that can exceed the trust’s income.

The new law also imposes the following requirements on perpetual care trusts:

A. Trust records must be made accessible to OECC examiners.
B. Trust instruments must be filed for approval.
C. Sales documents for interment rights and merchandise must comply with the Law, or the contract can be voided with interest refundable to the consumer.
D. The OECC can order the trustee to suspend your PC distributions.
E. PC deposits must be made on a monthly basis (instead of semi-annually).
F. The PC requirements have been raised for certain interment rights.

With regard to preneed, cemeteries must start from scratch. The prior law provided a low trusting requirement for services (opening and closings), and a segregated account requirement for marker and monument sales. To avoid the funeral licensing and trusting requirements of SB1, Missouri cemeteries must now comply with RSMo. Section 214.387. (To read a prior post on the new trusting requirement click here.)

Section 214.387 will require a cemetery to establish either an escrow account or a new trust, and comply with the following:

A. Escrow agents must be independent of the cemetery.
B. Escrow agreements and trust agreements must be filed with the OECC for approval.
C. Twenty percent of consumer payments may be retained but all subsequent payments must be deposited to a trust or an escrow account.
D. If a trust is used, all income must remain in the trust.
E. Deposits must be made within 60 days of receipt by the cemetery.
F. Preneed reporting to the OECC will begin in 2011.
G. New sales contract forms are required.

Banks that serve as a cemetery trustee will soon be receiving a letter advising of the new requirements. Missouri cemeteries will have more than New Year's resolutions to prepare for 2011.

 

Who's the Boss?

That’s the question a member of the Missouri State Board asked of his staff last Wednesday during a discussion of controversial examination procedures. Prior to the NPS fiasco, the answer to that question would have been “the Board is”. While SB1 (appropriately) continued to vest preneed supervision in the State Board, the new law also vests concurrent authorities in other state bodies.

From state to state, preneed supervision is assigned to either elected politicians, appointed agency directors or industry boards/commissions. As the Missouri Board was reminded this past week, the criticism made of vesting preneed supervision in an industry board often includes the characterization of having “put the fox in charge of the chicken coop”. But the advantage of having an industry board as the preneed supervisor is the experience those industry members bring to a complicated transaction.

If the Missouri funeral industry looks east to Illinois, it will find peers regulated by an office with a Tuesday election. The Comptroller candidates who would rather transfer preneed to another state agency than wade into a crisis that offers few answers. If Missouri funeral directors then look to the west, they will see that the fate of Kansas cemetery regulation is also dependent upon Tuesday’s elections. But after a year of meetings and warnings that changes are coming, the Kansas Secretary of State election could mean a new direction (or no direction at all).

Death care operators are often frustrated when regulators take actions that demonstrate a lack of understanding of the business (or worse yet, a misunderstanding of applicable laws). The risk to both the death care operator and consumer is when the elected preneed regulator allows politics to influence the reform process. Elected regulators may pose the greatest challenge to developing effective preneed supervision, and then maintaining that system.

While Missouri funeral homes may be frustrated by the past year’s changes, the Missouri reform process has been slow and measured in part because the Division of Professional Registration is contemplating its role when someone asks “Who’s the Boss?” In the future, effective preneed supervision must be a shared responsibility.