Self Administered Preneed: too convenient

The earliest form of preneed consisted of a depository account at the local bank. Often, the paperwork included a statement of goods and services describing the individual’s preferences. The account was set up so that the funeral director could access the account upon the consumer’s death. The statement of goods and services would then be followed for the funeral. This arrangement was convenient to both the consumer and the funeral director. But, a recent news report out of Louisiana serves as a reminder of how the depository account has been too convenient, forcing states to take it away.

As preneed proliferated, state legislatures imposed safeguards to protect the funds paid by consumers. With the exception of New Mexico, all states now have trusting requirements. When those trusting requirements were initially imposed, a few states made exceptions to allow small funeral homes to continue to use the depository account. Abuses now threaten to eliminate the depository account as a form of preneed funding.

Illinois was the most recent to eliminate the depository account. In response to IFDA abuses, SB1682 now requires Illinois funeral homes to move their depository accounts to a corporate fiduciary and to revise their preneed contracts. Some Illinois funeral directors are painfully learning that the new law precludes them from using their local bank and familiar contract forms.

Missouri’s 2009 law preserved the depository account, but with substantial reporting requirements. Funeral homes dependent upon the depository account were required to report those contracts this past October 31st. Those reports will be used for on-site exams to begin in 2011. The future of depository accounts in Missouri will depend on how well funeral directors have complied with both the old and new requirements.

As discussed in a prior post, funeral directors who have been forced from depository accounts, or who must meet new requirements, need to seek legal assistance when revising their preneed contract form. The old practice of preparing a statement of goods and services is not enough for compliance with the new (and most old) preneed laws.
 

Preneed Contract Forms: Worth The Paper They're Written On?

With the exception of a few states, each form of preneed funding has its own statutory requirements. Consequently, different contract forms are required for each method of preneed funding. So, what does this mean for the consumer worried about the safety of funds paid to the funeral home or cemetery.

Among the pecking order of contract forms, insurance funded contracts generally tend to be among the more compliant forms. The larger preneed carriers understand that if they are to win the funeral home’s business, the carrier must be able to provide the funeral home with the preneed contract form. When there is a problem with an insurance funded contract, often it is because the agent has chosen the wrong form. For example, the recent law change in Illinois requires new disclosures to be made in the contract form. If the agent pulls an old form, the contract is in violation of SB1682.

In terms of compliance, the trust-funded contract may place a distant second depending on who sponsors the trust (and whether the consumer’s state requires the filing of the preneed contract form). While the national companies (and some state associations) are diligent about having their contracts reviewed for compliance, that has not been the case for many independently owned funeral homes. While state associations are due credit for bringing a higher level of compliance to their state’s contract form, some associations (such as the contract forms used by the IFDA) set a very low bar.

The most suspect of the funding methods contracts is the depository (or self administered) account. With this funding method, the preneed seller is going solo without the assistance of an insurance company, the state association, or even a fiduciary. All too often, the operator assumes a contract is a contract, and ‘borrows’ a contract form from another funding method. Or worse yet, the funeral home uses the FTC at-need goods and services form as the preneed contract.

To prepare for a regulatory examination, sellers need to confirm they are using the correct (and current) contract form. Within each funding folder, the seller should establish a current contract form folder and a historic contract form folder. Similarly, the operator will want to maintain a current GPL and Outer Burial Container price list and a historic GPL and OBC price list folder (going back indefinitely).

While many consumers tend to purchase preneed based on personal trust earned by the funeral director, contract form compliance demonstrates that funeral director’s understanding of the preneed law. Preneed contract form compliance is also the consumer’s protection should the trusted funeral director ever be hit by a bus. The next owner of the funeral home will be bound by the terms of those preneed contracts, not necessarily the oral assurances of his predecessor.
 

Taking comfort from the local banker

Within the past few years, state legislatures have significantly expanded the fiduciary duties of banks and trust companies that service death care trusts. Michigan, Indiana and Tennessee responded to cemetery trust frauds (including the Clayton Smart affair). The trend continued in Missouri and Illinois with laws aimed at funeral trusts (in response to NPS and the IFDA master trust). And, Kansas joined the movement with bills that are in response to cemetery trust failures.

At hearing for Kansas HB2712, the Kansas Bankers Association endorsed a provision that would require Kansas cemeteries to use fiduciaries that maintain a physical location within the state. The KBA reasoning is very simple: Kansas jobs. While the Kansas Secretary of State will accept the KBA’s support, the regulator wants the domicile requirement because the local fiduciary will be more responsive to the auditor’s inquiries and demands.

Regulators are not alone in their preference for the local bank. Funeral homes and cemeteries also take comfort in dealing with the bank that also handles their commercial accounts and their loans. Many funeral directors report that consumers also take comfort knowing their preneed funds are being supervised by the same banker who provides them checking services. Even consumer advocates recommend that individuals use the local bank to set up Totten trusts or POD accounts in lieu of preneed contracts.

However, the preneed trust and the cemetery perpetual care trust are not the type of accounts that most banks (or trust companies) handle with sufficient frequency to develop expertise. There is very little in the way of guidance to banks other than a 2000 memorandum issued by the Office of The Comptroller of the Currency to national banks.

Buried in the details of the OCC memo is the devil that trips up many preneed fiduciaries: the bank will be required to administer and invest the trust pursuant to the controlling instrument and applicable law. Applicable law would include the Internal Revenue Code, 12 CFR Part 9 and state death care laws.

The OCC memo warns national banks that:

Many banks serving as trustee in a preneed trust have only limited contact with the purchaser of the funeral contract and provider of the trust funds. The bank’s contact and business relationship is primarily with the funeral company. The consumer’s primary contract is with the funeral company or funeral director. Upon the death of the consumer, the bank remits the proceeds of the trust to the funeral company in accordance with the terms of the trust and contract, not to the individual’s family or heirs as is common in most trust relationships.

What makes this complicated and sensitive is that preneed funeral trusts are usually accounts established by funeral homes on behalf of individuals who are elderly or have limited financial resources. In addition, trustees manage these funds for a particularly sensitive and emotional event. Absent appropriate policies, procedures, controls and monitoring systems, this business line can create increased transaction, compliance and reputation risks.

Poor management of preneed funeral trusts, including weak internal controls over account acceptance and disbursements, noncompliance with trust agreements and applicable law, and inadequate due diligence on funeral homes and directors, can negatively affect a bank’s reputation. Banks that align themselves, or are affiliated, with funeral companies that have or subsequently develop reputation problems may themselves be tarnished, even if their internal practices are appropriate.

Preneed funeral trusts require the same level of supervisory oversight and risk management systems as other fiduciary activities in national banks. We expect banks that are active in this line of business to have appropriate strategic plans, policies and procedures, internal controls, MIS, and monitoring systems for this product. The administration of these accounts must comply with 12 CFR 9, Fiduciary Activities of National Banks, particularly the pre-acceptance, post-acceptance and annual review processes. It may be appropriate to have policies and procedures specific to this business line, and, if the business is significant for a bank, a separate administrative and investment review committee should be established.

It is imperative that national banks perform due diligence reviews on a funeral company before they enter a business arrangement with it. Bankers should also perform annual reviews of companies with which a bank has established a business relationship. Bankers should administer the use of third party service providers, such as investment advisors or managers, with appropriate controls and monitoring systems. National banks should also include preneed funeral trusts in internal compliance and audit programs.

While everyone from the consumer to the state death care regulator may take comfort in the local banker, few small institutions will have the revenues sufficient to warrant the costs associated with the compliance procedures recommended by the OCC.
 

Joint Accounts and the Patriot Act

It was once fairly common for a funeral director to take a preneed purchaser's funds and establish a joint account at a local bank.  Missouri's preneed law contemplates the transaction and requires that the funeral home and the purchaser have joint control over the account.  Prior to 9/11, banks would freely provide account forms, allowing the funeral director to obtain the purchaser's information and signature at the funeral home.  However, the security requirements imposed on banks by the USA Patriot Act have probably made the joint account an impractical method to funding a preneed contract. 

A few years ago, banks were required to implement programs to collect more information about their customers and to verify their identities.  The purpose of these new requirements was to prevent money laundering that could involve the financing of terrorism. 

What this means to the funeral director is that he/she can no longer prepare bank account applications at the funeral home.  All parties to the account must be present at the bank when the account is opened.  I have encountered one bank that interpreted the Patriot Act to prohibit the joint account arrangement contemplated by Missouri law.  

While the joint account provided a funding mechanism to funeral directors who did not have the volume of preneed business to warrant the expense of trusting or insurance, there are ample indications the arrangement has been abused and may need to be discontinued.  An unknown number of funeral homes have rolled joint account contracts to NPS.  Unwittingly, some funeral homes have combined multiple contracts in a single certificate of deposit, exposing the consumers' funds to the claims of the funeral home's creditors.  

As states seek to respond to the NPS failure by tightening preneed laws regarding trusting and insurance, consideration must be given to how a safe and affordable preneed arrangement can be offered to the rural consumer.