June 21, 2012
--- The deadline is approaching to amend affected
deferred compensation arrangements to comply with Code Section 409A requirements
for payments contingent on execution of a release of claims. ---
An article by Morgan Lewis &
Bockius LLP explains that the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) takes the position
that an arrangement providing for payments of Section 409A deferred
compensation to be made subject to execution of a release may allow for the
possibility that an employee could manipulate the year in which payment is made
by accelerating or delaying the execution and delivery of the release. Where
the employee can thereby exercise control over the year of payment, the IRS has
indicated that such a provision would violate the prohibition on an employee
directly or indirectly designating the calendar year of payment for a payment
of deferred compensation subject to Section 409A, thus triggering an automatic
Section 409A violation.
The law firm notes that IRS Notices
2010-6 and 2010-80 offer corrective relief by providing that such documentary
failures can be corrected by either of the following methods:
- Providing for payment on a fixed date (such as on the
60th day following separation) so that delivery of the release does not
affect payment timing; or
- Providing that any payment that could be paid over a
release consideration and revocation period beginning in one taxable year
and ending in the subsequent taxable year will be paid in the subsequent
taxable year (again, so that release delivery does not affect payment
timing).
Any deferred compensation
arrangement under which payments of deferred compensation subject to Section
409A are contingent on a release must be amended by December 31 to comply with
the requirements of Section 409A, generally using one of the two methods
described above.
Rebecca Moore