- (1) Upon first becoming an active member of the retirement system, the member shall designate one or more primary beneficiaries and may designate one or more contingent beneficiaries.
(2)
- (a) At the time of retirement, the member's beneficiary designations under subsection (1) are void and the member shall designate a joint annuitant or make a new beneficiary designation as provided in this subsection (2).
- (b) A member who elects a normal form retirement allowance or a 10-year or 20-year period certain allowance under 19-20-702(3) shall designate one or more primary beneficiaries and may designate one or more contingent beneficiaries.
- (c) A member who elects a joint and survivor annuity under 19-20-702(2) shall designate one individual as the member's joint annuitant and is prohibited from designating a beneficiary.
(3) A designated beneficiary must be one of the following expressly identified by the designator in a beneficiary designation record as a primary or contingent beneficiary:
- (a) a named individual;
- (b) the member's estate; or
- (c) a legally existing trust created by the member as trustor or grantor.
(4)
- (a) If the member's estate or trust is designated as a primary beneficiary, no other primary and no contingent beneficiary may be designated.
- (b) If the member's estate or trust is designated as a contingent beneficiary, no other contingent beneficiaries may be designated.
(5)
- (a) An eligible beneficiary is a designated beneficiary or alternate beneficiary entitled to receive payment of all or a share of a refund of a member's account balance, a monthly retirement allowance, or a lump-sum payment of the actuarially determined present value of the remaining payments under a period certain retirement allowance due to the death of a member or benefit recipient, based on the criteria set forth in this section.
(b) For an individual to be an eligible beneficiary, the individual must:
- (i) survive at the time the distribution is to be made; and
- (ii) have a social security number.
(c) For the estate of the decedent to be an eligible beneficiary, the estate must:
- (i) be in formal or informal probate at the time the distribution is to be made;
- (ii) have a court-appointed personal representative; and
- (iii) have a tax identification number.
(d) For a trust created by the decedent to be an eligible beneficiary, the trust at the time the distribution is to be made must:
- (i) legally exist;
- (ii) be irrevocable;
- (iii) have a tax identification number.
(6) The eligible beneficiary or beneficiaries are determined at the time the first distribution is to be made by the retirement system as a result of the death of a decedent in the following order of priority to:
- (a) one or more primary designated beneficiaries;
- (b) one or more contingent designated beneficiaries; or
- (c) one or more alternate beneficiaries.
- (7) An individual who is a designated beneficiary may renounce the individual's beneficiary interest. A renunciation must be made of the beneficiary's entire interest. A partial renunciation may not be made. A beneficiary who renounces the beneficiary's interest is deemed to have predeceased the designator.
History: En. Sec. 15, Ch. 276, L. 2019.