Accounting for Unclaimed Property
By Jeffrey N. Berman, CPA, CFP and Raphael Kahn, CPA
For the Baltimore Business Journal/MACPA insert
This past July, Maryland Comptroller William Donald Schaefer announced
that his office, in an effort to increase the unclaimed property fund,
had begun to put unclaimed property up for auction on eBay. Included
were collectables, baseball cards, coins, jewelry, and other household
items.
Unclaimed property laws exist in most states, and while they have historically
often been neglected, governments have begun to aggressively enforce
them to generate millions of dollars for taxpayers. According to the
Maryland Comptroller's office, $480 million have been reported to the
State over the past 39 years. Already in fiscal year 2005 the Comptroller
has returned $46.5 million in unclaimed funds to individuals. Just this
past September at the Maryland State Fair in Timonium, 521 people found
$205,723 worth of property of which the largest claim was for $31,052.
The law applies to all forms of property, including:
- Unclaimed paychecks or vendor checks
- Funds and items in bank safe deposit boxes
- Dormant bank accounts
- Undeliverable stock certificates, annuities and dividends
- Customer credit balances
- Dissolution and escrow funds
- Fiduciary funds and endowments
Specifically, the unclaimed property statute requires holders of unclaimed
property with a dormancy of at least three years to send a certified
letter to the presumed owner informing that individual or entity that
the property will be considered abandoned absent a response within 30
days of the notice. If unclaimed, the property must be handed over to
the state, which will convert it into cash. The money is directed to
the state's general fund, but can be reclaimed at any time by rightful
owners or their heirs.
The law applies to businesses in all industry sectors, from hospitals
to insurers, to restaurant chains, to universities, to estates. We find
that many businesses in possession of unclaimed property are unaware
of the law's requirements.
Failing to comply can lead to a burdensome unclaimed property audit,
which can easily lead to fines and penalties for past violations. Companies
that are especially vulnerable to such audits include those that:
- Do not have procedures in place for reporting unclaimed property;
- Regularly cut large numbers of checks;
- Issues securities;
- Have many employees and high turnover; and/or
- Have overpayments or credit balances in their accounts receivables.
Additionally, companies should be aware that they are
obligated to comply not merely with Maryland's unclaimed property laws,
but probably with those of other states as well. The Supreme Court ruled
in Texas v. New Jersey (1965) that unclaimed property must be reported
to the state of the owner's last known address as it is reflected in the
holder's records. If the property in question is exempt in that state,
or if the address is unknown or located outside the U.S., then the holder
reports the property to the state in which it is incorporated.
Most sizable companies that have been in business for
a decade or more are likely to have unclaimed property on - or off - their
books. Banks are likely to have systematized the reporting process with
regard to dormant accounts and assets. Companies that are unfamiliar with
the law and its implications can also quickly get up to speed by enacting
a few simple steps.
Now that the Comptroller's office has so enthusiastically
embraced technology in the name of converting unclaimed property into
revenue for the state, you can presume it will not hesitate to enforce
the law with regard to delinquencies in adhering to the law.
Raphael Kahn and Jeffrey Berman are shareholders in the
accounting and financial services firm KBST&M. They can be reached
at
rkahn@kbstm.com and
jberman@kbstm.com
respectively.