For many Canadians, Registered Retirement Income Funds (RRIFs) and Registered Retirement Savings Plans (RRSPs) represent a lifetime of hard work. However, without precise planning, these accounts can become significant liabilities, triggering massive tax bills and fueling complex estate litigation.
At Derfel Estate Law, we frequently encounter disputes where technical misunderstandings regarding beneficiary designations erode the value of an estate and tear families apart. Here is what you need to know to protect your legacy.
The General Rule: Deemed Disposition
The Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) applies a strict default rule upon death: Deemed Disposition.
Unless specific exceptions apply, the CRA treats your registered accounts as if you cashed them out immediately before your death. The entire fair market value is added to your income on your final tax return. In Ontario, this spike in income can push your estate into the highest marginal tax bracket, potentially handing over 53.53% of your savings to the government.
The Exceptions: Spouses and Dependents
You can generally avoid this immediate tax hit if you leave these assets to a "qualifying survivor."
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Spouses: If you name your spouse as a "Successor Annuitant" (RRIF only), they take over ownership seamlessly. If named as a beneficiary, the funds can be rolled over tax-free into their own RRSP or RRIF.
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Dependent Children: Funds can be rolled over to a financially dependent child. If the child has a disability, proceeds can be transferred tax-free to their Registered Disability Savings Plan (RDSP), subject to contribution limits.
Pitfall 1: The "Automatic Conversion" Trap (Boulos v. Duca)
A common danger arises when RRSPs automatically convert to RRIFs at age 71. In Boulos v. Duca Financial Services Credit Union (2020 ONSC 1946), the deceased had named his close friend as the beneficiary of his RRSPs. When the bank automatically converted the accounts to RRIFs, the deceased never signed new beneficiary forms.
After his death, litigation ensued to determine if the funds belonged to the friend (as intended) or the estate. While the court eventually ruled that the RRIF was a "derivative" of the RRSP and the designation remained valid, the result was only achieved after a costly court application.
Pitfall 2: The "Asset Confusion" Trap (Murphy Estate)
Even when families attempt to settle an estate amicably, misunderstandings about RRIF designations can destroy the agreement.
In Murphy Estate (2012 ONSC 974), a family signed a "Deed of Arrangement" to split the "estate" equally. They mistakenly believed the mother’s $150,000 RRIF was an estate asset. However, because the RRIF had designated beneficiaries (two of the sons), it bypassed the estate entirely. The court ruled that the agreement to split the estate did not capture the RRIF, leaving the other siblings with significantly less than they expected.
Pitfall 3: The "Unclean Hands" Trap (Spellman v. Spellman)
Many assume that because designated funds fall outside the estate, they are untouchable by estate creditors or disputes. A recent decision, Spellman v. Spellman (2025 ONSC 1187), proves this is not always true.
In this case, a brother (Steven) acted as the administrator of his father’s estate and misappropriated over $178,000 for his own use, effectively stealing his sister’s (Dawn) inheritance. He then fled the province and ignored court orders. Later, the parties' mother passed away, leaving a RRIF valued at over $200,000 with both Steven and Dawn named as direct beneficiaries
Under normal circumstances, RBC would have paid Steven his half of the RRIF directly, bypassing the estate and his debt to his sister. However, Justice Wojciechowski intervened. The Court ordered that Steven’s share of the mother’s RRIF be seized and paid directly to Dawn to satisfy the judgment for the money he stole from the father’s estate.
The Lesson: While beneficiary designations generally bypass probate, they do not provide immunity if the beneficiary has committed fraud or misconduct against the family. The court has the equitable power to redirect these funds to ensure justice is served.
Protect Your Estate
These three cases—Boulos, Murphy, and Spellman—illustrate a critical legal reality: Beneficiary designations are powerful instruments, but they are not simple.
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Update your forms: Whenever an account changes (like an RRSP to RRIF conversion), sign a new designation.
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Know your assets: Do not sign family agreements until you know exactly which assets are in the estate and which pass outside of it.
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Conduct matters: Beneficiaries who act in bad faith may find their "protected" assets seized by the court.
Leaving your intentions to chance is a recipe for litigation. The difference between a seamless transfer and a lawsuit often comes down to professional planning.