(1) The benefits, rights, privileges,
and options under any annuity contract that are due the annuitant
who paid the consideration for the annuity contract are not
subject to execution and the annuitant may not be compelled to
exercise those rights, powers, or options, and creditors are not
allowed to interfere with or terminate the contract, except:
(a) As to amounts paid for or as premium on an annuity with
intent to defraud creditors, with interest thereon, and of which
the creditor has given the insurer written notice at its home
office prior to making the payments to the annuitant out of which
the creditor seeks to recover. The notice must specify the
amount claimed or the facts that will enable the insurer to
determine the amount, and must set forth the facts that will
enable the insurer to determine the insurance or annuity
contract, the person insured or annuitant and the payments sought
to be avoided on the basis of fraud.
(b) The total exemption of benefits presently due and
payable to an annuitant periodically or at stated times under all
annuity contracts may not at any time exceed two thousand five
hundred dollars per month for the length of time represented by
the installments, and a periodic payment in excess of two
thousand five hundred dollars per month is subject to garnishee
execution to the same extent as are wages and salaries.
(c) If the total benefits presently due and payable to an
annuitant under all annuity contracts at any time exceeds payment
at the rate of two thousand five hundred dollars per month, then
the court may order the annuitant to pay to a judgment creditor
or apply on the judgment, in installments, the portion of the
excess benefits that the court determines to be just and proper,
after due regard for the reasonable requirements of the judgment
debtor and the judgment debtor's dependent family, as well as any
payments required to be made by the annuitant to other creditors
under prior court orders.
(2) The benefits, rights, privileges, or options accruing
under an annuity contract to a beneficiary or assignee are not
transferable or subject to commutation, and if the benefits are
payable periodically or at stated times, the same exemptions and
exceptions contained in this section for the annuitant apply to
the beneficiary or assignee.
(3) An annuity contract within the meaning of this section
is any obligation to pay certain sums at stated times, during
life or lives, or for a specified term or terms, issued for a
valuable consideration, regardless of whether or not the sums are
payable to one or more persons, jointly or otherwise, but does
not include payments under life insurance contracts at stated
times during life or lives, or for a specified term or terms.
[2005 c 223 § 10; 1949 c 190 § 25; 1947 c 79 § .18.43; Rem. Supp. 1949 § 45.18.43.]