Current through P.L. 171-2024
Section 30-4-8-7 - Prohibited causes of action; effect of spendthrift provision(a) Except as provided in section 8 of this chapter, no cause of action of any kind, including a cause of action to enforce a judgment, may be brought for:(1) an attachment or other provisional remedy against property that is the subject of a qualified disposition to a legacy trust; or(2) the avoidance of a qualified disposition to a legacy trust. The protections provided to a qualified disposition by this subsection apply notwithstanding any law to the contrary set forth outside this chapter.
(b) If a court declines to apply Indiana law in determining the effect of a spendthrift provision in a legacy trust in an action brought against a legacy trust, the trustee of the legacy trust shall immediately resign and, without further order of any court, cease to be the trustee of the legacy trust. When a trustee resigns under this section, the trustee has the power only to convey the trust property to a successor trustee appointed under this section. A successor trustee shall succeed the resigning trustee in accordance with the terms of the legacy trust. If the trust does not provide for a successor trustee and the trust would otherwise be without a trustee, any beneficiary of the trust may petition an Indiana court to appoint a successor trustee. The Indiana court receiving the petition shall appoint a successor trustee to serve in accordance with the terms and conditions that the court determines are consistent with the purposes of the trust and this chapter.(c) A legacy trust and its property are protected under this section regardless of whether or not the transferor: (1) serves as an investment adviser under section 12 of this chapter; or(2) retains a power described in section 13 of this chapter.(d) To the maximum extent permitted by the United States Constitution and the Indiana Constitution, a court of this state shall exercise jurisdiction over a legacy trust or a qualified disposition and shall adjudicate a case or controversy brought before the court regarding, arising out of, or related to a legacy trust or a qualified disposition if that case or controversy is otherwise within the subject matter jurisdiction of the court. Subject to the United States Constitution and the Indiana Constitution, a court of this state shall not dismiss or otherwise decline to adjudicate a case or controversy described in this subsection on the grounds that a court of another jurisdiction has acquired or may acquire proper jurisdiction over, or may provide proper venue for, the case or controversy or the parties to the case or controversy. Nothing in this subsection shall be construed to do either of the following:(1) Prohibit a transfer or other reassignment of a case or controversy from one court of this state to another court of this state.(2) Expand or limit the subject matter jurisdiction of a court of this state.Amended by P.L. 231-2019,SEC. 29, eff. 7/1/2019.Added by P.L. 221-2019,SEC. 9, eff. 7/1/2019.