no
2006-12-17 13:18:10
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answer #1
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answered by Bobuck 4
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This is America, you can contest the beneficiary of the annuities account if your the purchaser of the policy or have a legal document describing what your interests in the policy are. The final decision would be of the courts.
2006-12-19 00:11:47
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answer #2
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answered by hot single mom 4
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Annuity beneficiaries, like life insurance, transfer by right of contract. The owner designates the beneficiary at application, or can change it at any time during their life.
So the answer is no.
Hope this helps
2006-12-19 03:51:03
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answer #3
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answered by Barry T 2
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The person who buys the annuity name the beneficiary. You can't contest something that you authorize, but you can change the beneficiary
2006-12-18 09:26:49
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answer #4
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answered by lm050254 5
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No. The policy owner names the beneficiaries - there's nothing to contest.
2006-12-17 15:14:51
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous 7
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If the home is properly worth under the internal maximum loan then in simple terms walk away. you're actually not in charge for the internal maximum loan. And, you will could get a felony expert to dispute the validity of the beneficiary claims which additionally expenses funds. So on the tip of the day you're able to return to a selection no remember if it extremely is properly well worth the attempt or in simple terms decrease bait and walk.
2016-12-30 14:00:11
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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The beneficiary is whoever bought the annuity. So, no.
2006-12-17 15:10:43
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answer #7
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answered by floozy_niki 6
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Floozy your info is waaaay off kiddo.
The policy owner elects the beneficiaries, period!
However, the OWNER of the policy can change it if they choose, not just anyone.
2006-12-18 20:43:53
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answer #8
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answered by godzillasagoodman 2
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Compare rates free
2015-02-07 06:56:36
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answer #9
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answered by Dyan 1
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