Ala. Code § 19-3E-5 (2026)
(b) In an action brought by a creditor for an attachment or other provisional remedy against property that is the subject of a qualified disposition or for avoidance of a qualified disposition, the following rules apply:
(c) A person may not bring or maintain an action concerning a qualified disposition under subsection (b) unless the action is commenced within either of the following periods:
(1) If the claim arose before the qualified disposition was made, or on the later of the following:
(d) If a trust beneficiary who has an interest in a qualified disposition or in property that is subject to a qualified disposition is a party to an action for annulment of a marriage, divorce, or separate maintenance, the following rules apply:
(2) If the trust beneficiary is the transferor of the qualified disposition, the interest of the trust beneficiary in the qualified disposition or in property that is the subject of the qualified disposition is not considered marital property, is not considered, directly or indirectly, part of the trust beneficiary’s real or personal estate, and may not be awarded to the trust beneficiary’s spouse in a judgment for annulment of a marriage, divorce, or separate maintenance if any of the following apply:
(e) Except as otherwise provided in subdivision (1), a fiduciary qualified disposition is deemed made as of the time the property that is subject to the disposition was first transferred to the trustee who is making the disposition, or any predecessor of that trustee in an unbroken succession of fiduciary ownership of the property, in a form that meets either of the following requirements:
(f) If a trustee of an existing trust proposes to make a disposition that, but for the exercise of authority granted in this subsection, would not be a qualified disposition because of a nonconforming power of appointment of the transferor, the trustee may modify the trust instrument by delivering to the qualified trustee an irrevocable written election to modify the nonconforming power of appointment to conform to the requirements of subdivision (3) or subdivision (11) of subsection (b) of Section 19-3E-4. An irrevocable written election described in this subsection shall include both of the following:
(g) With respect to a qualified disposition, a creditor does not have a claim or cause of action against any of the following:
(h) If more than one qualified disposition is made by means of the same trust instrument, the following rules apply:
(1) With respect to a prior qualified disposition, both of the following apply:
(i) In an action against a trustee who received property in a qualified disposition, if a court takes any action declining to apply the law of this state in determining the validity, construction, or administration of the trust, or the effect of a spendthrift provision in the trust instrument, the trustee, without the further order of any court, shall immediately cease to be trustee of the trust. The former trustee does not have any power described in subsection (b) of Section 19-3E-4 except to convey the trust property to the successor trustee, to petition the court for appointment of a successor trustee, and to collect the former trustee’s attorney fees, costs, and expenses. If the trust instrument does not provide for a successor trustee and the trust would otherwise be without a trustee, the following rules apply:
(k) A written agreement between a transferor and a creditor may provide for any of the following:
(Act 2021-238, §5.)