Sec. 12-833. Persons prohibited from assigning lottery prize.
Sec. 12-833. Persons prohibited from assigning lottery prize. No person may
assign a lottery prize if (1) such person is liable for support under the provisions of
section 52-362d, (2) such person is liable for any debt owed to the state under section
4a-12, (3) such person who does not assign any prize payments would be subject to an
immediate income tax liability for the value of the entire prize rather than annual income
tax liability for each installment when paid, as determined by a technical rule letter,
revenue ruling or other public ruling of the Internal Revenue Service or the Department
of Revenue Services, (4) a court of competent jurisdiction issues a published decision
that such person who does not assign any prize payments would be subject to an immediate income tax liability for the value of the entire prize rather than annual income tax
liability for each installment when paid, (5) the Connecticut Lottery Corporation receives such letter or ruling from the Internal Revenue Service or the Department of
Revenue Services or a published decision of a court of competent jurisdiction and the
corporation files such letter, ruling or decision with the Secretary of the State or (6) the
assignor's lottery payments are subject to any lien, judgment, offset, levy, attachment,
execution, garnishment or court ordered payment.
(P.A. 98-137, S. 59, 62; 98-219, S. 30, 33, 34.)
History: P.A. 98-137 effective October 1, 1998, and applicable to any action or arbitration brought on or after said date
with respect to a land survey performed or furnished on or after said date; P.A. 98-219 added reference to the Department
of Revenue Services in Subdivs. (3) and (5), added Subdiv. (6) prohibiting an assignment if the assignor's lottery payments
are subject to any lien, judgment, offset, levy, attachment, execution, garnishment or court ordered payment and changed
the effective date of P.A. 98-137, S. 59 from October 1, 1998, to July 1, 1998, effective July 1, 1998.