Two years for negligence/personal injury, wrongful death, and medical malpractice. For medical malpractice it is with the "discovery rule" which means from the date the illness or injury caused by medical malpractice was discovered. Three years for fraud. The article below goes into greater detail on statute of limitations.
Seven Years.
There is none.
36 month statute of limitations on the collection of civil traffic violations
What is the Statute of limitation for contesting a will in North Carolina?
It will depend on the specific classification of the crime in question. In Arizona it is most likely to be one year.
No.No felony in Kentucky has as statute of limitation.
It will depend on the actual charges that are brought. Felonies in Arizona are set at 7 years. If it is a misdemeanor charge, it is one year. However, it is tolled for absence from the state
The statute of limitation for unpaid credit cards in N.Y. is 7 years.
It will depend on what the specific charges are. Violent crimes and murder have no statute of limitations in Arizona. Other felonies are set at 7 years. Misdemeanors will be set at 1 year and petty offenses at 6 months. It is tolled if the identity is not known or they are absent from the state.
Don't understand what it is that is being asked. What is meant by, "the statute of limitation after the charges?"
In Georgia the statute of limitation on a misdemeanor is 2 years. If the person is not in the state, the statute does not run. If the crime hasn't been discovered, it doesn't start the clock.
The statute of limitations in Dallas is the same as it is anywhere else in Texas: Two years with the "discovery rule." States mandate statute of limitation rules.