concealment of property
Just what it says. Someone is wanting your property and you hide it so they can't get a lien on it or get it by other legal procedure. hiding it may be against the law in certain cases.
If it is your own, certainly not.
Depends by state law and how many acres of land you have.
This depends:If you are concealing a car from Reposetion, No MissdemeanerIf you never intended to pay for the car that is really fraud and can be a Felony
here is a web site that will give you all the information that you will need... http://georgiapacking.org/gfl1.php good luck
It depends on who owned the property prior to this event. Assuming it belongs to the wife, there is law in Georgia that prevents the husband from inheriting in such a case. In that event, the property would follow the other individuals listed in her will or would follow intestate law, skipping the husband.
What is concealment of information?
You can start researching Texas law at the Related Link below
I don't know about Alabama but in Georgia it is a jail sentence, and a fine.
To keep from having to share them with the spouse according to that state's laws of division of marital property.
Sec. 16H-35. Concealment of collateral. A person commits 1 the offense of concealment of collateral when the person, 2 with intent to defraud, knowingly conceals, removes, disposes 3 of, or converts to the person's own use or to that of 4 another, any property mortgaged or pledged to or held by a 5 financial institution. Sec. 16H-35. Concealment of collateral. A person commits 1 the offense of concealment of collateral when the person, 2 with intent to defraud, knowingly conceals, removes, disposes 3 of, or converts to the person's own use or to that of 4 another, any property mortgaged or pledged to or held by a 5 financial institution.
I used the tall grass for concealment.