What is the Statute of limitation for contesting a will in North Carolina?
No. There is no statute of limitations for felony offenses in North Carolina.
Yes, there is a statute of limitations for theft in North Carolina. If it is a felony or a malicious misdemeanor, there is no limitation. If it is another type of misdemeanor, it would be two years.
Well I don't live in North Carolina but I think you should ask someone who lives in North Carolina.
Not in North Carolina. It is one of the few states that has no statute of limitations for felonies. So they can charge you at any time in your life.
The statute of limitations for auto property damage in North Carolina is 3 years. Auto property damage falls under North Carolina's civil statute of limitations.
In North Carolina it would be 3 to 5 years for the civil debt. The crime would be 2 years for a misdemeanor or none for a felony.
North Carolina's statute of limitations are very basic and simple. Armed robbery is going to be brought as a felony charge. If the crime is a felony of any type there is no limit. Malicious misdemeanors have not limit either. Other misdemeanors are set at 2 years.
Malicious misdemeanors (any class) have no statute of limitations in North Carolina. All other misdemeanors have a 2 year statute of limitation under current NC law.
The statute of limitations for personal injury lawsuits in North Carolina is three years from the act or three years from the date of discovery-this is known as "the discovery rule." But never more than ten years from the actual date of occurrence.
what is the statute of limitations for harvesting timber in north carolina
what is the North Carolina statue of limitations for utility bills
The statute of limitations for negligence suits in North Carolina is three years with the discovery rule.