Washington’s Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act in Divorce Cases

Washington divorce lawyer tracing and unwinding fraudulent asset transfers under UVTA.

When Assets “Disappear” in Divorce

If your spouse suddenly “sells” the boat to a cousin, drains accounts, or deeds property to a friend, you may be dealing with a fraudulent (voidable) transfer. Washington adopted the Uniform Voidable Transactions Act (UVTA) (formerly UFTA), giving courts robust tools to claw back assets and prevent gamesmanship.

Who Counts as a “Creditor” in Family Court?

In divorce, the spouse seeking a fair division is effectively a creditor of the other spouse. If your partner moves property to hinder your equitable share, Washington courts can step in.

Badges of Fraud What Courts Watch

  • Transfer to insiders (family, friends, closely-held entities)
  • Transfers shortly before/after separation or filing
  • No fair consideration (gifts, sham sales, IOUs)
  • Concealment or inconsistent explanations
  • Transfer of substantially all assets or insolvency after transfer

Multiple badges paint a compelling picture judges don’t need a smoking gun.

Remedies That Work

  • Avoidance: Set the transfer aside; bring the asset back to the marital pot.
  • Injunctions: Freeze assets to stop further dissipation.
  • Execution/levy: Reach the transferred asset directly.
  • Attorney’s fees/costs: Possible fee shifting when bad faith is proven.

Discovery Tactics That Find the Money

Our team blends family-law strategy with commercial-litigation tools:

  • Subpoenas to banks, escrow, brokerages, crypto exchanges
  • Forensic accounting to trace flows and identify conduits
  • Early injunctive relief to preserve status quo
  • Depositions of transferees/insiders

Defending Against UVTA Claims

Not every pre-divorce transaction is fraudulent. We defend legitimate deals by proving reasonably equivalent value, good-faith purchaser status, or ordinary-course transactions.

Local Experience

From Seattle/Bellevue (King) to Tacoma (Pierce), Everett (Snohomish), Spokane, Vancouver (Clark), and Bremerton (Kitsap), we pursue rapid relief when timing can make or break recovery.

Call to Action:
Suspect hidden assets? Contact Family Law Complex Litigation Advocacy PLLC at (206) 792-7003 or office@familylawcomplexlitigation.com for swift action.