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Fraudulent Conveyance Complaint

Drafts a U.S. fraudulent conveyance complaint to avoid and recover debtor asset transfers under UFTA, UVTA, or state equivalents. Covers actual fraud (UVTA § 4(a)(1)), constructive fraud theories, badges of fraud, provisional remedies, and full prayer for relief. Use when a creditor needs to challenge a transfer made to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors, including bankruptcy adversary proceedings. Triggers: fraudulent conveyance, fraudulent transfer, voidable transaction, badges of fraud, asset concealment, debtor insolvency, UFTA, UVTA, avoidance action.

ID: us.litigation.fraudulent-conveyance-complaint Version: 0.1.0 License: Apache-2.0 Author: CaseMark Language: en Added: 2026-05-27
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Fraudulent Conveyance Complaint

Drafts a litigation-ready complaint to avoid a debtor's fraudulent asset transfer and recover value for creditors under UFTA, UVTA, or state equivalents.

Quick Start

Gather from the user:

  1. Creditor's claim — nature of debt, date incurred, amount, judgment status
  2. Transfer details — asset description (legal description if real property), date, transferee, stated vs. actual consideration
  3. Debtor financial condition — insolvency evidence (balance sheet, cash-flow, or unreasonably small capital)
  4. Badges of fraud — insider relationship, retention of control, concealment, timing, consideration adequacy
  5. Jurisdiction — governing statute (UFTA, UVTA, or state-specific); federal vs. state court; bankruptcy adversary proceeding

Then produce the complaint following the workflow below.

Core Workflow

1. Caption

[COURT NAME]
[DISTRICT/COUNTY]

[PLAINTIFF],
    Plaintiff,
v.
[DEBTOR-TRANSFEROR] and [TRANSFEREE],
    Defendants.

Case No. [________]
COMPLAINT FOR FRAUDULENT CONVEYANCE

Apply FRCP 10 (federal) or local rules (state).

2. Parties

Party Required Allegations
Plaintiff-creditor Legal name, entity type, standing basis, nature and amount of debt
Debtor-transferor Identity, entity type, insider status if applicable
Transferee Identity, consideration paid, knowledge of debtor's intent
Subsequent transferees Downstream recipients; good-faith purchaser status if asserted

3. Jurisdiction & Venue

Basis Requirements
Federal diversity 28 U.S.C. § 1332 — citizenship of each party, amount > $75,000
Federal bankruptcy 28 U.S.C. §§ 157, 1334 — adversary proceeding under FRBP 7001
State court Jurisdictional statute + amount-in-controversy threshold
Personal jurisdiction Residence, principal place of business, property situs, or where transfer executed
Venue Defendant's residence, where cause arose, or where property located

4. Factual Allegations

Plead in numbered paragraphs, chronologically:

  1. Origin, nature, and amount of claim; date debt incurred; judgment status
  2. Whether claim is pre-transfer or post-transfer (determines available theories)
  3. Debtor's financial condition at time of transfer — plead all that apply:
    • Liabilities exceeded assets at fair valuation (balance sheet insolvency)
    • Unable to pay debts as due (cash-flow insolvency)
    • Transfer left debtor with unreasonably small capital
  4. Transfer description: asset, date, transferee, stated consideration, fair market value
  5. Badges of fraud:
Badge Allegation
Insider transfer Relationship: family member, officer, affiliate, controlled entity
Retention of control Debtor continued to use, possess, or control asset post-transfer
Concealment Transfer not recorded, disclosed, or reported to creditors
Substantially all assets Scope of asset depletion relative to debtor's total estate
Inadequate consideration FMV vs. consideration actually received
Timing Transfer occurred [X days] before/after debt incurred or suit filed
Prior pattern History of transfers or asset-shifting
  1. Transferee's actual or constructive knowledge of debtor's fraudulent intent (if applicable)

5. Causes of Action

Count I — Actual Fraudulent Transfer

  • UVTA § 4(a)(1) [VERIFY state codification]
  • Elements: (1) transfer by debtor; (2) actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud any creditor
  • Incorporate badges of fraud and direct evidence of intent
  • Available to present and future creditors

Count II — Constructive Fraud (Insolvency)

  • UVTA § 4(a)(2) [VERIFY state codification]
  • Elements: (1) transfer without reasonably equivalent value; (2) debtor insolvent at time or became insolvent as result
  • Plead in the alternative to Count I

Count III — Constructive Fraud (Insider Antecedent Debt) (if applicable)

  • UVTA § 5(b) [VERIFY state codification]
  • Elements: (1) transfer to insider; (2) for antecedent debt; (3) debtor insolvent; (4) insider had reasonable cause to believe debtor insolvent

Additional claims (as applicable): conspiracy to defraud creditors, aiding and abetting, successor liability, lis pendens (real property — file with complaint)

6. Prayer for Relief

- [ ] Avoidance of the transfer to extent necessary to satisfy plaintiff's claim
- [ ] Recovery of transferred property or its value from transferee
- [ ] Money judgment against debtor for underlying debt (if not already obtained)
- [ ] Money judgment against transferee to extent of asset value received
- [ ] Attachment, garnishment, or receiver to preserve assets pending judgment
- [ ] Preliminary injunction against further dissipation (if imminent risk)
- [ ] Pre- and post-judgment interest at statutory rate
- [ ] Costs of suit
- [ ] Attorney's fees (if permitted by statute — verify jurisdiction)
- [ ] Such other relief as the court deems just and proper

7. Signature Block & Verification

  • Attorney: name, bar number, firm, address, phone, email; FRCP 11 or state-equivalent certification
  • Verification: many jurisdictions require verification for fraudulent conveyance complaints, especially when seeking provisional remedies — confirm local rules; some require notarization, others accept unsworn declaration under penalty of perjury

Pitfalls

  • UFTA vs. UVTA — Most states adopted UVTA (2014) but effective dates vary. [VERIFY] current state codification before citing section numbers.
  • Statute of limitations — UVTA § 9: 4 years from transfer (actual fraud); 4 years or 1 year after discovery, whichever is later (constructive fraud). [VERIFY state equivalent.]
  • Bankruptcy intersection — 11 U.S.C. § 548 reaches transfers within 2 years of petition; trustee may also invoke state UFTA/UVTA via § 544(b) for longer state limitations periods.
  • Good-faith defense — Transferee who took for value and in good faith may retain the transfer. Plead facts negating good faith where known; affects remedy (avoidance vs. money judgment).
  • Reasonably equivalent value — Distinct from fair market value; courts apply totality-of-circumstances. Inadequate price alone is not constructive fraud without insolvency.
  • Provisional remedies — If dissipation risk is imminent, prepare TRO/preliminary injunction for concurrent filing; allege irreparable harm and likelihood of success.
  • Insider definition — UVTA § 1(8) defines insiders broadly: relatives, general partners, directors, officers, affiliates. [VERIFY state definition.]

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