Lao Song and his wife have been married for many years, from poverty to luxury cars, from inseparable to mutual dislike. In order to keep young feelings from falling apart, they decided to stop loss in time through divorce.
However, on the eve of the divorce, Lao Song found that his wife was secretly transferring property. After several years of dating, he still can't resist the temptation of money.
Lao Song asked a lawyer for advice: If the other party transfers the property, can I get more property in divorce?
According to article 1092 of the Civil Code:
If there is sufficient evidence to prove that one party has transferred the joint property of husband and wife, the other party may divide the joint property at the time of divorce.
Different types of property need different evidence:
(1) deposit
It is necessary to provide the other party's bank card number to the court, and the court can inquire about the other party's bank flow according to the bank card number, so as to know whether the other party has transferred the property.
(2) Real estate
The court generally needs the parties to provide the specific house number of the property, and the court can query the relevant file information of the property according to this information, so as to prove whether the other party has transferred the property.
(three) a large amount of movable property
Such as a lot of jewelry, antique toys and so on. As the transfer behavior is difficult to prove, it is suggested to take audio and video evidence in advance, and to be on the safe side, you can entrust a notary office for notarization. Once there is a dispute in the future, this audio-visual evidence can prove the movable property owned by the family at that time, so as to divide it.