Kimster
Former Member
Do you have additional information on this "statute of limitations" and how it applies to "custodial interference"? Wouldn't the 7-year statute (or 5 years as it is in some states, i.e. Alabama where a judge declared Natalee Holloway dead after nearly 6 years) apply to someone who is missing and presumed dead? There is no proof to date that Kyron is deceased.
Perhaps when we see the wording of the lawsuit, this will become clearer, but for now, it's puzzling.
I don't know any more than what was said to me, that in TN it had to be filed within 7 years.
Here's some Oregon info I found with a Google:
Personal Injury: 2 years.
Fraud: 2 years from discovery.
Libel / Slander / Defamation: 2 years.
Injury to Personal Property: 6 years.
Product Liability: Two years after the plaintiff suffers injury, or within two years of the date the plaintiff discovers or reasonably should have discovered the injury. However, no product liability action may be commenced more than eight years after the date the product alleged to have caused injury was purchased.
Contracts: 6 years.
http://www.expertlaw.com/library/limitations_by_state/Oregon.html