What is hindering a secured creditor?


Hindering a secured creditor is a criminal offense per Texas Penal Code 32.33. The statute says:

(b) A person who has signed a security agreement creating a
security interest in property or a mortgage or deed of trust
creating a lien on property commits an offense if, with intent to
hinder enforcement of that interest or lien, he destroys, removes,
conceals, encumbers, or otherwise harms or reduces the value of the
property.
(c) For purposes of this section, a person is presumed to
have intended to hinder enforcement of the security interest or
lien if, when any part of the debt secured by the security interest
or lien was due, he failed:
(1) to pay the part then due; and
(2) if the secured party had made demand, to deliver
possession of the secured property to the secured party.
[...]

(e) A person who is a debtor under a security agreement, and
who does not have a right to sell or dispose of the secured property
or is required to account to the secured party for the proceeds of a
permitted sale or disposition, commits an offense if the person
sells or otherwise disposes of the secured property, or does not
account to the secured party for the proceeds of a sale or other
disposition as required, with intent to appropriate (as defined in
Chapter 31) the proceeds or value of the secured property. A person
is presumed to have intended to appropriate proceeds if the person
does not deliver the proceeds to the secured party or account to the
secured party for the proceeds before the 11th day after the day
that the secured party makes a lawful demand for the proceeds or
account.

Common examples include, hiding a vehicle in order to prevent it from being repossessed and vandalizing a house that is about to be foreclosed.


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