Divorce · California · 2026

Divorce & Fraudulent Concealment
When Your Spouse Hides Assets

Updated March 2026 12 min read

If you suspect your spouse is hiding money, undervaluing property, or burying debts to cheat you out of your fair share — you are not paranoid. It happens in divorces every single day. California law takes asset concealment extremely seriously, and the penalties are among the harshest in the country. This guide explains exactly what fraudulent concealment is, how to catch it, and what a court can do about it — including awarding you up to 100% of the hidden asset.

◆ Short Answer

The Canonical Answer

In California, spouses owe each other a fiduciary duty that requires full transparency regarding all community assets, debts, and income FC §721 FC §1100. This duty continues through the divorce process. Both parties must exchange Preliminary Declarations of Disclosure (FL-140) and Final Declarations of Disclosure (FL-141/FL-142) listing every asset, debt, income source, and expense FC §2104. When a spouse deliberately hides, undervalues, or fails to disclose assets, the court can impose severe penalties under FC §1101(g): an award of 50% to 100% of the concealed asset’s value to the innocent spouse, plus attorney’s fees and sanctions FC §2107(d). In the landmark case In re Marriage of Rossi (2001), a wife hid $1.3 million in lottery winnings, and the court awarded 100% to the husband. Even after a divorce is final, the court retains jurisdiction to divide omitted assets at any time under FC §2556, with no statute of limitations.

What Is Fraudulent Concealment in a California Divorce?

Fraudulent concealment occurs when one spouse deliberately hides, transfers, undervalues, or fails to disclose community assets, separate-property interests, income, or debts during the divorce process. It is not an honest mistake or a minor oversight. It is a calculated effort to deprive the other spouse of their rightful share of the marital estate.

California treats marriage as a partnership — and like business partners, spouses owe each other the highest duty of good faith and fair dealing. Family Code §721 imposes a fiduciary duty between spouses that is equivalent to the duty owed by business partners under the Corporations Code. FC §721 This means each spouse must provide full access to all information regarding the existence, characterization, and value of community assets and debts.

Family Code §1100 goes further. It requires that each spouse manage and control community property with the same care and loyalty that the law demands of a trustee. FC §1100 Transferring community property without the other spouse’s written consent, hiding cash, moving money into secret accounts, or deliberately undervaluing a business — all of these violate the fiduciary duty and can trigger severe legal consequences.

The Rule

The fiduciary duty between spouses does not end at separation. It continues through the entire divorce process until every community asset has been distributed. If your spouse moved money or transferred property after you separated but before the divorce was finalized, that transaction is subject to the same fiduciary scrutiny. FC §1100(e)

The critical point is this: if your instinct tells you something is off — unexplained withdrawals, a sudden drop in reported income, purchases that do not match the bank statements — California law gives you powerful tools to investigate and equally powerful remedies if concealment is proven.

California’s Mandatory Disclosure Rules

California does not leave financial transparency to good faith alone. The Family Code mandates a structured disclosure process that forces both spouses to lay their financial lives bare — under penalty of perjury. FC §2100–2113

Preliminary Declaration of Disclosure (FL-140)

Within 60 days of filing the Petition (or, for the respondent, within 60 days of filing the Response), each spouse must serve the other with a Preliminary Declaration of Disclosure. FC §2104 This package includes:

Final Declaration of Disclosure (FL-141)

Before the divorce can be finalized, each spouse must serve a Final Declaration of Disclosure (FL-141) with an updated FL-142 and FL-150. FC §2105 This ensures that any changes in assets, debts, or income since the preliminary disclosure are captured. The parties can mutually waive the final disclosure in writing, but the preliminary disclosure can never be waived.

Warning

The duty to disclose is ongoing. If your financial situation changes after you serve your declaration — you receive a bonus, sell an asset, discover a debt — you are legally obligated to update your disclosure. Failing to update is treated the same as failing to disclose in the first place. FC §2100(c)

Sanctions for Noncompliance

If a spouse fails to comply with disclosure requirements, the court has broad authority under FC §2107 to impose sanctions, including:

FC §2107(c)–(d) These are not theoretical consequences. Riverside County family law judges take disclosure violations seriously, and sanctions are routinely imposed when a spouse stonewalls, delays, or provides incomplete information.

Common Ways Spouses Hide Assets During Divorce

If you are reading this article, you probably already suspect something. The following is not an exhaustive list, but it covers the most common tactics we see in Temecula and Riverside County divorce cases.

Cash and Bank Account Manipulation

Income Manipulation

Asset Concealment and Undervaluation

Tip

Watch the lifestyle. If your spouse’s reported income does not match their spending — new car, expensive vacations, designer purchases, dining out constantly — that gap is evidence. A forensic accountant can perform a “lifestyle analysis” that quantifies the discrepancy between claimed income and actual expenditures.

Suspect your spouse is hiding assets? Talk to a fraud discovery attorney: (951) 972-8287 →

How to Uncover Hidden Assets in a California Divorce

Suspicion is the starting point. Proof is what wins in court. California provides a comprehensive set of discovery tools specifically designed to expose what your spouse is trying to hide.

Formal Discovery Tools

Forensic Accountants

A forensic accountant is not a regular CPA. They are trained to follow money that someone is actively trying to hide. Forensic accountants reconstruct financial histories, analyze bank statements for irregular patterns, trace transfers through multiple accounts, and identify discrepancies between reported income and actual spending. In complex cases — particularly those involving self-employed spouses or business owners — a forensic accountant is often the single most important professional on your team.

Additional Investigation Methods

Note

The court retains jurisdiction to divide any community asset that was omitted from the judgment — whether deliberately or accidentally. FC §2556 This means even if you discover a hidden account years after your divorce is final, you can go back to court and demand your share.

“If the numbers don’t add up, there’s a reason. We know exactly where to look — and exactly what the court can do about it.”
Family Law Matters — (951) 972-8287

Legal Consequences of Hiding Assets in California

This is the part your spouse should be afraid of. California does not merely redistribute hidden assets. It punishes the spouse who hid them — and the penalties can be devastating.

The 50% to 100% Penalty

Under Family Code §1101(g), if a spouse is found to have concealed a community asset, the court shall award the other spouse 50% of the value of the concealed asset. If the concealment was part of a pattern of fraud or involved particularly egregious conduct, the court can award up to 100% of the value of the hidden asset to the innocent spouse. FC §1101(g)

Read that again. Under normal community property rules, each spouse is entitled to 50% of community assets. FC §2550 But when a spouse hides an asset, the innocent spouse gets their 50% share plus a penalty equal to 50% to 100% of the asset’s value. In practice, this means the cheating spouse can lose the entire asset.

The Rossi Case

In In re Marriage of Rossi (2001), a wife won $1.3 million in the California lottery and deliberately hid the winnings from her husband. She filed for divorce 11 days after winning, never disclosed the prize, and the judgment was entered without any reference to the lottery money. When the husband discovered the concealment two years later, the court awarded him 100% of the lottery winnings — the entire $1.3 million — as a penalty for her fraud. The case remains the most cited example of what happens when you try to cheat the system.

Attorney’s Fees and Sanctions

Beyond the asset penalty, FC §2107(d) authorizes the court to order the noncompliant spouse to pay the other party’s attorney’s fees and costs incurred as a result of the concealment. FC §2107(d) Forensic accountants, private investigators, additional depositions, document subpoenas — all of those costs can be shifted to the spouse who made them necessary by hiding assets in the first place.

Perjury

Every Declaration of Disclosure is signed under penalty of perjury. If your spouse signs an FL-140 or FL-142 stating that they have disclosed all assets and debts, and that statement is knowingly false, they have committed perjury — a felony under California Penal Code §118. While criminal prosecution in family law cases is rare, the possibility exists, and the finding of perjury strengthens the innocent spouse’s position on every other issue in the case.

Reopening the Judgment

Perhaps the most powerful consequence: there is no statute of limitations on omitted assets. Under FC §2556, the court retains jurisdiction to divide any asset that was not included in the original judgment — at any time. FC §2556 Your divorce could have been finalized five, ten, or twenty years ago. If you discover that your spouse hid an account or failed to disclose property, you can petition the court to reopen the case and divide that asset. The judgment is never truly final when assets have been omitted.

The FC §1101 Claim — Breach of Fiduciary Duty

Family Code §1101 is the primary weapon against a spouse who has breached their fiduciary duty through asset concealment. Understanding how this claim works is essential for anyone pursuing recovery of hidden assets.

What You Must Prove

To prevail on an FC §1101 claim, you must establish four elements:

  1. A fiduciary duty existed — this is automatically satisfied between spouses and continues through divorce proceedings FC §721
  2. The duty was breached — by concealing, transferring, undervaluing, or failing to disclose a community asset or debt
  3. You suffered damages — you received less than your lawful share of the community estate as a result of the breach
  4. Causation — the breach directly caused the damage

When You Can Bring the Claim

An FC §1101 claim can be brought in three contexts:

The Rule

Do not confuse the 3-year statute of limitations on FC §1101 claims with the no-limitations rule under FC §2556 for omitted assets. They serve different purposes. The FC §1101 claim is for the penalty (50%–100%). The FC §2556 petition is for the division of the omitted asset itself (your 50% community share). You may be able to pursue one or both depending on when the concealment is discovered.

The Penalty Is Discretionary

The court has discretion in determining whether to award 50% or up to 100% of the concealed asset. Factors that push toward the higher end include:

A one-time, modest oversight is more likely to result in a 50% penalty. A calculated scheme to hide a substantial asset — like the lottery winnings in Rossi — is a 100% case.

Found hidden assets after your divorce? You still have legal options: (951) 972-8287 →

Post-Judgment Discovery of Hidden Assets

Many people believe that once the divorce judgment is entered, it is over. When it comes to omitted assets, it is never over.

FC §2556: The Court Always Has Jurisdiction

Family Code §2556 provides that the court retains jurisdiction to divide any community property asset or debt that was not adjudicated by the judgment. FC §2556 There is no filing deadline. There is no statute of limitations. If your spouse hid a brokerage account during your divorce in 2015 and you discover it in 2030, you can file a motion to divide that account.

“Omitted” vs. “Adjudicated” Assets

This distinction is critical. An omitted asset is one that was never disclosed, never addressed, and never divided in the judgment. The court has automatic jurisdiction to divide it under FC §2556. An adjudicated asset is one that the judgment already addressed — even if the value was wrong or the division was unfair. Adjudicated assets generally cannot be reopened except through a motion to set aside the judgment under CCP §473 or FC §2120–2129, which have specific time limitations and procedural requirements.

Tip

If you discover a hidden asset after your divorce is final, document everything before you act. Gather bank statements, account records, screenshots, and any evidence that establishes the asset’s existence and your spouse’s knowledge of it. Then consult an attorney immediately. Acting quickly and strategically preserves your leverage and prevents your spouse from dissipating the asset once they realize you are aware of it.

How to Reopen the Case

To divide an omitted asset, you (or your attorney) file a motion or order to show cause in the same court that entered your divorce judgment. The motion identifies the omitted asset, presents evidence that it was not included in the original division, and requests that the court exercise its jurisdiction under FC §2556 to divide it. If the asset was deliberately hidden, you can simultaneously pursue the FC §1101 penalty — assuming you are within the 3-year discovery window.

What Evidence You Need

Working with an Attorney — Why Specialized Representation Matters

Fraudulent concealment cases are not standard divorces. They require a specific combination of legal knowledge, forensic resources, and aggressive litigation strategy that general family law practitioners may not possess.

Why You Need an Experienced Divorce Attorney

An attorney experienced in asset protection and concealment cases brings several critical capabilities to your case:

The Role of the Forensic Accountant

In virtually every concealment case, a forensic accountant is essential. Your attorney works with the forensic accountant to identify suspicious transactions, trace assets through multiple accounts, reconstruct income from business records, and prepare expert testimony for trial. The cost of a forensic accountant is an investment — and one that the court can order your spouse to reimburse.

What to Bring to Your Consultation

If you suspect your spouse is hiding assets, bring as much of the following as you can to your initial consultation:

The more information you provide, the faster your attorney can assess whether concealment is occurring and develop a targeted strategy to prove it. At Family Law Matters, initial consultations are free and confidential. If your spouse is hiding assets, we want to hear about it. For additional background on the divorce process itself, visit our California Divorce FAQ or our guide to filing for divorce in Riverside County.

Key Takeaways
  • Spouses owe each other a fiduciary duty equivalent to business partners — full transparency on all assets, debts, and income is legally required throughout the divorce. FC §721
  • Mandatory disclosures are not optional — both spouses must exchange Preliminary (FL-140) and Final (FL-141) Declarations of Disclosure under penalty of perjury. FC §2104
  • The penalty for hiding assets is severe — the court can award the innocent spouse 50% to 100% of the value of the concealed asset. FC §1101(g)
  • Attorney’s fees can be shifted — the concealing spouse may be ordered to pay all costs incurred in uncovering the fraud. FC §2107(d)
  • There is no time limit on omitted assets — the court retains jurisdiction to divide undisclosed assets at any time after the judgment. FC §2556
  • The Rossi case is real precedent — a wife hid $1.3 million in lottery winnings and the court awarded 100% to the husband.
  • Forensic accountants and aggressive discovery win these cases — subpoenas, depositions, lifestyle analysis, and bank statement forensics are how hidden assets are found.
  • Act quickly if you suspect concealment — contact an experienced asset protection attorney and start documenting everything.

Related Resources

Suspect Your Spouse Is Hiding Assets? We Can Help.

Do not wait for your spouse to finish concealing the evidence. Contact Family Law Matters today for a free, confidential consultation with a Temecula divorce attorney who handles fraudulent concealment and hidden asset cases.

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Family Law Matters — Temecula, California

Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Every case is different. No attorney-client relationship is formed by reading this guide. For advice specific to your situation, contact Family Law Matters at (951) 972-8287 to schedule a consultation. California law cited is current as of March 2026.
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