International crimes Under
international law,
genocide,
crimes against humanity and
war crimes are usually not subject to the statute of limitations as codified in a number of multilateral
treaties. States
ratifying the
Convention on the Non-Applicability of Statutory Limitations to War Crimes and Crimes Against Humanity agree to disallow limitations claims for these crimes. According to Article 29 of the
Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes "shall not be subject to any statute of limitations".
Australia In Australia, there are no statutes of limitation in criminal proceedings if the maximum penalty that can be imposed for an offence committed by an individual includes imprisonment for more than 6 months. For civil matters, the statutes of limitation are prescribed by each state or territory jurisdiction.
Victoria The
Limitations Act 1958 allows 12 years for victims of child abuse to make a claim, with age 37 the latest at which a claim can be made. The police submitted evidence to a commission, the Victorian Inquiry into Church and Institutional Child Abuse (in existence since 2012) indicating that it takes an average of 24 years for a victim of
child sexual abuse to go to the police. According to Attorney General Robert Clark, the government will remove statutes of limitations on criminal child abuse; victims of violent crime should be given additional time, as adults, to deal with the legal system. Offenders of minors and the disabled have used the statute of limitations to avoid detection and prosecution, moving from state to state and country to country; an example which was presented to the Victorian Inquiry was the
Christian Brothers. An argument for abolishing statutes of limitations for civil claims by minors and people under guardianship is ensuring that abuse of vulnerable people would be acknowledged by lawyers, police, organizations and governments, with enforceable penalties for organisations which have turned a blind eye in the past.
Support groups such as
SNAP Australia, Care Leavers Australia Network and Broken Rites have submitted evidence to the Victoria inquiry, and the
Law Institute of Victoria has advocated changes to the statute of limitations.
Western Australia The
Criminal Procedure Act 2004 outlines the statute of limitations, stating that a simple offence (an offence which can only be brought to a magistrate's court, and cannot include more than 12 months' imprisonment as the maximum penalty) shall have a statute of limitations of 12 months. However, all crimes (offences which can be brought to a district court or the supreme court) have no statute of limitations. Furthermore, a person may be charged with a simple offence after 12 months' if the person consents to such a charge being laid, or if that offence has a different statute of limitations as provided by law.
Canada Criminal A criminal statute of limitations does exist in Canada, although for most crimes it is rather weak. Offences under the
Criminal Code fall into one of two base categories: summary and indictable, with indictable being the more serious of the two. Additionally, most offences are hybrid offenses, where they may be tried as either summary or indictable depending on the severity of the crime; this is done at the prosecutor's discretion. Summary proceedings have a limitation period of 12 months unless waived (such as under a
plea deal). Hybrid offences cannot be prosecuted as summary after the limitation period, but can still be upgraded to indictable. Non-hybrid summary offences (e.g. causing a disturbance, nudity, trespassing at night, falsifying employment records) cannot be prosecuted at all after the limitation period. Few offences fall under this category. Indictable offences (e.g. murder, kidnapping, sexual assault, perjury) do not have a limitation period; a defendant can be charged at any future date. In sexual assault cases in particular, men and women have been charged and convicted more than 40 years after the abuse had been committed. Hybrid offences (e.g. theft, assault, harassment, mischief) can be charged as indictable if prosecutors deem it to be in the public interest and serious enough to be worth their resources, making the limitation period of 12 months somewhat weak or even irrelevant in many instances. Someone who has committed a hybrid offence in the past can never be truly immune from prosecution simply because their crime is "out of statute", unlike in other jurisdictions. Some hybrid offences may have aggravating factors which automatically make them indictable offences (e.g. mischief causing actual danger to life, assault which causes the victim to be wounded, maimed or disfigured), removing the limitation period entirely.
Civil Limitation periods for civil cases vary by province. Claims filed in
Federal Court are generally subject to the limitation period of the province it arises from; in other cases the limitation period is 6 years. For unsecured consumer debts such as credit cards and personal loans, the applicable provincial limitation period generally runs from the date of the debtor's last payment or written acknowledgment of the debt, after which the debt becomes "statute-barred" and unenforceable in court, although the underlying obligation is generally not extinguished.
Finland In Finland, the authority of a prosecuting official to bring charges for a crime expires after a set period of time has passed since the act. This period is 20, 10, 5, or 2, years depending on the seriousness of the offence. Offences punishable with life imprisonment, such as murder and treason, do not expire. Sexual offences committed against minors do not expire before the victim reaches 23 or 28 years of age, depending on the nature of the offence.
Germany In Germany, the statute of limitations on crimes varies by type of crime, with the highest statute of limitation being 30 years for
voluntary manslaughter (). Murder, genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes and the
crime of aggression have no statute of limitations. In Germany, the crime of murder used to have a 20-year statute of limitations. In 1969, the statute of limitations for murder was extended from 20 to 30 years. The limitations were abolished altogether in 1979, in order to prevent Nazi criminals from avoiding criminal liability. For most other criminal offences, the statute of limitations is set by Section 78(3) of the Criminal Code () as follows: • 30 years for offences which are punishable by a maximum
term of imprisonment for life; • 20 years for offences which are punishable by a maximum term of imprisonment of over 10 years but not by imprisonment for life; • 10 years for offences which are punishable by a maximum term of imprisonment of over 5 years but no more than 10 years; • 5 years for offences which are punishable by a maximum term of imprisonment of over 1 year but no more than 5 years; • 3 years for all other offences. In the civil code (), the regular statute of limitations is three years (plus the time until the end of the calendar year); however, different terms between two and thirty years may apply in specific situations. For example, the term is only two years for claims for alleged defects of purchased goods, but 30 years for claims resulting from a court judgement (such as awarded damages).
India The statute of limitations in India is defined by the Limitations Act, 1963. The statute of limitations for criminal offences is governed by Sec. 468 of the Criminal Procedure Code.
Indonesia The statutes of limitations in Indonesia are defined by articles 136-139 of Law No. 1 of 2023 on Criminal Code, and varies by type of crimes and ages of the perpetrators. According to article 136 of the Criminal Code, as well as article 7 and article 46 of Law No. 26 of 2000 on Human Rights Courts, the limits are as follows: • For crimes committed by adults: • 3 years for crimes which are punishable by a maximum of 1 year imprisonment or by only a maximum criminal fine of category III (Rp50,000,000). • 6 years for crimes which are punishable by a maximum of 3 years imprisonment. • 12 years for crimes which are punishable by a maximum of 7 years imprisonment. • 18 years for crimes which are punishable by a maximum of 15 years imprisonment. • 20 years for crimes which are punishable by a maximum of 20 years imprisonment, life imprisonment, or capital punishment. • For crimes committed by children: • 1 year for crimes which are punishable by a maximum of 1 year imprisonment or by only a maximum criminal fine of category III (Rp50,000,000). • 2 years for crimes which are punishable by a maximum of 3 years imprisonment. • 4 years for crimes which are punishable by a maximum of 7 years imprisonment. • 6 years for crimes which are punishable by a maximum of 15 years imprisonment. • around 6.6 years for crimes which are punishable by a maximum of 20 years imprisonment, life imprisonment, or capital punishment. • No limit for genocide and crimes against humanity. For most crimes, the prescriptive period begins from the following day after the crime is committed. However, exceptions are made for crimes of forgery, currency destruction, abduction, and hostage-taking. For the first two, the period is calculated from the following day after the forged goods or damaged currency is used, while for crimes of abduction and hostage-taking, it is calculated from the following day after the victim is released or dies as a direct result of the crime. • 6 months for offences which are punishable by a maximum of 3 months imprisonment or a $7,500 fine. • 12 months for offences which are punishable by a maximum of 6 months imprisonment or a $20,000 fine. • 5 years for offences which are punishable by a maximum of 3 years imprisonment, although this can be extended with the consent of the
Solicitor-General. • No limit for offences which are punishable by more than 3 years imprisonment.
Norway The statute of limitations on murder was abolished by a change in law on 1 July 2014, causing any murders committed after 1 July 1989 to have no statute of limitations. This led to the national police force implementing a new investigation group for old cases called the "Cold Case" group. The law was also changed to let cases involving domestic violence, forced marriage, human trafficking and genital mutilation to count from the day the victim turns 18 years old. Cases where the statute of limitations have already passed can not be extended due to the constitution preventing it.
Philippines In the Philippines, the
Revised Penal Code has different limitation periods, based on the penalty of the crime: •
Reclusión perpetua or
reclusión temporal (imprisonment of 12 years and 1 day to 40 years): 20 years • Other afflictive penalties (imprisonment of 6 years and 1 day to 12 years): 15 years • Correctional penalties: 10 years, except: •
Arresto mayor (imprisonment of 1 month and 1 day to 6 months): 5 years • Libel and other similar offenses: 1 year • Oral defamation and slander: 6 months • Light penalties (imprisonment of 1 day to 30 days): 2 months Other special laws have their own limitation periods. For crimes punished under the Revised Penal Code, the limitation period won't run if the offender is outside the Philippines, while for those punished under other laws, it does. Municipal ordinances have a limitation period of 2 months.
South Korea In July 2015, the National Assembly abolished a 25-year limit on first degree murder; it had previously been extended from 15 to 25 years in December 2007.
Turkey Turkish Code of Obligations sets the general limitation period to ten years, which applies where the law does not provide a specific limitation period. There is no statute of limitations for
sexual offenses committed against
minors, however, under both the Turkish Penal Code (article 99) and
Turkish Civil Code (Law No. 2827).
United Kingdom The United Kingdom has no statute of limitations for criminal offences beyond minor
summary offences (offences tried exclusively in the
magistrates' courts); For civil claims, the period of validity varies depending on the type of claim. For example, a claim (debt) from a simple contract can no longer be pursued after six years.
United States In the United States, statutes of limitations may apply in
criminal procedures and civil lawsuits. Statutes of limitations vary significantly among U.S. jurisdictions. A
government agency is permitted by the
Congress to create under
federal regulations its own statute of limitations.
Retroactive extensions The
U.S. Supreme Court held in 2003 in
Stogner v. California by a 5–4 majority that
California's retroactive extension of the criminal statute of limitations for
sexual offenses committed against
minors was an unconstitutional
ex post facto law.
Civil statutes A civil statute of limitations applies to a non-criminal legal action, including a
tort or
contract case. If the statute of limitations expires before a lawsuit is filed, the defendant may raise the statute of limitations as an
affirmative defense to seek dismissal of the claim. The exact time period depends on both the state and the type of claim (contract claim, personal injury, fraud etc.). Most fall in the range of one to ten years, with two to three years being most common.
Criminal statutes A criminal statute of limitations defines a time period during which charges must be initiated for a criminal offense. If a charge is filed after the statute of limitations expires, the defendant may obtain dismissal of the charge.
Initiation of charges The statute of limitations in a criminal case only runs until a criminal charge is filed and a warrant issued, even if the defendant is a fugitive. When the identity of a defendant is not known, some jurisdictions provide mechanisms to initiate charges and thus stop the statute of limitations from running. For example, some states allow an indictment of a
John Doe defendant based upon a DNA profile derived from evidence obtained through a criminal investigation. Although rare, a
grand jury can issue an
indictment in absentia for high-profile crimes to get around an upcoming statute of limitations deadline. One example is the
skyjacking of Northwest Orient Airlines Flight 305 by
D. B. Cooper in 1971. The identity of D. B. Cooper remains unknown, and he was indicted under the name "John Doe, aka Dan Cooper."
Heinous crimes Crimes which are widely considered heinous have no statute of limitations. Although there is usually no statute of limitations for murder (particularly
first-degree murder), judges have been known to dismiss murder charges in
cold cases if they feel that the delay violates the defendant's right to a speedy trial. For example, waiting many years for an
alibi witness to die before commencing a murder trial would be unconstitutional.
Military law Under the U.S.
Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ),
desertion has no statute of limitations.
Maritime Injury Law Under 46 U.S. Code § 30106, "Except as otherwise provided by law, a civil action for damages for personal injury or death arising out of a maritime tort must be brought within 3 years after the cause of action arose." There are some exceptions to this, primarily with regard to Jones Act cases filed against the government, in which case the statute of limitations can be less than 2 years.
State laws Exceptions Pursuant to the legal doctrine of tolling, U.S. jurisdictions recognize exceptions to statutes of limitation that may allow for the prosecution of a crime or civil lawsuit even after the statute of limitations would otherwise have expired. Some states stop the clock for a suspect who is not residing within the state. The right to
speedy trial may potentially derail a felony prosecution after many years have passed, including in states that have no statute of limitations for the charged offense.
Fraud on the court When an
officer of the court is found to have fraudulently presented facts to impair the court's impartial performance of its legal task, the act (known as
fraud upon the court) is not subject to a statute of limitation: "This concept that the inherent power of federal courts to vacate a fraudulently obtained judgment—even years after the judgment was entered—has long been recognized by the Supreme Court." Fraud on the court can be done many ways and in any court. One of which can be "where the court or a member is corrupted or influenced or influence is attempted or where the judge has not performed his judicial function — thus where the impartial functions of the court have been directly corrupted." Officer of the court includes any
judge,
law clerk,
court clerk,
lawyer, investigator,
probation officer,
referee,
legal guardian, parenting-time expeditor, mediator, evaluator, administrator, special appointee or anyone else whose influence is part of the judicial mechanism.
Continuing-violations doctrine In
tort law, if any person or entity commits a series of illegal acts against another person or entity (or in criminal law if a defendant commits a continuing crime) the limitation period may begin to run from the last act in the series. The entire
chain of events can be tolled if the violations were continuing. Courts have explained that the continuing-violations doctrine "tolls the statute of limitations in situations where a continuing pattern forms due to
discriminatory acts which have been occurring over a period of time, as long as at least one incident of discrimination occurred within the limitations period." Whether the continuing-violations doctrine applies to a particular violation is subject to judicial discretion; it was said to apply to
copyright infringement in the jurisdiction of the Seventh Circuit, but not in the jurisdiction of the Second Circuit. ==See also==