Subject summary
T. Vaughn (DOB 19xx · last known address Henderson, NV). Owner of a single LLC interest and one titled vehicle. Real-property holdings present in 2022 are no longer held individually as of 2024 — the Henderson residence was transferred to the Vaughn Family NV Asset Protection Trust on 2023-04-12, eleven months before the subject judgment was entered.
Recovery posture is constrained. The trust transfer occurred close enough to the judgment date and to the underlying tort claim's accrual date to support a fraudulent-transfer cause of action under NRS 112.180, but Nevada's spendthrift trust statute (NRS 166) is one of the most aggressive in the country and outcomes are not certain.
Judgment details
- Cause number
- A-23-885421-C
- Court of record
- Eighth Judicial District Court, Clark County, NV
- Judgment amount
- $128,000.00 principal + costs
- Date entered
- 2024-03-08
- Statute of limitations
- Current — 6-year period under NRS 11.190(1)(a) (renewable).
Real property findings
| Parcel | Address | County | Est. value | Exemptions | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 178-08-512-024 | Held by Vaughn Family NV APT (formerly held individually) | Clark | $612,000 (transferred 2023-04-12) | Held in spendthrift trust — see fraudulent-transfer analysis | redrock.clarkcountynv.gov |
Vehicles & UCC liens
| Item | Detail | Lien status | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2020 Cadillac Escalade | VIN ending 1147 · Title issued 2020-04 | No active UCC | dmvnv.com |
Business interests
| Entity | Role | Status | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Spring Valley Capital, LLC | Member (50%) | Active — manager-managed | esos.nv.gov |
Bankruptcy & litigation history
- 2021-08-15Underlying tort claim accruedPlaintiff's pleadings — basis of subject judgment
- 2023-04-12Real property transferred to NV APTVaughn Family NV Asset Protection Trust — Clark County recorder Doc. No. 2023-0412-1882
- 2024-03-08Subject judgment enteredCause No. A-23-885421-C · $128,000 principal + costs
- 2026-04-08No bankruptcy filings (PACER)Last 10 years checked, no active stay
Recoverable value analysis
This section translates the public-record findings above into a dollar view: what the judgment is worth today, which assets are realistically reachable, and whether the exposed value covers the claim. Figures are estimated exposed asset value, not guaranteed collection.
- Judgment principal
- $128,000
- Post-judgment interest (indicative, since 2024)
- + $19,000
- Recording & anticipated execution costs
- + $2,000
Baseline exposed value covers about a third of the claim; the upside depends on a contested trust-transfer fight.
This is a strategic call, not a clerical one. The recorded trust transfer is a strong fraudulent-transfer signal, but Nevada's spendthrift statute (NRS 166) gives the trustee real defenses.
- $612,000Henderson residence — held by NV APTContestedTransferred 11 months pre-judgment. Reachable only via a fraudulent-transfer action (NRS 112.180).
- ~$40,000Spring Valley Capital, LLC — 50% interestPartialCharging order reaches distributions from the manager-managed entity.
- ~$15,0002020 Cadillac EscaladePartialUnencumbered; equity above exemption is reachable.
Recovery score rationale
Score: 41 / 100 — Medium confidence. The score reflects a single material asset (the LLC interest in Spring Valley Capital) and an unencumbered titled vehicle, against the absence of recoverable real property post-trust-transfer.
The score is held above the LOW band by the temporal proximity of the trust transfer to the underlying tort accrual date (~20 months) and the judgment date (~11 months). This pattern is among the strongest signals of fraudulent-transfer exposure under NRS 112.180, but Nevada's spendthrift trust statute (NRS 166) provides the trust beneficiary substantial defenses that limit certainty of recovery.
Confidence is rated Medium because the trust transfer is a verifiable public fact (recorded deed) but the strength of a fraudulent-transfer claim against a Nevada APT is highly fact-specific and depends on solvency analysis at the time of transfer — which Writrun cannot independently verify from public records.
Enforcement path & indicative timeline
- Step 1Weeks 1–2Charging order + writ on the LLC interest and vehicleSecures the uncontested ~$45K of exposed value while the larger question is evaluated.
- Step 2Weeks 2–6Judgment debtor exam focused on solvency at transferEstablishes the record needed to test a fraudulent-transfer claim under NRS 112.180.
- Step 3Case-by-caseFraudulent-transfer action against the APT trusteePursued only if the firm has appetite for contested Nevada litigation — but the upside is the full $612K residence.
Windows are illustrative sequencing, not commitments or legal advice. Actual timing depends on court calendars and your firm's strategy.
Recommended next step
Firms in this asset profile typically pursue a fraudulent-transfer action under NRS 112.180 against the trustee of the NV APT, paired with a charging order against the LLC interest. Whether to bring the fraudulent-transfer claim is a strategic call that depends on the firm's appetite for contested litigation in Nevada state court.
A judgment debtor exam should be the first procedural step — it surfaces solvency representations made at the time of transfer.
Writrun does not provide legal advice. Your firm makes all decisions about strategy, timing, and filings.
Sources appendix
- [1]https://redrock.clarkcountynv.gov/2026-04-08T15:30Z
- [2]https://esos.nv.gov/2026-04-08T15:32Z
- [3]https://dmvnv.com/2026-04-08T15:33Z
- [4]https://www.clarkcountycourts.us/2026-04-08T15:35Z
- [5]https://pacer.uscourts.gov/2026-04-08T15:37Z