The law expressly stipulates that if a litigant participant or other person commits one of the following acts in transferring property, the people's court may impose a fine or detention according to the seriousness of the case; If the case constitutes a crime, criminal responsibility shall be investigated according to law:
1. Forge or destroy important evidence, which hinders the people's court from hearing cases;
2. Insulting, slandering, framing, beating or retaliating against judicial personnel, participants in litigation, witnesses, translators, expert witnesses, inspectors and assisting executors;
3. Preventing witnesses from testifying by violence, threat or bribery, or instigating, bribing or coercing others to commit perjury;
4. Hiding, transferring, selling or destroying the property that has been sealed up or detained, or transferring the property that has been counted and ordered to be kept;
5. Refusing to perform the legally effective judgment or ruling of the people's court;
6. Obstructing judicial personnel from performing their duties by violence, threat or other means.
Therefore, you can boldly file legal proceedings. The specific process is as follows:
First of all, provide sufficient evidence to prove that the debtor's transfer of property occurred during the existence of the creditor's rights, and caused damage to your creditor's rights (the actual consequence of the failure to perform the debt).
Second, take your evidence to the court and claim that the debtor's transfer of property is invalid.
It should be reminded that the procedures involved are complicated, and it is recommended to consult a professional lawyer to avoid missing the best evidence-giving period because of unnecessary entanglement.