Although many states have "borrowing statutes" that will apply a shorter statute of limitations from a jurisdiction where a cause of action accrued, while the defendant was living out-of-state, Indiana does not have a conventional borrowing statute. You should expect that the court of the state in which you are sued will apply that state's own statute of limitations. Statutes of limitation are considered to be procedural laws and thus, absent a law that requires the use of an out-of-state statute, courts will normally apply the laws of the state in which the lawsuit is filed even if the cause of action accrued in a different state.
Quoting IC Sec. 34-11-4-2. Bar of cause of action is defense

