No. A judgment creditor cannot take possession of child support payments to satisfy a lien.No. A judgment creditor cannot take possession of child support payments to satisfy a lien.No. A judgment creditor cannot take possession of child support payments to satisfy a lien.No. A judgment creditor cannot take possession of child support payments to satisfy a lien.
Yes.
Yes. Your creditor can request a judgment lien and take any property you own to satisfy the lien.Yes. Your creditor can request a judgment lien and take any property you own to satisfy the lien.Yes. Your creditor can request a judgment lien and take any property you own to satisfy the lien.Yes. Your creditor can request a judgment lien and take any property you own to satisfy the lien.
The creditor can take the matter to court, obtain a judgment lien and take any property either party owns.The creditor can take the matter to court, obtain a judgment lien and take any property either party owns.The creditor can take the matter to court, obtain a judgment lien and take any property either party owns.The creditor can take the matter to court, obtain a judgment lien and take any property either party owns.
yes
No. The judgment creditor might take your car and sell it to pay part of the judgment, but your license has no intrinsic value for sale. In addition, the judgment creditor is not permitted to seize your license or ask the state to seize it until you pay the judgment.
If the judgment is for state or federal taxes then any refund is subject to seizure by the agency holding the judgment. If it is a creditor judgment, a tax refund would only be subject to attachment if it were placed in a bank account that was being levied by the judgment creditor. I would consult with a tax attorney.
A creditor can sue in court to obtain a lien against a debtor for an unsecured loan. If successful in the lawsuit, the creditor can request a judgment lien that can be used to take the debtor's property to pay the amount due.A creditor can sue in court to obtain a lien against a debtor for an unsecured loan. If successful in the lawsuit, the creditor can request a judgment lien that can be used to take the debtor's property to pay the amount due.A creditor can sue in court to obtain a lien against a debtor for an unsecured loan. If successful in the lawsuit, the creditor can request a judgment lien that can be used to take the debtor's property to pay the amount due.A creditor can sue in court to obtain a lien against a debtor for an unsecured loan. If successful in the lawsuit, the creditor can request a judgment lien that can be used to take the debtor's property to pay the amount due.
Yes, in the event the court orders it.
Generally when a defendant does not appear in a creditor civil suit, the court will award the plantiff a default judgment against the debtor. The judgment creditor can then execute the writ in the manner allowed by the laws of the judgment debtor's state. If a vehicle is not protected under the exemption amount allowed a judgment creditor can place a lien on the vehicle and request a forced sale. However, this is rarely done, as it is time consuming, complicated and seldom results in the judgment creditor recovering all monies owed. Please be advised, a judgment creditor has several options for enforcing the judgment, the preferred method is wage garnishment or bank account levy, followed by the seizure and sale of other non exempt property owned solely by the judgment debtor.
It depends on the details. If the business was incorporated and the judgment was against the corporation the creditor can only take business property and assets. If you owned the business as individuals then a judgment creditor can take any of your assets to satisfy the judgment: bank accounts, vehicles, boats, equipment, real property, etc.
Not unless the creditor has a judgment order and executes it as a bank levy.