If you have the appropriate court order, yes.
Yes, in Gwinnett County, Georgia, a landlord can potentially garnish a tenant's wages if they have obtained a court judgment for unpaid rent or damages. The landlord would first need to obtain a court order allowing them to garnish the wages through the tenant's employer.
A landlord can garnish yor wadges if you do not pay rent
If it is true fact, then yes.
Not if you listed your landlord as a creditor on your bankruptcy petition and that there is excess property to pay your landlord after secured creditors and your exemptions. Unpaid rent is an unsecured debt. If a judgment lien is filed, you can avoid it if filed shortly before bankruptcy filing.
If you were evicted for non-payment of rent, your landlord COULD file a lien against you for the unpaid amount.
Only for current rent. Federal law prohibits the use of government subsidies to pay an old debt.
The landlord's tacit hypothec -- It is an action that gives the landlord security for rent money that has not been paid. If the tenant has not paid the rent ,his goods are sold to cover the unpaid rent. When the goods are attached, it means an officer of the court will come and take the goods away as a form of security for outstanding rent and while the goods are on the leased property the landlord may interdict the tenant from removing them.
Yes, but only if the landlord has a valid civil judgment against you.
The landlord has self-remedies, up to a point. But landlords cannot issue a "legal judgement". The landlord can deduct damages and unpaid rent from your security deposit, and the landlord or tenant can seek legal resolution.
no I don't think so but they will send it to collection agency and u may have a hard time renting again
It depends upon state law and what the agreement says (provided it does not actually contradict state law). For example, many states have a separate law for "security deposit" related to rent and "damage deposit" related to the costs of repairs or cleaning. In such a state it may be illegal for a landlord to seize a damage deposit to "cover the rent" if there was no invoice for "repairs" for damage.