Yes, if the creditor sues, and the judge rules in his or her favor, a lien can be placed on a co-signer's business.
yes. the creditor can put a lien on anything that may be counted as your assets. if your corporate business account is one of your assets, the creditor can try to recover their money from that account.
Yes, if the creditor obtains a judgment lien in court.Yes, if the creditor obtains a judgment lien in court.Yes, if the creditor obtains a judgment lien in court.Yes, if the creditor obtains a judgment lien in court.
Yes. Your creditor can seek a judgment lien in court.
Yes. If you owe a creditor money and you have an asset (such as a house), a creditor can put a lien against your asset for any amount, even $1.
Only if the parents cosigned the note.
The answer is yes, if the creditor brings you to court on the matter.
When you signed the contract to finance the vehicle, the creditor put a lien on the vehicle. In the rare event that this was not done, it can be done later in some cases.Also, a creditor can place a lien on an already financedvehicle if there is more equity in the vehicle than the amount of the original loan. Generally, a creditor who obtains a judgment lien against you can arrange to place that lien against any property you own in order to satisfy the lien.
Yes, but if the judment has been secured (meaning the creditor has put a lien on the property) then the lien survives the BK, unless there is a motion to avoid a lien.
A creditor can put a lien on federal income tax refunds and usually will when the debt is that of a student loan or child support. Other creditors can if the right paperwork is filed within a specified time frame to the IRS.
Yes. That is what judgment liens are all about. A creditor can sue you in court and if successful obtain a lien against your real estate.
Yes. If there is a balance due on the loan and the creditor has obtained a court judgment.
No, unless it is a sole proprietorship. The IRS cannot put a lien on anything held by a corporation, LLC, etc. However, note that the IRS lien attaches to all property -- real and personal, tangible and intangible. That means that if they put a lien on you, they have technically attached that lien to your ownership interest in the company.