yes
Yes, as the fail under US jurisdiction
Yes, if the creditor sues the debtor and receives a judgment award the judgment can in the majority of US states be executed as a wage garnishment.
Yes, if the creditor sues the debtor and receives a judgment award the judgment can in the majority of US states be executed as a wage garnishment.
If you move from Canada to the US and have bad debt in Canada will it effect your credit in the US?
agfafsfasfas
definitely
"The great Canadian dream is to get out of Canada"
they make 1,000,000 dollars three months becasse they have more money
not all canadians move to u.s.a, that just like saying why did u.s.a move to canada. we didn't move to u.s.a not all canadians move to u.s.a, that just like saying why did u.s.a move to canada. we didn't move to u.s.a
no.
The answers are not the same dude!
It's your wages that get garnished...not the credit card. Even then, garnishment would normally occur only after many other steps have been taken to collect the debt...and certain legal process done. (Understand too, the cost of any and all actions that are needed to be taken to collect the debt will become your obligation to pay too). A few states in the US restrict garnished wages to a few types of debts. Specifically, North and South Carolina, Texas and Pennsylvania allow garnished wages only for federal or state tax debts, child support, defaulted student loans that are federally guaranteed, or for compensatory damages decided by a court during a criminal or civil law suit. The exceptions though, not the rule.