Yes, a hospital can sue you for nonpayment. If you fail to pay your hospital bill, the hospital will report your account to a collection agency.
Yes, you may sue anyone who breaks the items stipulated in any written contract signed and agreed upon by both parties in the first place.
Not directly. They could sue for your assets, which would include your house though.
YOU don't sue a hospital for malpractice. Get a malpractice attorney who specializes in that area and he/she will let you know if they think you have a case that they can win for you.
Generally, it will sue (or sell the debt to someone who will sue) within the statute of limitations for suing on a credit card debt in your state. This is often 5 years, but it can be less or more.
If you can prove it you would need to sue the hospital.
Yes. A payday loan company may sue a borrower in Texas in order to get their money back.
If there is no court order in place for child support, you will likely not win a court case for back child support. If the case is currently handled by a recovery unit, you can sue for nonpayment.
compensated
Yes.
yes
Only if it was due to their negligence. If it can be proven that they were looking after his best interests (i.e. no negligence was involved), then no. And it would probably have to be a specific doctor that you sue, not the hospital.
That is the correct spelling of nonpayment (failure to remit payment).