Possibly 'post-judgement' they might be, but the finding of the court is still a court order and cannot be subject to change. Either the payor or the payee would have to file a motion with the to alter its' judgement.
Yes, the estate of the deceased is responsible for all debts, including the collection of legal fees as allowed by judgment or law.
The bank, as judgment creditor, cannot change the principle judgment amount. They can, however, add attorney fees and interest as allowed by the law of your state. Contact a lawyer or legal services firm in your area for specific info on your state's laws.
Yes, if they have or obtain a judgment against you for the outstanding balance of the loan, plus collection fees, legal fees, repossession fees, storage fees, auction fees, and any unpaid balance. Essentially, you could end up owing much more than the original loan, and if (when) they obtain the judgment, you will have no say in how they collect it. they can garnish your bank accounts, attach other assets with court order, and garnish your state tax returns as well.
The duration of Snap Judgment - legal comedy show - is 1800.0 seconds.
1. Bad credit score. 2. Higher interest rate for card balance payments. 3. Late payment penalties. 4. Collection and legal fees added to balance. 5. Lawsuit for debt collection, including legal fees and costs, and statutory interest added to your balance. 6. If judgment not paid within (usually) 30 days, more legal procedures and fees to collect on the judgment, plus statutory inerest. 7. Really bad credit score. File bankruptcy and avoid all this. Debt consolidation will NOT prevent any of thses things.
No
Attorney fees should be included in the terms of the lawsuit judgment.
Snap Judgment - legal comedy show - was created on 1999-04-01.
reimbursed
Lenders don't issue deficiency judgments. Courts do. And if the lender doesn't get the total amount owed, including all the costs of trying to recover (legal, towing, fix up, maintenance, interest, fees, etc), then they would ask the court for this judgment and normally get it.
The judge is the voice of the court; his judgment is the court's judgment.
A California domestic judgment accrues interest at 10% until paid, no other fees involved.