No, wage garnishment by a judgment creditor must run consecutively not concurrently. Garnishment/automatic deduction of court ordered child support is not considered a 'true garnishment', that being the case a child support deduction and creditor garnishment can be active at the same time.
Means a judge's order you must pay a creditor. A creditor with a judgment can have your wages garnished to repay the debt.
Yes.
Not for the same debt, but a wage garnishment can be implemented by one judgment creditor and a bank account levy by an additional judgment creditor.
Yes. If the creditor receives a lawsuit judgment the judgment can be enforced as a wage ganishment.
If your creditor has obtained a judgment against you, yes.
Means a judge's order you must pay a creditor. A creditor with a judgment can have your wages garnished to repay the debt.
Yes.
Wages can be garnished if the creditor wins a judgment against you. In order to so that, you must first be sued by the creditor. And the creditor must win the judgment in court. If you are sued, be sure to attend the court hearing and plead your case to prevent this from happening.
Yes, but the creditor would have to sue in the debtor's state court in the county where the debtor resides and if awarded a judgment execute the writ under the laws of Massachusetts not Oklahoma. If the judgment creditor already holds a writ of judgment in Oklahoma they can file it as an abstract judgment against the debtor's real property without the necessity of court procedure.
If the husband was not liable for the debt, then his wages cannot be garnished to collect on the judgment. The judgment is against the person who incurred the debt.
Wages can be garnished in the state of PA. The creditor needs to go to court, and get a judgment against you, and garnishment will begin in approximately one month.
Not for the same debt, but a wage garnishment can be implemented by one judgment creditor and a bank account levy by an additional judgment creditor.
Yes. If the creditor receives a lawsuit judgment the judgment can be enforced as a wage ganishment.
If your creditor has obtained a judgment against you, yes.
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, Ohio allows wage garnishment by a judgment creditor.
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.