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If the plaintiff (that is the person who filed the law suit) wins (i.e. is awarded a judgment), then they can attempt to collect the money that they were awarded by the Court. There is no guarantee that they will be able to collect any money, as the Court is not involved in this process and it is up to each individual plaintiff to collect on their judgment.
Yes. It doesn't matter how much the account balance is, it only matters if the creditor can collect the money owed after wining a lawsuit
they can't do much if you have no money and thaey may put a lean on your house if the person wins the lawsuit, but they can only collect if you sell your house so don't sell it
If there is a lawsuit that benefits the estate, the estate will have to be reopened. The creditors can make their claims. The court should not have a problem reopening it in this instance. The creditors can force it as well.
In a lawsuit, any party may subpoena bank account records as long as the records are relevant to the issue in the lawsuit. After a lawsuit, a judgment creditor may subpoena the defendant to see his/her bank records in order to help collect on the judgment debt. During a lawsuit, a party would not be allowed to subpoena a the other party's bank records to see if there is enough money to pay the claim.
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Award
If someone sued you and won a money judgment against you, it would show up on a credit report if you failed to pay the amount, and a collection agency was engaged to collect it, but failed to obtain payment from you. When a person wins a money judgment in a lawsuit, the court order will state the amount due to that person (the plaintiff) from the defendant who lost the lawsuit. Amounts ordered by a court can, alternatively, be collected by the County Sheriff's Department, on behalf of the person who won the lawsuit. Collections processed by the County are typically done via wage garnishment of the person who owes the money.
They collect money for stuffing animals.
because they had to gave that tax money for educations, hospitals, roads and other public services for.
Because your town needs money, and that's a easy way to collect money.
No. The most legal action that can be taken against you include: delinquency reported to the credit bureaus, collection agents begin to call you and then possibly a lawsuit to collect the owed money.