Yes--you will need the patient's name, social security number, and date of injury. The DWC website has a free search tool to find the ADJ or work comp number.
Best practices dictate that you work with the association's attorney to identify the proper lien to file, and to follow the process required to file such a lien. An improper lien, filed improperly will give an owner an 'out'.
Read your governing documents where the authority to lien and process for establishing a lien are all written out. Work with your association's condominium-savvy attorney to file the lien and pursue collecting the debt.
Workers comp is a benefit associated with workplace inuries, not with lack of work. Employers never file for WC, injured employees do.
He can sue you for any work he performed prior to his withdrawal. If the court decides in his favor he can ask for a judgment lien and file that in the land records. You cannot sell or mortgage your property until the lien is paid.He can sue you for any work he performed prior to his withdrawal. If the court decides in his favor he can ask for a judgment lien and file that in the land records. You cannot sell or mortgage your property until the lien is paid.He can sue you for any work he performed prior to his withdrawal. If the court decides in his favor he can ask for a judgment lien and file that in the land records. You cannot sell or mortgage your property until the lien is paid.He can sue you for any work he performed prior to his withdrawal. If the court decides in his favor he can ask for a judgment lien and file that in the land records. You cannot sell or mortgage your property until the lien is paid.
Read your governing documents and work with your association attorney to file a lien for unpaid assessments.
within 30 days of the injury
only if your surgery is the result of a work related injury. Sorry.
Generally, the association will work with its counsel to file a lien on your property that you own within the association.
This is a good question and it has more questions layered within it that you probably didn't realize. An article that will help you with this question was written on the Lien Blog, and you can read it in the related link for further information. Can A Contractor File A Mechanics Lien If They Didn't Finish The Work?
Yes. If the contractor has performed work on the house, and has not been paid, he may file a lien. Even if you truly don't owe the contractor any money, he may still file a lien; eventually, he will have to prove its validity in court or the lien is released automatically.
Best practices dictate that you work with your association's attorney to file a lien for unpaid assessments. Generally, a single lien can be worded in such a way so as to update the lien's impact sufficient to cover unpaid liens over a period that they may continue to go unpaid. Your association attorney who helped you file the original lien can give you the answer you need.
In most states, the contractor must have performed work or brought materials to the job site before he can file a lien.