Yes. Your creditor can request a judgment lien and take any property you own to satisfy the lien.
Yes. Your creditor can request a judgment lien and take any property you own to satisfy the lien.
Yes. Your creditor can request a judgment lien and take any property you own to satisfy the lien.
Yes. Your creditor can request a judgment lien and take any property you own to satisfy the lien.
Yes you can. It will depend on the size of the judgment and the age as well. The judgment can not jeopardized the security of the new loan.
Yes. Your creditor can request a judgment lien and take any property you own to satisfy the lien.
yes you can
The debtor would need to pay the debt owed or make a settlement or payment with the creditor who is threatening or has initiated a lawsuit, Judgments cannot be "avoided" when they are in connection with a valid debt.
Face your judgments using valid arguments, and have your name clean again.
If the judgments are by a third party against the ex-husband as the only defendant then they are not your mother's debts. If they mention her name as a defendant her estate is responsible. If the judgments were granted to her ex-husband against HER then he can make a claim against the estate as a creditor.
A judgment is against specific things.
The only option for stopping a lawsuit and/or obtaining relief of judgments is filing bankruptcy. Otherwise, once a creditor has filed a lawsuit against you and you receive notice of the hearing, or recovered a judgment against you, you cannot stop the process.
Recovery
No, they don't effect your tax calculation if that's what you mean. Depending on who has the judgments, tax refunds may be able to be taken.
No. A judgment has to be docketed for there to be a liens. This, of course, is referring to civil or small claims financial judgments.
Your creditors can make claims against your estate if you own any property at the time of your death.
Deficiency judgments are fairly common everywhere on large houses. The more the amount you owe on a house, the more you are likely to have a judgment filed against you.
if you lose at home
None. Only bankruptcy provides protection against lawsuits and judgments.