In general, you can sue anyone who has done something wrong to you. However, collecting the judgment may be difficult if the person's only income is from disability, unless the person has insurance that covers the liability at issue.
Hi,
Ya sure, why not?
Thanks
Some people have to sue for disability. Social Security has disability and some jobs have it. If you have not worked long enough you might need to file for medicaid.
No nor can they anywhere else in the united states. However they can sue you for the money and you can be ordered to pay.
yes
No. SSD and SS benefits of all types are 100% exempt from creditor attachment. They are protected by federal and state exemptions/laws.
You don't have to "sue" for Social Security in any state. You file an application. If your application is denied, you are probably ineligible, but you can appeal that denial, and some people win!
Yes and its always good to have reliable evidence to back up your statement.
Yes, the issue of a citizen collecting SS benefits, public assistance or private disability/pension is not relevant when it pertains to a civil suit of any nature.
You can try.
Don't quote me on this as I really don't know for sure, but I'm on SSDI, and if I were to get a job that pays well enough for Social Security to say that I don't need them to pay me anymore, I wouldn't expect them to say that all of the checks that Social Security gave me in the past seven years, I would have to pay back. which would be somewhere in the ballpark of $63,000. There would be no way I could ever pay that amount back. Now if Social Security was paying me my checks for all these years and then found out that I was working and getting paid enough where Social Security wouldn't need to pay me and I wasn't telling Social Security, then I believe that Social Security would have me pay the amount that Social Security gave me and if I didn't pay it back, Social Security would sue me.
You cannot be arrested for failing to pay a debt. The collection could sue you, but the judgment would be nearly impossible to enforce. Your disability benefits cannot be taken or garnished to enforce the judgment. The most they could do is put the judgment on your credit rating, put a lien on your property and perhaps have some of your nonexempt property taken and sold to pay toward the judgment.
ummm yea! its America u can sue anyone for almost anything........and why would she do that?
see a doctor. if you were at someone house or on someones property, you could sue them.