You can not have a judgement to garnish wages since you are not a major company, you will need to go to court to collect.
within 90 days
A homeowners association does not have the authority to garnish wages. Garnishment of wages can only be conducted by a court order, typically in cases involving unpaid debts. However, homeowners associations may have the ability to place a lien on a homeowner's property or pursue legal actions to collect unpaid dues or fines.
If you have a court judgement and the debtor receives a regular wage garnishment is possible. Give the sheriff or local official the information on where the debtor works and they will collect the garnishment and forward it to you.
A Collection Agency that "owns your debt" can not garnish any wages. Assume that the collection agency in their efforts to collect the debt for their client, sues the debtor and then provoke that the Court works an arrangement to pay the debt, if the arrangement includes garnishment of wages then, the Court can garnish salaries. And there is laws to garnish wages that apply to every state.
They can only garnish your wages if they took you to court and a judge ordered the garnishment via a judgement. The lender first off must be licensed to be able to take action against you in court. But the only entity who can garnish your wages without a court order is the federal government. No matter what you signed there must be due process. Hope this helps. David Schmidt, PLDR
Yes, a finance company from Georgia can garnish wages even if the person lives and works in South Carolina. If the company got a judgement in court, they can garnish the wages in any state.
No.
A business can't garnish over another business, but if they hire a commercial collection agency to collect the debt, even then the agency can't garnish. When a business debt collection service goes to Court, the commercial debt collection agency can arrange a settlement to "force" the Court to garnish over the debtor. Collection Laws varies in every state
IF they have JUDGEMENT, THEY CAN GARNISH YOUR WAGES OR ATTACH OTHER PERSONAL PROPERTY.
They only can provided that they are legal to operate in Ohio and that they have a judgement against you first. Payday lenders have tried to garnish wages by sending a garnishment notification to clients human resource departments but this is not legal. Only the federal government can garnish wages without a court order.
You file a law suit, which means you notify the debtor. They may pay up rather than hire an attorney and going to court. If they don't, then you go to court. If they don't show up, you get a Default Judgement. If they do, the case is heard and the judge will issue a Judgement (presumably in your favor, if you have the debt properly documented). You can then serve the judgment on the debtor to collect the amount. The judgment can be used to put a lien on property, garnish wages and other means of collection.
NO