Generally, yes. But those holding the judgment may well come after the money...and hiding it from them can tuen to criminal charges. Not paying what you are required to has a way of ggetting worse, and worse.
I assume the judgment is against you. If you held the judgment, you will have received money and that may or may not be income. If you pay a judgment against you, whether or not you can "write it off" will depend entirely on what kind of judgment it is. Also, you may be able to write it off for state tax purposes but not federal and vice versa. Usually, paying most judgments does not affect taxes.
Can you still file income taxes even though no federal taxes were taken out of check?
yes you can
No. Only the government can take your taxes, but a debt collector can get a court judgment against you and take your pay check.
If the state where you owe back taxes gets a judgment against you, your wages can be garnished. This can happen no matter what state you live in.
The judgment part indicates that the creditor has won the lawsuit and been awarded a judgment. The collection may indicate that the debt is still outstanding or has been paid. Public means, well simply that. Anyone who is interested can find out the information. For instance if there are delinquent taxes, resulting in a lien against real estate.
All taxes federal , state or municipal comes first. All personal debt obligations comes after the taxes.
Yes, the IRS could withhold your taxes if there is a judgment against you. If you are sued for back child support, for example, your refund could be given directly to the other parent.
are taxes due on monetary judgment like a pay check
If you have a job you are legally required to file taxes. Your employer's responsibility is to take the taxes out of your paycheck and "pay the man," as it were. If your W-2s reflect taxes paid to the Gov't, you are in the clear - if you file.
Taxes on top of taxes
Yes it can if the loan company taKES it to court and gets a judgment against you, then by all means they can take your taxes, pay, etc.