You should demand a pay stub with a written letter; if that does not work, you should write a letter to the court where you got divorced.
Generally they can't garnish your account for a debt in your husbands name only unless he also uses your account - as in a joint account or his pay is deposited in the account.
A person on fixed income wages can be garnished. The reason I know is because my friends father got his wages garnished because he borrowed to much money on his chase card. Her father has to pay back 35,000: that includes intrest. My advice is to not get a credit card and if you get a credit card, only use it for emergencies only because you do not want your wages garnished when you already have a fixed income.
my opinion is yes you can because once you tell him that your interested then he will start considering it and start thinking about you (:
This is known as the fallacy of wishful thinking or argument from consequences. It occurs when a person believes that a statement is true simply because they want it to be true, without considering the evidence or logical reasoning behind it. This type of thinking can lead to biased decision-making and easily accepting false beliefs.
Lousy husbands treat their wives like crap because they are cowards.
No, they cannot be garnished because there is no paper trail of the earnings until that person completes their yearly taxes. They can put a levy on your bank account though.
Because he was on your mind.
Well thinking of it, it is because they are probably straight and the wives are just jealous.
Because they do not receive a salary that can be garnished.
because their husbands have hollow wennies!
If your asking if you can get fired from a job because your earnings are being garnished for some sort of reason , then the answer is no , and if court has anything to do with it , then you should definitly show up .
Critical thinking is the ability to analyze and evaluate information objectively in order to form logical and well-reasoned judgments or decisions. It involves questioning assumptions, recognizing biases, and considering alternative perspectives in order to reach informed conclusions.