No, the creditor does by having you served. You may be served in person by a process server. If this is not possible. you may be served by certified mail. If you refuse to accept the mail. The creditor can have you served by public notice, often in the local newspaper. If you do not happen to get the paper, or do not see the notice, too bad. It is a legal form of service, and the creditor will receive a default judgment when you do not show for the court date.
You can resolve the execution by paying the debt in full. The creditor will notify the court of the payment and the execution will be dissolved. If the execution was recorded in the land records the court will issue a judgment satisfied certificate that must also be recorded.You can resolve the execution by paying the debt in full. The creditor will notify the court of the payment and the execution will be dissolved. If the execution was recorded in the land records the court will issue a judgment satisfied certificate that must also be recorded.You can resolve the execution by paying the debt in full. The creditor will notify the court of the payment and the execution will be dissolved. If the execution was recorded in the land records the court will issue a judgment satisfied certificate that must also be recorded.You can resolve the execution by paying the debt in full. The creditor will notify the court of the payment and the execution will be dissolved. If the execution was recorded in the land records the court will issue a judgment satisfied certificate that must also be recorded.
No.
You can, but not directly from them. The debt collector is the agent of the original creditor and does not likely have all records of the debt or contract. The collector, as the agent of the creditor can go back to the creditor and request a reconciliation of payments and history, and will in fact be required to so that it van be verified if you notify the collector in writing that the debt is invalid due to payment or some other reason.
You must notify prior to moving and obtain permission in writing.
Yes
In some states yes.
The amount you will owe the creditor will be the amount of your auto loan (including repossession fees, interest, and collection charges) minus the amount the vehicle sold for at auction. The creditor will notify you of the amount due in writing after they auction off the vehicle.
It is considered a "write off"; which benefits the original creditor due to financial loss. Some creditors will keep your original information, and others simply give up those rights to third party collection agency. Once a payment is made, they notify the original creditor that your account was paid off in full in order to update this informaiton with the bureaus that they are reporting with.
No. The courts are required to attempt to notify the father.
Yes if the payment was fraudulent. Usually there is a very short time window (2 days or less) to notify your bank.
The Certifying Officer's commander or director
eBay will notify you when payment is received, if the buyer pays online.