In Ohio a NON-wage garnishment is good for one shot. Of course, a creditor could file again (and again...). Filing a nonwage garn isn't done often since there are court fees and other costs to take into consideration, but I've seen it done more than once.
A non-wage garnishment is used to attach monies earned by someone who isn't paid personal wages, like an independent contractor, or someone who works on commission. It is also used to attach bank accounts.
Hope this helps,
barbe
I have had several KY non-wage garnishments filed against me in the past few months. Basically the judgment creditor's attorney has to file a new non-wage garnishment every time they want to raid your checking or savings accounts. The courts get a lot of these and they (local county District Court) told me they usually just rubber-stamp approve them all due to volume received. They send it out certified mail to your bank, who has to freeze all the assets in your account as of the business day they get the court order. This has happened to me once a month for the past 3 months. I usually find out about it when my debit card declines, then about a week later I get my copy of the non-wage garnishment state of Kentucky form in the mail from the bank's headquarters office.
You are only allowed to have a license from one state at a time. And you Ohio license is valid, even though suspended.
you can have more than one garnishment but only one can be taken out of your paycheck at a time. They cannot garnishment more than 25% of your paycheck.
Only one creditor garnishment can be in affect at any given time. However, child support garnishments and tax arrearage garnishments can run concurrently with a creditor garnishment.
In the state of Indiana, only one garnishment can be active at any given time. The other garnishment has to wait until the first one is done. This not include child support. You can have a child support and one garnishment at the same time.
A person can have more than one garnishment at a time. The garnishment that has higher priority will be satisfied first.
Creditor garnishments can only run consecutively (one at a time). However, a creditor garnishment and a garnishment for child support and/or tax arrearages can run concurrently (at the same time).
There can only be one garnishment against your wages at a time.
Your bank account is generally frozen only one time when the judgment for a garnishment is set to begin. This allows the courts the time to release the judgment and decide on the amount that you will have to pay.
No, the law allows for only one garnishment action by a creditor to be in force.
Ohio is in only one time zone - the Eastern time zone. Ohio does utilize Daylight Saving Time. Ohio is GMT/UTC - 5h during Standard Time (EST). Ohio is GMT/UTC - 4h during Daylight Saving Time (EDT).
Creditors usually don't file garnishment unless you miss payments. If you make payments on time there's no reason to file. They have to have a reason before the garnishment can happen.
No, wage garnishment by a judgment creditor must run consecutively not concurrently. Garnishment/automatic deduction of court ordered child support is not considered a 'true garnishment', that being the case a child support deduction and creditor garnishment can be active at the same time.