YES, and the laws of the state you reside in might protect you from garnishment when you income / assets are below some threshold(s).
Yes. That is one of the risks associated with having a joint account. Your creditor can attach the funds pursuant to a court judgment.
you need a writ of execution. File for this 30 days after judgment and no payments received. File at same court and bring your copy of the court decision/order
You can only attach a person's property through a court judgment. The court issues the judgment lien and then the lien is recorded in the land records. When the parties settle out of court there is no perfected "lien".
Because creditors may garnish your taxes, your bank account, other financial accounts, and may attach other real property with a court order.
No, only a court can do that. However, the state could apply to a court to do this.
Yes, if you can show the court "just cause" for the funds in the account to be frozen.
If a court order was published to examine your account balance , then yes they can get you bank info
court reporter
No. In the US the police cannot freeze your bank account. That would require a court order.No. In the US the police cannot freeze your bank account. That would require a court order.No. In the US the police cannot freeze your bank account. That would require a court order.No. In the US the police cannot freeze your bank account. That would require a court order.
Yes. The final account must be filed and allowed by the court in order to close the estate. An executor who refuses to file a final account should be reported to the court. The judge can compel the executor to file the final account so the court, and the heirs, can review the disposition of the estate by comparing it to the inventory and the distribution to heirs.Yes. The final account must be filed and allowed by the court in order to close the estate. An executor who refuses to file a final account should be reported to the court. The judge can compel the executor to file the final account so the court, and the heirs, can review the disposition of the estate by comparing it to the inventory and the distribution to heirs.Yes. The final account must be filed and allowed by the court in order to close the estate. An executor who refuses to file a final account should be reported to the court. The judge can compel the executor to file the final account so the court, and the heirs, can review the disposition of the estate by comparing it to the inventory and the distribution to heirs.Yes. The final account must be filed and allowed by the court in order to close the estate. An executor who refuses to file a final account should be reported to the court. The judge can compel the executor to file the final account so the court, and the heirs, can review the disposition of the estate by comparing it to the inventory and the distribution to heirs.
Yes. Then get a letter stating the debt was satisfied and photocopy it. Get a report from each reporting agency, dispute it saying it should say "satisfied"...attach a copy of the letter from court to your dispute letter. Attach the page of your report (photocopy) and highlight the item disputing. Include the case/account number in your dispute.
They will receive a judgment on the property and can collect the money any way they want, including garnishing your wages, checking and savings account. So if you ever paid with a check they have your information and can get a court order to remove all the money from your account. If you have a money deposited on the bank, there's a chance that they will collect it through a court order. I'm sure they will find ways to know about your bank accounts so that they can collect through it. They do this legally with a court order. Off course, they will seize your bank account as a way to get a payment.