no
Yes, up to 18 years retroactive.
2 years
Hi~ It is my very recent personal experience that you will not be successful in receiving benefits for your new injury. They will jump on the opinion that this is a pre-existing condition. But STILL file your claim as quickly as possible! (Hopefully you either had witnesses to the injury or it occured just days or hours ago....)
1 year = 12 months 2 years = 2 x 12 = 24 months. Number of payments in a month = 2 Number of payments in 2 years or 24 months = 2 x 24 =48 payments.
That would depend on the specifics of the divorce decree. Any benefits and payments would have been split up at that time.
Credit cards are considered Open Ended accounts. In Virginia, they have three years in which to collect or bring suit, or receive re-validation of the debt through payments or other acknowledgement.
3 years
Between 7 and 10 years
yes..... a doctor can collect a debt for more than 2 years
Seven years. However, they will have less effect as time goes by. For example, late payments over a year old do not harm your credit as much as late payments from last month. Late payments over 2 years old are generally ignored.
Are you a teacher or otherwise employed at the school, or a parent at the school? If you were at work when the injury happened, were operating in the normal scope of your duties, it may be covered under Work Comp.
The statute of limitations starts on the date of the last activity on the account. So, making any payments at all restarts the statute of limitations period. In Wisconsin, the statute of limitations is 6 years. After that, they cannot collect.