7 years,and can be refiled
Yes, if the judgment was renewed before the expiration date.
The laws and procedures on this vary by state. In California, you have a mail notice to the last known address of the judgment debtor.
A Notice of Nonsuit is the termination of a legal action. An example of this type of notice would be if a plaintiff fails to pursue or abandons the suit; a judgment would be granted against the plaintiff in this case. In a nonsuit case ruling, there is a dismissal of the case. It can be done with or without prejudice. If done with prejudice, it means the case cannot be refiled. If done without prejudice, it can be refiled later on. In Texas, there is a form that is filled out and submitted to the court.
I'm not entirely sure what you mean, so I'm taking a stab in the dark here. It's possible for a lender to begin to foreclose on a property, decide for whatever reason (such as the debtor bringing the loan current, or reaching an agreement with the debtor to halt the process) not to complete the foreclosure, and then later go ahead and start the foreclosure again if the debtor misses additional payments or fails to comply with the terms of the agreement.
'Attach' is another term used for the action taken when a bank account is levied by a judgment creditor. In the majority of instances a judgment creditor can execute the writ against a bank account held by the judgment debtor (or jointly with another party) and withdraw the amount owed until the judgment is paid. State law determines the judgment terms, therefore the levy process will differ somewhat from state-to-state. Generally a bank levy has a specified time in which funds can be seized, then the judgment must be refiled with the clerk of the issuing court before more monies can be taken from the account. A very few US states will not allow the levy of a bank account by a judgment creditor when it is held by a married couple as Tenancy By The Entirety.
You have only 5 days from when you get your notice. After that no.
If the court denied the motion for garnishment 'with prejudice,' it cannot be refiled. If the court denied the motion for garnishment 'without prejudice,' it can be refiled.
Until a judge refuses to allow the suit to be refiled. If a case is dismissed without prejudice regardless of what that case might be about it can be refiled as many times as necessary.
You feel that you learned something new and you feel refiled with information.
The process begins again as a new case.
Not directly. Once the funds have been deposited into a bank account a judgment creditor could levy the account for the debt owed. There are several factors that come into play when it relates to the attachment of a bank account by judgment creditors. For example, how the account is set up, JT, JTWRS, TBE, and so forth. The majority of U.S. states only allow a creditor to levy and account once. After that the creditor has to return to court and have the judgment refiled as a second levy if the full amount of the debt was not obtained in the original action.
Your association attorney is better prepared to answer this question in your particular situation. There is no standard.