Check your agreement. It is at his convenience that he accepts late payments with fees. There probably is a statement about how many times he has to tolerate late payments--if at all. Better for you to reexamine your payment habits and make sure all in the future are timely.
yes, it absolutely will. However, there are a couple of different ways it may affect your credit rating depending on your circumstances and how your child support payments are collected.
miss a couple of car payments and you will find out!
The only option she may have is to contact the lender and attempt to reaffirm the contract, which would include making up all missed payments and penalties in a specified time limit. Action concerning such an issue depends upon what the lender decides is in their best interest not the borrower's.
It may be. More importantly, do you want your child to be homeless? If you fall far enough behind on the mortgage payments the mortgage company could foreclose ... and then where would your child be? More likely, your state will go to your employer to garnish your wages for the payments to make sure you fulfill the arrearage and stay on time with future payments. Answer these questions for yourself: are your car payments on time? are your rent/mortgage payments on time? have you bought yourself any clothing in the past couple months? have you bought any gifts for others in the past couple months? have you gone out to eat in the past couple months? If your answer to any of these is YES, then tighten your belt, grow up, lose the self-indulgence and act like an adult ... a parent. Short of significant physical injury or illness beyond your control, you will face consequences.
Nowhere, however that are a couple of ways around this:The first couple may marry, and then subsequent wives enter into a domestic contract with that couple.Incorporate. Right, like a business. A contract is a contract is a contract. Incorporation is very much like a marriage, and may offer those involved greater protections and rights. A little more expensive, a little more complicated, but any competent corporate or contract attorney should be able to handle the paperwork and advice relatively easily.
it's based on your credit place
I would like to see a statement of payments for the last couple of months. And the charges.
If you are late, depending on who you owe, you can get taken to a collection agency, charged fines and/or have your car repossesed. I actually know two people who couldn't do the payments, it may have been for a couple of months, and their cars were repossesed.
Yes, surviving family members are not responsible for the contract nor any outstanding debt associated with such. An exception MIGHT be a surviving spouse where the married couple resided in a community property state.
After a couple of months they can and will
There a couple of websites. The top two are www.bookingentertainment.com and simplythebest.net/music/ .
If they have not signed a contract, there is no sale. All transfers of real property must be in writing. If they have signed a contract, they have failed to live up to their part of the agreement and the contract can be voided. You need to consult an attorney in your jurisdiction.