The entry on the credit report is not incorrect, a dismissed bankruptcy remains on the CR for seven years from the date of the dismissal. Valid information cannot be expunged from a credit report until the required time limit has expired.
Yes. It will show that you filed bankruptcy and that the bankruptcy was dismissed.
The bankruptcy trustee in charge of the case will notify the filer that the BK has been dismissed and the reasons for it having been done.
Your creditors do not need to reopen the case. In most instances your car and home lenders will be secured creditors- the house and car serves as collateral for the loans. In a bankruptcy the promissory notes for both types of loans are dismissed, but not the liens- the liens survive the BK. So you can keep the house and car, even if you dont re-affirm these debts, as long as you keep making the payments. If you dont, the lender is then able to repossess the car or foreclose on the house- without having to repoen the BK case. A foreclosure would take several weeks to do (more than 10-14 days). But im not sure about car repossessions. But if there is no state mandated period to notify the debtor, then they would be able to repossess with little to no warning.
Sachin Tendulkar
Since the UCC, is the Uniform Commercial Code which was created to standardize the commercial processes across state lines because so much trade occurs interstate, once the action is dismissed, there would be no need to follow UCC.
Yes, you're paid for jury duty.
if your chapter 13 gets dismissed can you buy a car
Complaint dismissed as to Swanson, Pamela with disposition of Request for Dismissal. what does case dimissed with disposition of request for dismissal mean
Really an impossible question to answer. If that is the only record you have, you may not have trouble because of it. But, it may depend on WHAT the original charge was though, and whether or not you are up against someone with NO criminal record at all.
Wow, ten years! You would have to show proof that it was paid or dismissed. If warrant was issued then courts have no proof of this. Need to contact lawyer and show the proof.
Prosecutors can choose to Nolle Prosse a criminal charge but they do not have the power or authority to dismiss a charge. Only judges can dismiss a charge. I seriously doubt that any statistics are kept on the number of state AND federal charges nationwide that are Nolle Prosse'd.
No. It is highly likely that you will be dimissed, prob for gross misconconduct - i.e bringing the company into disrepute or similar. This is possible for any conviction, not just jail time. You may be able to put a case to your employer but this will depend on the nature of your role, your previos convictions, work record and understanding nature of your employer. Would you want a convicted thief operating your cash till?