The judge could order garnishment of your wages in the form of weekly mandatory deductions - you get what is left over.
The judge could place a lien on personal property you own - when you sell that item, any proceeds gained can be used to satisfy the debt.
The judge could order a warrant for your arrest.
they didnt lol
the blacks didnt buy things from stores and they didnt pay for the buses so the country didn't get that money hope it helped
They didnt want to pay taxes on their tea and items. They didnt want to be ruled by the king. ~wiki answers official
They told the British government that,"Boston Harbour is a teapot tonight."it is because they didnt wanna pay there taxes the british were charging them.
America are selfish lazy pigs who didnt want to pay taxes to their motherland
Yes; it is called restitution. If the sentencing judge orders that restitution be paid to the victim, that becomes all or part of the sentence. If the offender does not pay, he or she may be held in contempt and subsequently confined.
The Judge ordered the rapist to pay restitution to his victim.Restitution is a form of payment that criminals pay to the victim, the victim's family, or to the government.Since prisoners earn less than minimum wage, they barely pay court ordered restitution.
Yes, POSSIBLY ... it is entirely possible that the judge may order the perpetrator to pay restitution to the victim, BUT IT IS NOT REQUIRED by law.
If paying fines or making restitution to the victim was part of your sentence and you failed to do so for whatever reason, the judge can jail you if he so chooses.
He was ordered to pay restitution for the damages he caused during the robbery.
Probation can be terminated without deference to the owed restitution on the books. Fines, fees, and court cost owed can be tied to probation, but if someone merits no further probation, than they become solely responsible for repaying their restitution. However, I would caution this person to continue payments and work with the court to resolve the owed monies in a timely manner as the judge can order further probation if the person fails to meet restitution guidelines or pay the monies.
restitution means, pay back (generally for damages.) premises refers to the property, and eviction means you need to leave. put it all together, Pay back the damage caused from living there and leave.
"Make restitution" means to pay someone for the damage or other cost that you caused.
restitution
It depends on your record and your judge. You could just get probation or you could get jail time. Almost always, you'll have to pay restitution.
Not by itself. That is something that is ordered by a judge when you are evicted. It basically means to return the property back to its original condition if you damaged it (or at least pay the landlord for what you damaged).
Are you referring to an actual "fine" or are you referring to restitution? If the payment of restitution was in lieu of serving the sentence you were given, yes, you must pay it to satisfy the sentence. If you failed to pay restitution it is possible that you COULD also be charged with Contempt of Court for violating the court's order.