If your asking if you can get fired from a job because your earnings are being garnished for some sort of reason , then the answer is no , and if court has anything to do with it , then you should definitly show up .
I believe that if a credit card company takes you to court and you or your representative (attorney) do not appear, a summary judgment can be issued against you and the court can order your wages garnished.
No.
knowing the lawpeoples wages mostly get garnished from law suites and judgments from the court systems
Wages should not be garnished prior to a court order. You should be able to argue before a judge that you do not owe a bill because a man did not complete the work. You are not bound to pay him until he finishes the job. If he did not fix your car, he should not garnish your wages for refusing to fix it.
No. Wages can never be garnished without providing an opportunity to the borrower (debtor) to explain their particular situation. If you have legal representation, they are obliged to let you know if you are being asked to appear in court. At that point, you and your attorney would decide if showing up for the hearing is the best choice of action.
Your wages can be garnished with a court order, but it does not require your agreement to do it. If you have agreed to it in a contract, then you have agreed to allow them to do it.
if you account is being garnished you would have an order from the court in your area.. Unless it Federal
He does not pay who, since his wages are garnished? see link
No. That employer should be reported to the court. If a court order for garnishment was issued it is in contempt of a court order.No. That employer should be reported to the court. If a court order for garnishment was issued it is in contempt of a court order.No. That employer should be reported to the court. If a court order for garnishment was issued it is in contempt of a court order.No. That employer should be reported to the court. If a court order for garnishment was issued it is in contempt of a court order.
You cannot get your husband's paycheck garnished without a court order. A court will order garnishment if they decide that he should pay child support or spousal maintenance.
Wages cannot simply be garnished by an individual, they can only be garnished with the approval of a judge by court order.
If the debt relates to tax arrearage and/or child support then yes, SSD benefits can be garnished via a court order. SSD cannot be garnished for creditor debt.