if your tenant owes you back rent and/or late fees, yes you can file with the magistrate court for a judgment against them and provided you have the correct banking information, you can levy their bank account.
If the creditor wins a lawsuit and receives a judgment the judgment can possibly be used as a bank account levy. This would depend upon state laws relating to how the bank account is established.
They can levy bank accounts in most cases, they cannot garnish wages.
A court levy is actually put in place by a court, the bank is required by law to comply with the court. The reason the court may have put a levy on your account is usually due to an unpaid debt. I would contact your bank and try to find out the details. In most places, the bank is required to provide notification of a levy, but not until after the levy action has taken place.
The day the bank receives the levy the funds should be taken from the account or accounts and make a cashier's check payable to Wisconsin Department of Revenue. The funds can be held in the this for up to 21 days. If the bank doesn't get a release of the levy, the bank needs to send the funds to the Wisconsin Department of Revenue. If the bank receive a release of the levy, the bank can deposit the funds back into the account or accounts that the funds where taken from
no
No a landlord can not have a bank account frozen. The landlord must file a suit in court to get back any money owed to them.
The Bank of America branch address to mail an IRS levy to can vary by the state the levy is filed in. The court of the area where the levy is filed will give you the correct address to mail the levy.
If the creditor wins a lawsuit and receives a judgment the judgment can possibly be used as a bank account levy. This would depend upon state laws relating to how the bank account is established.
They can levy bank accounts in most cases, they cannot garnish wages.
Yes there are attorneys in Anchorage, Alaska that specialize in bank levy law.
The bank must adhere to terms of the court order for the levy of the account, and the laws relating to such can greatly differ from state-to-state.
A court levy is actually put in place by a court, the bank is required by law to comply with the court. The reason the court may have put a levy on your account is usually due to an unpaid debt. I would contact your bank and try to find out the details. In most places, the bank is required to provide notification of a levy, but not until after the levy action has taken place.
The Landlord
yes
no
The day the bank receives the levy the funds should be taken from the account or accounts and make a cashier's check payable to Wisconsin Department of Revenue. The funds can be held in the this for up to 21 days. If the bank doesn't get a release of the levy, the bank needs to send the funds to the Wisconsin Department of Revenue. If the bank receive a release of the levy, the bank can deposit the funds back into the account or accounts that the funds where taken from
It's not called a lien. A lien is against real property. I believe you are talking about a levy. You have to know what bank the account is drawn on and then file the appropriate paperwork with the court to enforce the judgment and freeze the account.