Yes. If the bank does something that is not correct you can always sue the bank. For ex: if a bank charges you a fee for not maintaining your minimum balance even though you have sufficient balance in your account, you can raise a complaint with the bank to reverse the fee. If they fail to do so, you can sue them legally because what they did was wrong and you had enough balance in your account and they should have never charged you that fee.
That's up to the bank.
If it was on purpose, the bank may be brought out of business. If it wasn't, the customer could sue. But it's rare, the banks always check for fakes.
Answeryes*THEY WILL SUE YOU!!!!!!!!!! There are no options. They do not care if you are unemployed, if there are no jobs in or area and even a single mom to boot. These Banks that CAUSED our economic failure WILL take you to court and win. The judge then decides whether to put a lien on your house or garnish your wages leaving you unable to EVER have a decent life again. The unemployed in our country don't have a prayer.
Banks can not garnish a homeowner's wages during the foreclosure process. This is because the real estate is collateral for the loan. Thus, the bank will have to take the property all the way through the foreclosure and have it sold at a county sheriff sale. This is the legal mechanism by which the bank is allowed to attempt to recover the amount it is owed on the loan. If the sheriff sale pays off the mortgage in full, there is nothing further to collect. If the property does not sell for enough to pay the loan off completely, some states allow mortgage companies to sue for a deficiency judgment after the foreclosure. Again, not all states allow this under the foreclosure laws, but it would give banks the right to garnish wages after the foreclosure, if they decide to sue for the judgment. Banks rarely, if ever, sue former clients for deficiency judgments, though, because they know foreclosure victims do not have a lot of extra cash to pay down another judgment after losing their homes. It would take the bank too much time and money to sue again, when they didn't collect very much on their original foreclosure lawsuit.
The expression burst their banks means that they overflowed their banks.
Designer Jeff Banks was first married to 1960's pop star Sandie Shaw. He is currently married to Sue Mann.
That's up to the bank.
dey taza' da foo's.
As of 12/20/2012 Oklahoma is a Recourse State.
probably but if not i got cake anyway it was only about 150,000 like so what i can easily buy another 1. 4 my name if banks. holla at your boy army boy banks 215-839-4946
If it was on purpose, the bank may be brought out of business. If it wasn't, the customer could sue. But it's rare, the banks always check for fakes.
Absolutely you can. They only check your credit history at banks not your criminal history. It would be prejudice and illegal for them to check your criminal background. Then you sue em.
if they are dumb enough to tell you their real name sue sue sue sue sue sue
Yes. You can sue her for divorce.Yes. You can sue her for divorce.Yes. You can sue her for divorce.Yes. You can sue her for divorce.
If you do not know whom to sue, you should not sue anybody.
The Tagalog translation for "Sue" is "Susi."
Then Sue came along Loved me strong That's what I thought Me and Sue that died