If you win an auction and can't pay, you may face consequences such as losing the item, being banned from future auctions, or legal action by the auction house or seller. It is important to only bid on items you can afford to pay for.
If you win the lottery in a different state, you can still claim your prize, but you may have to pay taxes in both the state where you bought the ticket and the state where you live.
ill give you an example from local lottery... you win 12,000,000 but the goberment keeps 55% of the prize
Well first, you shouldn't owe a credit bureau such as Experian or Equifax; you should owe a lender such as a credit card company or other business. If you fail to pay, the party you owe may win a judgment against you in court requiring you to pay the debt. If the debt remains unpaid, wages can be garnished with a court order.
The two terms are used loosely by many people so they can have an overlap in their meaning. Foreclosure is a process. When someone says a property has been foreclosed upon they are mostly talking in the past tense. A foreclosure that runs its full course will end with an auction. If the foreclosure stops prior it is normally because the default has been settled through some other means. Normally a default that has been cured is from the loan being settled (in full or for an agreed short sale amount). When a foreclosure happens the final step is an auction where the lender enters the opening bid. If there is another bidder that offers more they win the auction and become the owner. In that case the property was foreclosed upon and the owner is the party that won the auction. For most practical purposes there is nothing special in that the property has a new owner and there is nothing odd to be concerned about. When the auction fails to identify a bidder who will pay more than the lender's opening bid the lender becomes the owner. Assuming a bank and not a private lender, the property is classified as Other Real Estate Owned (OREO). Most people shorten the term to REO. Regulated banks in the US are required by law to dispose of property that is OREO. It is surplus to requirements and banks cannot hold RE for investment purposes.
You can sue anyone. What you need to win the lawsuit though is evidence. You have to prove to the court that the other person you loaned money to did not pay it back and you also have proof that they agreed to pay it back.
They can renew their auction any time they want...Untill they have a final bidder who will win the car!
possibly. if the top bidder pulls out at the last minute you could be the next highest bidder which could potentially win you the auction but otherwise no, you dont pay anything unless you win the auction
I looked this up and couldn't even find the site. If you bid on any auction site and win you do have to pay for it.
all the people that like them that much and THAT can pay for it and I cant do that :-(
You are not charged for bidding. If you win an auction (are the highest bidder) you pay what you bid. The seller is charged not the buyer. You pay for the auction price and shipping unless shipping is free then the seller pays for the shipping too.
If you choose to bid on diamond jewelery owned by the Vanderbilt family, you should expect to pay in the tens of thousands for any auction item you win.
Here are some sentences.We went to the auction and bought an old lamp.He bid on the shelf at the auction but didn't win it.
You bid the most money
They're actually with your chao, they will choose whether to use it or not.
No "ZEEKLER" is not a scam you can get "real" free bids & if you win you really get the items you win after you pay for them. If you win the auction of, lets say, a $300.00 item and the price you get the item for is $25.04 that is what you pay that for the item. Check it out and I will give you 50-100 bids for free to try it out. No strings and no obligation to buy more bids, just sign up is all. www.tbinnovate.zeekler.com
If you can't take the trip or don't want to pay the taxes for it, you can forfeit the trip after winning it.
be the highest bidder at the end of the auction