It depends, some states have laws that protect funds garnered from a personal injury award from attachment/seizure by creditors. If the judgment concerns a lawsuit that involves damage to personal property or personal injury the funds are generally not exempt from seizure by the winning party, but are viewed as private assets/income. However, there may be contributing factors, one would be if the original award pertained to a permanent disability.
Yes, but the judgment may not be discharged in BK without compensation.
Yes, if you have a judgment against you the money you owe can come from any source that you may have.
The statement, "execution of judgment is stayed until final payment is received at which time judgment will be deemed satisfied" means that the judgment will be held against you until the debt is completely paid off. You can then get a letter of clearance to have the judgment removed from your credit report. Most debts will remain on a credit report for 7-10 years, even after they have been paid and satisfied.
I assume the judgment is against you. If you held the judgment, you will have received money and that may or may not be income. If you pay a judgment against you, whether or not you can "write it off" will depend entirely on what kind of judgment it is. Also, you may be able to write it off for state tax purposes but not federal and vice versa. Usually, paying most judgments does not affect taxes.
The judgment is against the person, not the property.
No, it is levied against your estate.
A judgment is against specific things.
Can someone collect my income tax return for a judgment against me
Yes, it is called Pro Se, you can file a civil complaint against someone and the judge will determine whether a judgment in your favor will be granted, it is up to you and not the court to enforce the judgment.
If there is a judgment AGAINST you for fraud, then NO, such a judgment WILL NOT be discharged.
Yes.
A judgment against the trustee in his individual capacity will not affect the trust property. A judgment against the trustee as the trustee will become a lien on the trust property.