They will typically garnish your wages until it is paid in full if you cannot pay in full initially.
You can pay off the judgment , prove with a letter or some valid evidence that the judgment was made in error..
if you have the ability to do an act required under a judgment then you can be held in civil contempt and actually jailed, however if it is strictly a monetary judgment then you cannot be incarcerated, but your wages can be garnished and your assets seized by the judgment holder.
If you have a civil judgment or lien against you in South Carolina and you pay you house off, they can not take it directly from you. They may be able to put a lien against it until you pay the debt off.
A civil suit after a judgment is obtained but not before can definitely result in a garnishment of the judgment debtor's salary. That is one of the most widely used methods of collecting on a judgment when the debtor does not have assets from which to pay the debt.
no dah wat kind question is that :]
If the judgment is open, you must pay before escrow closes on the mortgage. If the judgment cannot be satisfied, you must show an agreement with the creditor and at least six months of consistent payments.
Pay it in full, make a settlement agreement to pay a lesser amount in lieu of full payment or file for bankruptcy.
No warranty can be placed. They can file a civil lawsuit against you, then get a judgment to garnish your wages or property. This is a civil matter.
In Illinois, each child support payment is a civil judgment.
You need to sue them in civil court and win a judgment lien.You need to sue them in civil court and win a judgment lien.You need to sue them in civil court and win a judgment lien.You need to sue them in civil court and win a judgment lien.
Since he was not insured, you have to sue that person in civil court and obtain a judgment, which you need to enforce afterwards.
"Judgment for Defendant" means that the defendant wins the case. In a criminal case, a judgment for defendant would be a "not guilty" verdict (usually). In a civil case, it would usually mean that the defendant does not have to pay money to the person who sued him or her (known as the "plaintiff").