The involved party will be given a specified amount of time to respond. When the person issues their response they need should take care to be accurate in the listing of exempted property. If the person owns a home it is very important to determine if the homestead exemption needs to be filed; or if the home is already protected under state laws.
The defendant debtor will receive a notice of final judgment from the court where the suit was heard and a judgment was awarded. The notification may be served by an officer of the court or independent agency or it may arrive by certified mail.
No, the defendant (debtor) does not have to appear at the date of the hearing. A non appearance usually results in a default judgment being entered against the debtor. The debtor will receive a notice of final judgment before the judgment creditor can take steps to have the judgment executed.
yes
Yes, the lender can file suit for the outstanding amount and if they receive a judgment they can execute the judgment in the manner in which the laws of the judgment debtor's state allow.
The laws and procedures on this vary by state. In California, you have a mail notice to the last known address of the judgment debtor.
Yes you should respond promptly
That normally means the plaintiff asked the judge for a judgment against you not on the facts of the case but just because you're in default (for failure to appear, plead, answer, or do something else you're supposed to do as a defendant in litigation wherever you are). And apparently the judge said no, and either the law required that notice be sent to you or the judge in his or her discretion ordered that notice be sent to you. So right now there's no judgment against you -- yet. The next step if you do nothing but continue to receive court notices and you do not respond, may be for the plaintiff to ask the judge for a trial date where the plaintiff puts on its witnesses and evidence and if you are given notice to the trial and don't show up the judge could enter a judgment against you "ex parte" (one-sided) and then it just gets more difficult to undo anything.
call up notice
By himself through Meditation and the Eightfold Path.
A restraining notice to a judgment debtor is a legal document typically issued by a court that prohibits the debtor from transferring or disposing of certain assets, pending resolution of the debt owed to the creditor. It essentially freezes the debtor's assets to prevent them from being moved or hidden to avoid payment of the judgment.
you can find a notice of assignment but im not sure if this is the same as the assignment of judgment itself. http://www.aopc.org/Forms/Default.htm
Other than paying the debt, the only method for having a judgment quashed is to prove that it is invalid due to the content or the method in which the named person(s) was notified. Unlike the lawsuit summons itself, a debtor must receive and acknowledge the receipt of a final judgment notice before the judgment can be enforced.