Yes, if the association won the judgement.
An outstanding judgment is a court order that gives a creditor the legal right to collect from a debtor. As court judgments are a matter of public record, a creditor can report the judgment on the debtor's credit reports. An example of a judgment placed on a credit report would be a judgment for eviction. This judgment will remain on the credit report for seven years from the filing date.
An individual cannot submit a court judgment to the credit reporting agencies; however the County will report the judgment to the bureaus only by using the complete name and address of the defendant.
The individual does not report a judgment award to the credit bureaus. This type of information is collected by operators who specialize in researching and retrieving public records and storing them in databanks. The records are then sold to various agencies, such as credit bureaus.
No. It will show that you had a judgment on your credit report for up to seven years, but it will show a zero balance.
Individuals cannot "put" something on someone else's credit report. Judgments are part of the public record, and as such, are the subject of routine searches by individuals who re-sell this type of information to Credit Reporting Agencies. So, if you were the prevailing party in a judgment, you can be relatively certain the judgment will find it's way onto the defendants credit. In most states, a judgment must be recorded twice to ensure that it attachs to any real property owned by the defendant.
If the judgment names only one spouse as the judgment debtor it will not be entered on the non judgment spouse's credit report.
Placing JudgmentsFirst you need to win the judgment in court proceedings. Then with that paperwork, you can contact the credit reporting agency. With that judgment, you can also do a search of the person's assets (through the internet) and put a lien on the assets.Individuals do not report judgment awards to credit reporting bureaus that is done by independent agencies contracted by the credit bureaus.A judgment cannot be used to access a person's financial and personal information, that is done via discovery documents issued before the judgment is entered against the debtor/defendant.
Generally, yes
you sould go to a local bank and ask for a credit report
A paid judgment stays on a person's credit report for seven years. An unpaid judgment also stays on the report for seven years, but may be renewed. Tax liens are another item that stay on a credit report for seven years, if paid. If not paid, they remain on the credit report indefinitely.
To report a judgment to a credit bureau, you typically need to provide the bureau with the necessary documentation, such as the court judgment or order. You can contact the credit bureau directly to inquire about their specific process for reporting judgments.
Plaintiff's do not enter a judgment on the defendant/debtor's credit report. Private agencies research court records and report civil lawsuit judgments that have been entered against a debtor to the credit bureaus.