7 years. Most judgments are renewable and can be reentered on a CR when that is done.
The SOL for filing a lawsuit to recover monies owed has no correlation with the time limit for a negative entry on the consumer's credit report. Judgments may or may not be subject to expungement from credit reports after the 7 years from date of entry has passed. Most judgments are renewable and can remain on a credit report for an indefinite period of time.
Moving has no affect on a debt. The creditor or his agent the collector may collect against a judgment for ten years from the date of judgment or the date of last payment, which ever is later.
The South Carolina Exposition was a protest by the state of South Carolina against the Tariff of 1828. The document stated that without repealing the tariff South Carolina would secede.
They would likely hold the case where you live for simplicity.
Yes because north Carolina and south carolina used to be one state but when tennsions started growing between the north and south they split so south Carolina was part of the south that supported slavery
NO. In S.C. they can not garnish your wages if you have a judgement of a lien. It will go on your credit report, but no garnishments.
The SOL for filing a lawsuit to recover monies owed has no correlation with the time limit for a negative entry on the consumer's credit report. Judgments may or may not be subject to expungement from credit reports after the 7 years from date of entry has passed. Most judgments are renewable and can remain on a credit report for an indefinite period of time.
South Carolina Federal Credit Union was created in 1936.
Yes
no
Yes, a creditor can garnish a bank account in South Carolina. The creditor will have to obtain a judgment from a court before a bank account can be garnished.
no dah wat kind question is that :]
explain activity
Wages cannot be garnished for credit card debt in South Carolina. They can be garnished for unpaid taxes and child support.
No, but if you are stopped in Florida while operating a vehicle, using a South Carolina Driver's License, the Florida authorities may run a check through South Carolina's system.
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 creditor can get a judgment and freeze your bank account in South Carolina, but typically creditors only do this if you owe them a very large amount of money. The cost to do this usually means it's not worthwhile for creditors to pursue this type of action.