At the time of judgment, the prevailing party should have requested that the judgment/order include a court order to fill out form 1.977 (fact information sheet about losing party's financials)..but since the judgment is already ordered, you now have to request the court to order the losing party to fill out the form, (usually can do this in the form of a motion/petition)...or you can move to compell discovery in regards to the loser's financials...
and then after this discovery is completed, you can move to for a 1) writ of garnishment, 2) or order execution (compelled payment)...please consult Fla. Civ Pro Rules 1.550, 1.560, and 1.570 .....
Or u can simply ask for the money! haha
No, it is levied against your estate.
A bank account in Delaware can be levied for a court judgment. The judge will determine whether or not the action can take place.
Court
Yes. If the creditor has won a judgment against the trust. It cannot be levied for a debt against the beneficiary as long as the trust is a valid trust.Yes. If the creditor has won a judgment against the trust. It cannot be levied for a debt against the beneficiary as long as the trust is a valid trust.Yes. If the creditor has won a judgment against the trust. It cannot be levied for a debt against the beneficiary as long as the trust is a valid trust.Yes. If the creditor has won a judgment against the trust. It cannot be levied for a debt against the beneficiary as long as the trust is a valid trust.
Yes.
The Stamp Tax
i think it is called the stamp act
The "Stamp Act".
Not if it is a marital account held as Tenancy By The Entirety.
If the judgment is for state or federal taxes then any refund is subject to seizure by the agency holding the judgment. If it is a creditor judgment, a tax refund would only be subject to attachment if it were placed in a bank account that was being levied by the judgment creditor.
The bank should notify the account holder that the account has been levied by a judgment holder. Also, the account holder/judgment debtor should have received a final notice of judgment citing the action the judgment creditor is taking.
Answer: If your credit card company obtains a judgment against you they may take any property of value that they can find.