Originally posted by music12
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I think you are confusing family court and tax court, where child support evasion after divorce proceedings or IRS tax evasion is involved and may be grounds for "contempt" or worse. In a simple money judgment, ALL the judge does is rule on the request for a money judgment based on the pleadings of the case. The court has NO role in enforcing the collection of a judgment.
A debtors exam under oath requested by the plaintiff to search for a debtor's assets is all the court offers in any collection efforts after a judgment. The only "contempt of court" ruling that could occur is if the debtor lies under oath about his assets and the plaintiff was able to prove this.
Remember the time to prove a debtor has the ability to pay to the court is before the judgment, through the discovery process and a court trial.
so, technically, there are no debtors-prisons, only prisons for those that a judge decides are willfully refusing to pay. and given that judges often don't seem to need proof for anything as the OP described, i wouldn't be surprised if people end up getting jailed simply because they really do not have money to pay.
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