Hi PHX,
I will take a shot on the judgement/lien issue...
You and creditor go to court. Creditor proves you owe them X dollars. Court awards them a judgment, a legal document that states creditor went to court and proved you owe them X dollars. Thats it, they won, you lost, you owe them x dollars, court seal of approval.
But...the court doesn't collect any money from you. The creditor still has to collect the money you owe. Of course they already tried to collect, but they were pretty much limited to letters and annoying phone calls. Having the judgment opens up some heavy duty methods to collect their money:
Garnish wages...take a cut of your pay until they get paid back (without your permission)
Levy bank accounts....go get their money out of your bank (without your permission)
Liens against property....they get a document that says "if this property gets sold, creditor has to get paid"
Liens don't happen by magic or just b/c the creditor said so. Property deeds/titles are "recorded" (kept) by someone, usually the county clerk. Liens need to be recorded too, officially "attached" to the deed/title. This process might be referred to as "perfecting the lien" The process will vary state to state.
Confusion: the county recorder has "judgment" under your property instead of "lien
Possible answer: judgments get recorded too, put "on the record" so to speak. The county recorder may do both judgments and liens. Or maybe "judgment" is shorthand for "judgment lien"
Confusion: In AZ liens don't attach to primary residence unless equity is 150K+ (Des says) Yet title company says there is a lien preventing the sale.
Possible answer: ??? I was on a roll till I got here....how about getting a paper from the title company spelling out what exactly is the holdup, take that paper over to the county recorder and see how it compares to their records.
And now that I have slung enough mud on the judgement vs lien issue...
...how about an easy shot at attorneys for the creditor?
Charge the full amount to negate the judgment or release the lien. Illegal? no, audacious? yes
"It will follow you to your next property" Give em an "A" for effort and an "A" for creativity. This is complete BS and probably a violation of BK code. Absolutely cannot try to collect on debt discharged in a BK.
Lets play who's the plaintiff....original creditor hires local lawyer to file suit, local lawyer and/or orig. creditor farms judgment out to a bottom feeder debt collector. Find out who exactly was awarded the judgment, only deal with them.
...enough is enough....time to sign off..
Tom in Colo
I will take a shot on the judgement/lien issue...
You and creditor go to court. Creditor proves you owe them X dollars. Court awards them a judgment, a legal document that states creditor went to court and proved you owe them X dollars. Thats it, they won, you lost, you owe them x dollars, court seal of approval.
But...the court doesn't collect any money from you. The creditor still has to collect the money you owe. Of course they already tried to collect, but they were pretty much limited to letters and annoying phone calls. Having the judgment opens up some heavy duty methods to collect their money:
Garnish wages...take a cut of your pay until they get paid back (without your permission)
Levy bank accounts....go get their money out of your bank (without your permission)
Liens against property....they get a document that says "if this property gets sold, creditor has to get paid"
Liens don't happen by magic or just b/c the creditor said so. Property deeds/titles are "recorded" (kept) by someone, usually the county clerk. Liens need to be recorded too, officially "attached" to the deed/title. This process might be referred to as "perfecting the lien" The process will vary state to state.
Confusion: the county recorder has "judgment" under your property instead of "lien
Possible answer: judgments get recorded too, put "on the record" so to speak. The county recorder may do both judgments and liens. Or maybe "judgment" is shorthand for "judgment lien"
Confusion: In AZ liens don't attach to primary residence unless equity is 150K+ (Des says) Yet title company says there is a lien preventing the sale.
Possible answer: ??? I was on a roll till I got here....how about getting a paper from the title company spelling out what exactly is the holdup, take that paper over to the county recorder and see how it compares to their records.
And now that I have slung enough mud on the judgement vs lien issue...
...how about an easy shot at attorneys for the creditor?
Charge the full amount to negate the judgment or release the lien. Illegal? no, audacious? yes
"It will follow you to your next property" Give em an "A" for effort and an "A" for creativity. This is complete BS and probably a violation of BK code. Absolutely cannot try to collect on debt discharged in a BK.
Lets play who's the plaintiff....original creditor hires local lawyer to file suit, local lawyer and/or orig. creditor farms judgment out to a bottom feeder debt collector. Find out who exactly was awarded the judgment, only deal with them.
...enough is enough....time to sign off..
Tom in Colo
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