I don't get it - I read through a couple stickies and in one place it looks like they can just up and take your money after they get a judgment (for me, a summary judgment on a Cap1 credit card which was granted 10/7/10) and then I read something else that says they have to have a garnishment hearing first and file motions to garnish and all that. Which is it??
Can someone help me out here? My brain is completely fried.
I live in Georgia. I take home about $700 every two weeks. (Family of 4) We rent our house and own 2 crappy vehicles with no payments. (I really have nothing worth anything, you could take everything in my house for $1500 and still feel like you got suckered.) I make about twice minimum wage and work around 30 hours a week, sometimes a bit less. I have about $450 in my checking account which will be mostly gone by the end of next Friday when I get my next paycheck. Should I be worried about the money being gone suddenly?
I don't exactly understand the concept of "judgment proof" as it relates to someone who is working but only making enough to pay for the bare minimums like we do. My budget is tight as a guitar string but we're getting by while I'm in school, with brighter days to come.
Can someone help me out here? My brain is completely fried.
I live in Georgia. I take home about $700 every two weeks. (Family of 4) We rent our house and own 2 crappy vehicles with no payments. (I really have nothing worth anything, you could take everything in my house for $1500 and still feel like you got suckered.) I make about twice minimum wage and work around 30 hours a week, sometimes a bit less. I have about $450 in my checking account which will be mostly gone by the end of next Friday when I get my next paycheck. Should I be worried about the money being gone suddenly?
I don't exactly understand the concept of "judgment proof" as it relates to someone who is working but only making enough to pay for the bare minimums like we do. My budget is tight as a guitar string but we're getting by while I'm in school, with brighter days to come.
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