Who Should You Pick to Enforce your Judgment
I am not a lawyer - I am a judgment broker. With that out of the way, a
judgment is a legal document that needs proper "care and feeding". If
the debtor named goes bankrupt, or the time limits have expired (e.g.,
ten years in California, five years in Wyoming), or there is a
successful court action to cancel it, the judgment can die. Also, if all
laws are not followed during the enforcement of your judgment, you may
end up owing the debtor money.
Anyone that enforces a judgment
must take care of it. This article is for judgment owners considering
who should enforce their judgment. Here are the five choices, with the
pros and cons of each:
1) You can enforce your judgment yourself.
The pro parts are that you are in full control of everything, and that
this is usually the cheapest way to enforce a judgment. The con parts
are that judgment enforcement requires a lot of time and money. Be
polite, use common sense, and have patience. Each state has its own laws
on what you can and cannot do to enforce a judgment.
2) Hire a
lawyer on contingency - the pro parts are that it may not cost much to
get your judgment enforced. The con parts are that very few judgments
are accepted on contingency by lawyers. Also, the lawyer may give up if
the judgment is not easy to enforce, wasting a lot of time. Also, many
lawyers who take a case on a contingency expects the Judgment Creditor
to pay all court costs up-front before taking your case. Court costs can
become expensive.
3) Hire a lawyer by the hour - the pro parts
are that when your judgment is large and you already know where the
debtor's assets are, you can save a lot of money. The con parts are that
usually things are not so easy, and often you end up spending a lot of
money with no recovery on the judgment.
4) Use a collection
agency - the pro parts are that collection agencies can sometimes
persuade certain debtors to pay, by writing letters to them, calling
them, and putting the judgment on their credit report. The con parts are
that collection agencies don't take every judgment they see, require
you to establish an account with them, and can't take money or property
from a debtor.
5) Use a Judgment Enforcer, or a Judgment Broker -
the pro parts are that they are more likely to take your judgment, and
more likely to recover money from the debtor. They look for and grab
assets. The con parts are that they must take ownership of your
judgment, you cannot control how they work, and most charge 50% of what
they recover from the debtor.
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Mark D. Shapiro - http://www.JudgmentBuy.com
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