In any state, you can travel to the courthouse where the case was heard and ask the clerk for the court records. You'll need to know at least the names of the parties, and possible other information such as the date or case number.
In Florida, and in many other states, you can search for judgments and other types of public records in a statewide database (the first related link below) by party name, type of document, location, and date range. There is a charge for this service in Florida.
Many individual counties have free record-search websites; the options are all included in the second link below. CourtReference has a page like this, as well as court clerk contact information, for every state.
Contact the office of the clerk of the court where the judgment was entered. If you do not know the specific court then contact the circuit court clerk's office. Or you can do a search of public records, however such sites are generally three months or more behind in posting judgment awards and other public judicial information.
Yes
It will appear in the public records portion of the CR and it most definitely will have a negative impact on a person's credit score.
Court records are public documents, and available to the public.
Define "renewed." Once a judgment of the court has been delivered (unless it is peculiarly time-sensitive) it doesn't need renewal , nor does it expire unless a motion is presented to the court to alter or vacate the original judgment.
You must sue them in court and win. Then you can request a judgment lien from the court and record it in the land records.You must sue them in court and win. Then you can request a judgment lien from the court and record it in the land records.You must sue them in court and win. Then you can request a judgment lien from the court and record it in the land records.You must sue them in court and win. Then you can request a judgment lien from the court and record it in the land records.
The court clerk should have records.
You need to sue the debtor and if you prevail the court can issue a judgment lien. The judgment lien can be recorded in the land records and used by the sheriff to seize personal property.You need to sue the debtor and if you prevail the court can issue a judgment lien. The judgment lien can be recorded in the land records and used by the sheriff to seize personal property.You need to sue the debtor and if you prevail the court can issue a judgment lien. The judgment lien can be recorded in the land records and used by the sheriff to seize personal property.You need to sue the debtor and if you prevail the court can issue a judgment lien. The judgment lien can be recorded in the land records and used by the sheriff to seize personal property.
The creditor must sue in court and obtain a judgment in their favor. The court will issue a judgment lien that can be filed in the land records.
The individual does not report a judgment award to the credit bureaus. This type of information is collected by operators who specialize in researching and retrieving public records and storing them in databanks. The records are then sold to various agencies, such as credit bureaus.
You probably won't find arrest records online but you can search Volusia County Florida court records. Volusia County allows you to search case records, citations and violations, official records, court documents, judgments, liens and probate records. You can search these records by case or citation number, case type, name, date, location or document type.
Court files are public records and some even have the records online where they can be viewed for free. If not available online, you can got to the court and review the file and pay to have copies of the documents made from the file. If an abstract of judgment was filed, it would have been in the county where you were sued. Contact the county clerk's office for assistance.