Once the garnishment and any related fees are satisfied, the rest of the money is available for use.
You can have a bank account frozen by going to an attorney or before a court of law and receiving a garnishment or judgment. If you receive a judgment, it is not enough, you have to have an order to freeze a bank account.
You get fined a fee by the bank, your account is frozen, and they will probably come after your paycheck through garnishment (even if the levy is removed) Levy is a step, garnishment follows.
Yes. You may be able to get it unfrozen by showing that all deposits to it derive from protected sources (I'm not sure if social security is one of those).
If your account was garnished by a govt agency(i.e. the IRS). Then the IRS needs to put that money back into your account not the bank.
yes and no, bank accounts can be frozen subject to a levy or garnishment order, however you have the right to go before the judge within 30 days of the hold being placed on the account to explain your financial problems. If you have not been provided with that notice you should contact the clerk of courts, or a non-profit legal assistance program.
Until it is unfrozen.
Your bank account is generally frozen only one time when the judgment for a garnishment is set to begin. This allows the courts the time to release the judgment and decide on the amount that you will have to pay.
Frozen batteries last longer unfrozen batteries.
You can have a bank account frozen by going to an attorney or before a court of law and receiving a garnishment or judgment. If you receive a judgment, it is not enough, you have to have an order to freeze a bank account.
I thought this was illegal. How is the credit card company that is garnishing his wages supposed to collect their money when our account is frozen?
As the frozen cupcakes will require extra time to defrost, the unfrozen cupcakes will bake faster.
It probably is that frozen candles will melt faster
a frozen bouncy ball will not bounce higher or lower than an unfrozen one it will shatter
You get fined a fee by the bank, your account is frozen, and they will probably come after your paycheck through garnishment (even if the levy is removed) Levy is a step, garnishment follows.
yes because it is frozen and everything frozen weighs more then unfrozen.
the word "un" in that word unfrozen is a prefix
From experience (as far as I know), if you are a joint holder of the frozen bank account, yes, they can garnish, but check your state statues because you may be exempt from garnishment.