A judgment is an adjudication that gives the prevailing party (judgment creditor) the right to enforce the judgment in accordance with the applicable state law (e.g., wage garnishment, bank levy, etc.). A judgment is not a mandate that obligates the judgment debtor to pay, and there are no consequences to not paying a judgment other than those that flow from the existence of the judgment. In other words, you can't be fined or imprisoned for failing to pay a civil money judgment. By contrast, if "the judge ordered them to pay the dues plus court costs," as the OP wrote, then they would be legally obligated to pay, and failure to do so could be enforced by seeking a citation for contempt. While a judgment could also include an order, I'm doubtful that the OP's corporation has anything other than an ordinary civil money judgment.