No. A judge will not agree to let you search the fellow's home.... My last question is: just based on my suspicion, doubt, etc., is it possible to convince judge to let me search his home or any similar action involving physical search by sheriff or so? Would it be any different if I request the judge as such soon after the debtor withdrew cash or bought the gold coins? (this would help me decide my actions if he suddenly involved in such transactions in the future).
No, not just based on suspicion or doubt. If you had evidence that the debtor had assets within the home that you could attach to satisfy the judgment the court can authorize entry into the home (probably by the sheriff) to take those assets. But the court isn't going to authorize what amounts to a fishing expedition in the debtors home on the off chance that something attachable might be found.My last question is: just based on my suspicion, doubt, etc., is it possible to convince judge to let me search his home or any similar action involving physical search by sheriff or so?
No.is it possible to convince judge to let me search his home or any similar action involving physical search by sheriff or so?
No. The court is not going to authorize a general search. It's possible you could get an order for the sheriff to enter the home to seize something in particular, but you're not going to get one just to poke around.Would it be any different if I request the judge as such soon after the debtor withdrew cash or bought the gold coins?
That's correct.Appreciate all your inputs. So, if the court does not allow a fishing expedition (or some thing similar) at debtor’s home then, during the debtor’s exam, the debtor says that he has only a table and a chair in his home although he has several “other items” (which were bought years ago) then it is impossible for me to prove that he has “other items” (such a TV, etc, which are in excess of the total price of all items he can keep) or to request the court to attach those “other items”. Is this correct?
One of the members of FreeAdvice is a former debt collector who had, I believe, his own collection agency. Although @TigerD is now an attorney and essentially has left his debt collection days behind, perhaps he will visit this thread to provide some insight.... A word about collection agencies. My own experience with potentially uncollectible judgments is that collection agencies don't pay anything for them but they'll take it on a commission basis. Unfortunately, after determining that the guy is a professional deadbeat they will probably put it aside and nothing will ever come of it.
Thanks for calling my attention to this thread Q.One of the members of FreeAdvice is a former debt collector who had, I believe, his own collection agency. Although @TigerD is now an attorney and essentially has left his debt collection days behind, perhaps he will visit this thread to provide some insight.
I know some agencies will only pay pennies on the dollar - but sometimes pennies are better than no money at all.
Again, though, the judgment is good for many years, if robinsonf wants to wait awhile longer. The debtor eventually, when he thinks robinsonf is not looking, may want to get a job, or buy a new car using cash, or open an account in a bank to stow a few gold coins. Then robinsonf can rush in.
You need proof of assets. Suspicions are not enough.Many thanks to each of you!
TigerD: I will check if he has a dog. The court ordered interest around 4%. I will read stuff online on judgment collection and do my best to give him some hard time.
Appreciate all of you once again! Still the lingering question I have is: if he keeps items such as gold, TVs, cash, Fridge, etc. in his home and testify that he has nothing but a table and chair (probably a dog) in his home, is there any way/mechanism provided by the legal system to prove that he is telling false information which eventually help getting authorization from the court to authorize a sheriff to take those assets? Otherwise, tomorrow, e.g., he may but another TV (or another item which has no tag like a car) from his own bank account and empty the bank account and, day after tomorrow, say that the TV is broken therefore he has thrown into garbage therefore he longer has it.
I'm not sure what you're envisioning when you refer to a "way/mechanism provided by the legal system to prove that he is telling false information," but we've told you repeatedly that the only way you're going to get the court to make any sort of order that would be helpful to you is if you have evidence that the debtor is lying. Here's a hypothetical.if he keeps items such as gold, TVs, cash, Fridge, etc. in his home and testify that he has nothing but a table and chair (probably a dog) in his home, is there any way/mechanism provided by the legal system to prove that he is telling false information which eventually help getting authorization from the court to authorize a sheriff to take those assets?
You keep asking the same question over and over again and getting the same answer. No, the "legal system" will do nothing for you until you can show that he has such and such, not that you think he has such and such.Still the lingering question I have is
Also keep in mind that the guy can file for bankruptcy and, if successful, your judgment disappears forever.But the bottom line is that, in a battle of a lying judgment debtor and a suspicious judgment creditor with no evidence, the debtor will win.