What is the name of your state? Florida
I won a case in 2016 but, for some reasons, I did not try to collect the judgment. Now, the records of the debtor show the following,
(i). Debtor has a husband (husband has $400/month income as rent from a house he has on his name. Further he has a piece of land on his name but that did not produce any income), between the years 2016-2021. They got divorced towards the end of 2021. During those years, she was transferring her salary, from her bank account, as soon as it is deposited by her employer, into her other relatives’ accounts.
(ii). Debtor has been making almost $6000 (disposable earnings) per month from her job since 2016 until now.
(iii). Since end of 2021 (after their divorce), debtor is living alone but withdrawing her salary as cash from bank, as soon as it is deposited, She said she is spending that cash for living expenses. She will retire sometime in 2023 (that is what she said)
I could not afford an attorney and did my own research on this matter. This forum and some previous postings in this forum greatly helped me educate on this! I found the following and I greatly appreciate if you could share your thoughts on my questions below.
There is Florida statute 222.11 Exemption of wages from garnishment, and the relevant parts are
1(c) “Head of family” includes any natural person who is providing more than one-half of the support for a child or other dependent.
2(a) Disposable earnings of a head of a family, which are greater than $750 a week, may not be attached or garnished unless such person has agreed otherwise in writing.
(3) Earnings that are exempt under subsection (2) and are credited or deposited in any financial institution are exempt from attachment or garnishment for 6 months after the earnings are received by the financial institution if the funds can be traced and properly identified as earnings.
She is no longer supporting anyone since the end of 2021 therefore I can garnish her salary as per Florida statute 222.11 and will do it soon. I am not concerned about this. My questions are,
(A). whether she is involved in any fraudulent transfer CHAPTER 726 http://www.leg.state.fl.us/statutes/index.cfm?App_mode=Display_Statute&URL=0700-0799/0726/0726.html during the years 2016-2021 when she has husband?
(B). Whether she will be qualified as head of family for the years 2016-2021 when she had husband? The financial record shows that she was paying almost all bills such as utilities, insurance to their home, groceries, husband’s etc. during all those years.
I won a case in 2016 but, for some reasons, I did not try to collect the judgment. Now, the records of the debtor show the following,
(i). Debtor has a husband (husband has $400/month income as rent from a house he has on his name. Further he has a piece of land on his name but that did not produce any income), between the years 2016-2021. They got divorced towards the end of 2021. During those years, she was transferring her salary, from her bank account, as soon as it is deposited by her employer, into her other relatives’ accounts.
(ii). Debtor has been making almost $6000 (disposable earnings) per month from her job since 2016 until now.
(iii). Since end of 2021 (after their divorce), debtor is living alone but withdrawing her salary as cash from bank, as soon as it is deposited, She said she is spending that cash for living expenses. She will retire sometime in 2023 (that is what she said)
I could not afford an attorney and did my own research on this matter. This forum and some previous postings in this forum greatly helped me educate on this! I found the following and I greatly appreciate if you could share your thoughts on my questions below.
There is Florida statute 222.11 Exemption of wages from garnishment, and the relevant parts are
1(c) “Head of family” includes any natural person who is providing more than one-half of the support for a child or other dependent.
2(a) Disposable earnings of a head of a family, which are greater than $750 a week, may not be attached or garnished unless such person has agreed otherwise in writing.
(3) Earnings that are exempt under subsection (2) and are credited or deposited in any financial institution are exempt from attachment or garnishment for 6 months after the earnings are received by the financial institution if the funds can be traced and properly identified as earnings.
She is no longer supporting anyone since the end of 2021 therefore I can garnish her salary as per Florida statute 222.11 and will do it soon. I am not concerned about this. My questions are,
(A). whether she is involved in any fraudulent transfer CHAPTER 726 http://www.leg.state.fl.us/statutes/index.cfm?App_mode=Display_Statute&URL=0700-0799/0726/0726.html during the years 2016-2021 when she has husband?
(B). Whether she will be qualified as head of family for the years 2016-2021 when she had husband? The financial record shows that she was paying almost all bills such as utilities, insurance to their home, groceries, husband’s etc. during all those years.