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this was from a court appointed attorney...they are now saying at its a county lien and there are no statute of limitations on that. it will remain until either debt is paid or the person dies....is this really true??

2007-11-08 03:08:16 · 3 answers · asked by sexyliltink76 2 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

it was an application for crt appt, which was of coure granted but the judge never filled out the part of payment arrangements, that part was left blank, and the app said IF i was able, why would they wait so long before setting this up for collections, they never ONCE tried to contact me before

2007-11-08 11:54:35 · update #1

it was an application for crt appt, which was of coure granted but the judge never filled out the part of payment arrangements, that part was left blank, and the app said IF i was able, why would they wait so long before setting this up for collections, they never ONCE tried to contact me before

2007-11-08 11:54:38 · update #2

3 answers

Most likely yes.
Almost all debt owed to government entities has no statute of limitations.
In some locales, a lien may be placed on property, and the property seized for auction to pay the lien.
You need to contact a local atty immediately.

2007-11-08 03:25:46 · answer #1 · answered by patrick 6 · 0 0

"Free" attorneys (court appointed) are not always free. There are things that can be considered before appointing one. This includes property which could be sold to pay for the service. You may have signed a paper allowing payment to be made later.

2007-11-08 11:50:34 · answer #2 · answered by sensible_man 7 · 0 0

what country & if the U.S.A. what state? different every where

2007-11-08 11:19:47 · answer #3 · answered by seaching4rastartt 3 · 0 0

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