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Garnishment an d Financial Hardship

Date: Wed, 06/14/2006 - 21:06

Submitted by anonymous
on Wed, 06/14/2006 - 21:06

Posts: 202330 Credits: [Donate]

Total Replies: 19


I'm really needing some advice. Recently my wages have begun being garnished the full 25% for an old debt. I'm currently having serious financial problems and I need to try to get that amount reduced. I have every intention of paying the debt, but my take home after the garnishment will not pay the bills.

I'm confident I would qualify for financial hardship, I have 2 children, both under my custody, normal car, home and utility bills.

I can't afford an attorney, how would I go about getting the amount reduced until I'm doing better financially?

Thanks for any help.


Thanks for the replies.

The amount is for $6500 for an old credit card debt and the garnishment amount is between 300-400 per month depending on my checks.

The judgment was awarded a couple of years ago, but they only recently started garnishing. I never recieved a letter stating that they were going to garnish, I only found out after one of my checks was unusually small.

I read, or heard that under financial hardship (for Oklahoma) that the amount garnished could be lowered.

I will look and see if I can find any forms of appeal at the court, any other advice?


lrhall41

Submitted by on Thu, 06/15/2006 - 06:43

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If your wages are already being garnished then it's too late to have it reuced. BTW, there is no appeal form that exists..You must actually go before a judge/magistrate/court official to get a garnishment reduced. One thing you can try, and I deal with garnishments every week and have seen this work...Is call the original creditor and explain the situation. They can stop the garnishment if they want to, you'll have to pay extra fees, but may be able to have an easier payment plan. Pm me if you have any questions, I may be able to give you some ideas to try.


lrhall41

Submitted by finsfan13 on Fri, 06/16/2006 - 21:23

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Oaklahoma law states that the 75% exemption can be reduced if you establish hardship. With 2 kids that should not be a problem. Its a cold heartless thing to place on someone responsible for 2 children.

You can request a hearing. search on wage garnishment Oaklahoma hardship

I would also seek out any free legal aid. Do a search. Contact your State Contact child services in Oaklahoma, any applicable state services. Perhaps even apply for State aid for your dependants.

The words "I cannot house, cloth and feed my children" are very strong words when pitted against a greedy CC company. Who knows - you may even get a refund on what has been taken. Even the IRS will leave you with enough money for the basics.


lrhall41

Submitted by Glynnie11 on Fri, 06/16/2006 - 22:13

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Bud, actually there are quite a few ways that garnishment can be stopped. It seems, though, it would be difficult to be able to afford to move because you can't afford the garnishment..Garnishments last 90 days. Period..and creditors USUALLY don't refile.
I'm telling you, though...It's going to be VERY VERY difficult to prove hardship if you're already being garnished. I don't know a whole lot about special laws in OK, but I'm fluent on federal/Michigan garnishment laws.
Less...Here's one for you...3 years ago an employee was being garnished. they let it go on for a pay period or two, then filed chapter 13...But didn't put the creditor who was garnishing them into the plan..I guess they thought they'd go away because they couldn't garnish anymore. I got this employee's chapter 13 discharge papers 2 weeks ago..Guess what I got last week? A garnishment order for this employee..From the same creditor who garnished them 3 years ago! When I gave this person a copy of the order, he called me stupid and told me it was illegal to garnish him. I told him that's fine, just wait until you get your check next month. I've been doing this job for 6 years, and I have never seen a creditor wait to pounce again like this.


lrhall41

Submitted by finsfan13 on Sat, 06/17/2006 - 13:09

( Posts: 6919 | Credits: )


Well, I don't think we're going to have an abusive employee much longer anyway..This gentleman has a hard time showing up for work.
I didn't know that you had to wait that long to re-file chapter 7..I am pretty clueless on bankruptcy laws...Employees frequently ask me about filing, like I'm an attorney or something!! All the knowledge of bankruptcy that I have comes from this site...and my bank of knowledge is growing!


lrhall41

Submitted by finsfan13 on Sat, 06/17/2006 - 20:31

( Posts: 6919 | Credits: )


DD

I heard there are some companies that offer special hardship programs to those who can't afford to make the payments. You have to contact them and explain your situation. They might offer you some facilities and make your repayment process easier. You will have to talk with the right person in the company who can take care of this matter and offer you help.


lrhall41

Submitted by anthony on Tue, 07/18/2006 - 13:20

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Oklahoma laws are apparently quite different. Garishments last 180 days here. There are forms you can file requesting a hearing for hardship purposes. If you are not able to meet your basic needs for yourself and your children (housing, food, clothing, transportation) the amount can be reduced or apparently, stopped altogether. A lot of us here are in the position of having to file this after granishment starts because we found out about the garnishment from our employeers after it was a done deal. There is a law firm here that specializes in buying junk debts and garnishing wages without proper notification.


lrhall41

Submitted by on Wed, 04/28/2010 - 09:32

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Garnishments usually lasts for 6 to 12 weeks. However, garnishment laws are different in different states. It also depends on the type of debt you have, and the type of action that the court is going to take, or has taken.

However, in Colorado a writ of garnishment can remain active for 6 months.


lrhall41

Submitted by SC on Sat, 06/19/2010 - 07:18

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