In California, a debtor has the right to file an “order to show cause” in court, which can be used to contest the renewal of judgment and ask the court to set it aside if the creditor failed to follow the proper procedures, or if the judgment is no longer enforceable.
A judgment is valid in ance with California Law for ten years, and then it will automatically expire. However, a judgment can be extended another ten years at the creditor's request as long as it's before the ten years expires.
The Notice of Entry of Judgment (SC-130) is a court form that states the judge's decision. This form also tells you about your rights and lists the date the form was mailed to you. This date is very important. You have only 30 days from this date to file a motion to vacate the judgment or appeal the judge's decision.
Judgments have expiration dates. If they are not timely renewed, they expire. In CA that is 10 years. However, when a judgment lien has been recorded against your property, it has no expiration date.
Most judgments (the court order saying what you're owed) expire in 10 years. This means you can't collect on it after 10 years. To avoid this, you can ask the court to renew it. A renewal lasts 10 years.
Most judgments (the court order saying what you're owed) expire in 10 years. This means you can't collect on it after 10 years. To avoid this, you can ask the court to renew it. A renewal lasts 10 years.
A judgment is valid in ance with California Law for ten years, and then it will automatically expire. However, a judgment can be extended another ten years at the creditor's request as long as it's before the ten years expires.
Debt collectors may not be able to sue you to collect on old (time-barred) debts, but they may still try to collect on those debts. In California, there is generally a four-year limit for filing a lawsuit to collect a debt based on a written agreement.
Most judgments (the court order saying what you're owed) expire in 10 years. This means you can't collect on it after 10 years. To avoid this, you can ask the court to renew it. A renewal lasts 10 years.
Alameda County has courts in ten different locations. Here is a rundown of the locations of each courthouse in Alameda County.