A garnishment is a means of collecting a monetary judgment against a defendant by ordering a third party (the garnishee ) to pay money, otherwise owed to the defendant, directly to the plaintiff. In the case of collecting for taxes, the law of a jurisdiction may allow for collection without a judgment or other court order.
United States
Wage garnishment
Wage garnishment , the most common type of garnishment, is the process of deducting money from an employee's monetary compensation (including salary), sometimes as a result of a court order. In the United States, some such garnishments are limited by federal law to 25 percent of the disposable income that the employee earns. Wage garnishments continue until the entire debt is paid or arrangements are made to pay off the debt. Garnishments can be taken for any type of debt but common examples of debt that result in garnishments include:
- child support
- defaulted student loans
- taxes
- unpaid court fines
- any other type of monetary judgment
When served on an employer, garnishments are taken as part of the payroll process. When processing payroll, sometimes there is not enough money in the employee's net pay to satisfy all of the garnishments. In such a case, the correct order to take a garnishment must be satisfied. For example, in a case with federal tax, local tax, and credit card garnishments, the first garnishment taken would be the federal tax garnishments, then the local tax garnishments, and finally, garnishments for the credit card. Employers receive a notice telling them to withhold a certain amount of their employee's wages for payment and cannot refuse to garnish wages.
Wage garnishment can negatively affect credit, reputation, and the ability to receive a loan or open a bank account.
At present four U.S. states — North Carolina, Pennsylvania, South Carolina and Texas — do not allow wage garnishment at all except for debts related to taxes, child support, federally guaranteed student loans, and court-ordered fines or restitution for a crime the debtor committed. Several other states observe maximum thresholds that are lower than the 25 percent maximum provided by federal law. States may also prohibit garnishment altogether in certain circumstances. For example, in Florida the wages of a person who provides more than half the support for a child or other dependent are exempt from garnishment altogether (though this exemption is subject to waiver). Loans and negotiations with creditors can also help debtors to avoid wage garnishment.
In many states when the person is an employee or appointee of a governmental unit the writ is called a Writ of Sequestration. These are processed by the courts in the same manner as garnishments and are subject to the same wage exemptions.
The debtor has a remedy if he/she believes the Garnishment is improper under the law. That remedy is a Motion To Quash the writ.
Debtors can have multiple writs of garnishment against their wages but most states follow the first to serve rule . The first to serve rule is that the employer must honor the garnishments one at a time in the order that they were served on the employer.
A typical garnishment statutory scheme can be seen in Missouri Supreme Court Rule 90 .
Attachment
The other type of garnishment, also known as attachment , (or attachment of earnings), requires the garnishee to deliver all the defendant's money and/or property in the hands of the garnishee at the time of service of process to the court, to be paid over to the plaintiff. Since this type of garnishment is not continuing in nature, but is not subject to the type of restrictions that apply to wage garnishment, it is most often used against banks, or other persons or companies that incur liquidated obligations in the regular course of business. The garnishment should never begin during the pay period but should begin on the following pay period
U.S. federal tax rules
In the context of garnishments under U.S. federal tax law, there are only a few requirements that must be met before the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) starts a wage garnishment:
- The IRS must have assessed the tax and must have sent a written Notice and Demand for Payment;
- The taxpayer must have neglected or refused to pay the tax within the time prescribed in the notice; and,
- The IRS must have sent a Final Notice of Intent to Levy and Notice of Your Right to A Hearing (levy notice) at least 30 days before the levy.
A garnishment by the Internal Revenue Service is a form of administrative levy. In the case of an IRS levy, no court order is required.
The IRS may serve the Final Notice in person, may leave the notice at the taxpayer’s home or usual place of business, or may send it to the last known address by certified or registered mail. The IRS is required to send the Final Notice to the last address known to the agency. The taxpayer does not need to actually receive the notice for the notice to be effective. Many taxpayers never actually receive the final notice. Those taxpayers may not realize they are in danger of receiving a levy until their wages are actually garnished.
See also
- Attachment of earnings
- Collections
- Distraint
- Judgment
- Student Loan Default
- Tax refund interception
- Working under the table
- Sequestration
References
- ^ In the context of U.S. federal tax law, see 26 U.S.C. § 6331. See also United States v. Rodgers , 461 U.S. 677, 103 S. Ct. 2132, 83-1 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) paragr. 9374 (1983) ( dicta ).
- ^ "Wage Garnishment". Ohio Legal Services . http://www.ohiolegalservices.org/public/legal_problem/consumer-rights/debt-collection/Home/public/legal_problem/consumer-rights/debt-collection/wage-garnishment/garnis.pdf . Retrieved 2009-06-15 .
- ^ "Wage Garnishment". Federal Register, vol. 68 No. 246 . United States Government. 2003-12-23 . http://edocket.access.gpo.gov/2003/pdf/03-31489.pdf . Retrieved 2009-06-15 .
- ^ Mara Yoresh and Daniel Rivera (2007). Playing the System- The Consumer's Guide to Credit Repair . MD Corp. p. 16. ISBN 1434823024 . http://books.google.com/books?id=tIRspPpPbOsC&pg=PA16&dq=%2B%22wage+garnishment%22+%2B%22credit+score%22 . Retrieved 2009-06-15 .
- ^ See 26 U.S.C. § 6331; United States v. Rodgers , 461 U.S. 677, 103 S. Ct. 2132, 83-1 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) paragr. 9374 (1983) ( dicta );
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