Creditors' Rights Lawyers in North Carolina Near Me, page 3
-
Butler Algernon L III Attorney
Wilmington,
North Carolina
Attorneys - Bankruptcy Lawyers - Creditors' Rights Lawyers
-
Cabaniss, Thomas E. Attorney
Charlotte,
North Carolina
Attorneys - Bankruptcy Lawyers - Corporate Business Lawyers - Corporate Finance & Securities Lawyers - Creditors' Rights Lawyers
-
Chastain, Peter F. Attorney
Greensboro,
North Carolina
Attorneys - Creditors' Rights Lawyers - Real Estate Attorneys
-
Powell, Alan B. Attorney
High Point,
North Carolina
Banking & Investment Lawyers - Bankruptcy Lawyers - Creditors' Rights Lawyers - Debt Consolidation Lawyers
-
Pearce, Bradley E. Attorney
Charlotte,
North Carolina
Bankruptcy Lawyers - Creditors' Rights Lawyers - Debt Consolidation Lawyers
-
Lumsden, Margaret C. Attorney
Raleigh,
North Carolina
Attorneys - Bankruptcy Lawyers - Creditors' Rights Lawyers - Debt Consolidation Lawyers - Employment & Labor Lawyers
-
Hubbard, William E. Attorney
Raleigh,
North Carolina
Attorneys - Construction Lawyers - Creditors' Rights Lawyers - Trial Lawyers
-
Gardner, Terri L. Attorney
Raleigh,
North Carolina
Attorneys - Bankruptcy Lawyers - Corporate Business Lawyers - Corporate Finance & Securities Lawyers - Creditors' Rights Lawyers
-
Hamrick, S. Dean Attorney
Charlotte,
North Carolina
Attorneys - Creditors' Rights Lawyers - Disability Lawyers - Insurance Lawyers - Trial Lawyers
-
McMillan, William P. Attorney
Charlotte,
North Carolina
Attorneys - Bankruptcy Lawyers - Creditors' Rights Lawyers - Debt Consolidation Lawyers
117 Lawyer(s)
Creditors' rights are the procedural provisions designed to protect the ability of creditors—persons who are owed money—to collect the money that they are owed. These provisions vary from one jurisdiction to another, and may include the ability of a creditor to put a lien on a debtor's property, to effect a seizure and forced sale of the debtor's property, to effect a garnishment of the debtor's wages, and to have certain purchases or gifts made by the debtor set aside as fraudulent conveyances. The rights of a particular creditor usually depend in part on the reason for which the debt is owed, and the terms of any writing memorializing the debt.