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Who Can Buy Your Judgment

Who Can Buy Your Judgment
Who Can Buy Your Judgment

At one time or another, almost everyone wants to sell their judgment for cash up front. However, judgments are not to be confused with cash. A judgment's value is either nothing or unknown, unless the judgment is eventually enforced.Most judgments are never enforced and expire and become worthless. Yet most judgment owners, especially those with a new judgments, tend to believe their judgments are valuable and can be sold for a very high price. This belief wastes a lot of time and causes frustration.Sometimes, when people try to sell their judgment for cash, it's as if they hope they will find a dumb person (someone who buys without doing due diligence) to buy their judgment for a lot of cash. What they will almost always find is a smart person, that can buy their judgment (after checking the debtor's assets carefully), for a low price.Anyone buying your judgment will likely perform lengthy due-diligence before making you a firm offer. With cash judgment sales, almost always, the debtor's assets have to be in the USA. With very few exceptions, nobody pays more than a few cents on the dollar for most judgments.When web sites advertise "we pay up to 50%" for judgments, it wastes everyone's time. Such web site claims are one more reason judgment owners spend countless hours shopping their judgment with countless potential judgment buyers. The chances of getting 50% of the face value of your judgment is about the same as your chances of buying a big-winning lottery ticket.On average, judgments are sold for 1-3% of their face value for reasons which include the economy, the ability of the debtor to file for bankruptcy, the difficulty and expense of enforcing judgments, and the usual lack of assets of the debtors behind the judgments.Some judgments may be worth much more than 2%. The wrong way to get more than 2% is to contact every judgment buyer you can find. It makes sense to contact more than one potential judgment buyer. However, if you lose track of which potential judgment buyers you have contacted, you are over-shopping.The right way to get a higher sales price for your judgment is to document why your judgment is worth more. Make a list of the debtor's assets or hire a private investigator to perform an asset report on your debtor. An impressive list of debtor assets will vastly increase the price someone will be willing to pay for your judgment.When you contact a judgment buyer, keep everything related to your judgment organized. Include a copy of the judgment, the proof of service, everything you know about the debtor, and every asset or hint of the debtor's assets.You can look for judgment buyers on the web, but often you are better off with a judgment listing service. A judgment listing service saves you a lot of time and work, and exposes your judgment to many judgment purchasers. If you use a judgment listing service, pick one with low or no listing or other fees.




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