Legal Question in Credit and Debt Law in New Jersey

Can I erase a satisfied judgment of my credit? i currently have two judgements that were paid off about two to three years ago its affecting my credit.....


Asked on 11/21/10, 7:34 am

2 Answers from Attorneys

Jeffrey Walters Law Offices of Jeffrey S. Walters, LLC

If you had a judgment against you and you paid the creditor, you should have asked the creditor (or their attorney if that is who you paid) for a Warrant to Satisfy Judgment. Then you would file that with the court where the judgment is entered, so that they mark the judgment as satisfied. Note that if the judgment was docketed in Trenton, you must file it with the judgment unit in Trenton. If not docketed in Trenton, then you must file it with the county court where the judgment is entered. Then when the credit reporting agencies routinely update their public record information (Experian, Trans Union, Equifax), they should note the satisfied judgment and update your credit reports accordingly. In order to speed things up, once you procure and file the Warrant to Satisfy judgment, I suggest that you dispute the judgment information on all 3 credit reports and provide them with a copy of the Warrant to Satisfy. This should get the satisfaction noted on your credit reports faster than waiting for the normal update process to take place.

Read more
Answered on 11/28/10, 8:25 am
Robert Davies The Davies Law Firm, P.A.

If you paid the judgments, you should have gotten a 'Warrant To Satisfy'. If the creditor's lawyer did not give it to you, then you need to get it. It needs to be filed with the Court.

Getting the judgments off of your credit report may be possible. I would need more info to tell you.

Give me a call, make an appointment to come see me, and let's get moving on this for you.

There is NO COST to you for the telephone call, or for the first meeting at my office.

Robert Davies, Esq. 201-820-3460

My contact information can be obtained from the links below, just click on the Attorney Profile link. Let my secretary know you found me through LawGuru.

Please keep in mind that my response is just a general comment on your question, and not legal advice. Your question and any response does NOT create an attorney-client relationship between you and this law firm. The exact details of your situation and things that you have not mentioned in your question can completely change the answer to your question. You can not rely upon what I have written, because I do not have all of the formation that I need to advise you, I only have the very small amount of information that you put into your question. For me to give you any legal advice, I would need for you to hire me to be your lawyer, and then we would need to discuss this in detail and go over the documents.To get legal advice that you can rely on and use, please contact me directly. I would be happy to assist you.

Read more
Answered on 11/29/10, 7:03 am


Related Questions & Answers

More Credit, Debt and Collections Law questions and answers in New Jersey