Can bank get an attachment of earnings orders (AEO's) for debt in this juristiction?

mprsv1000

Registered User
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If the bank sell your house and there is say €200,000 outstanding (which you can't pay due to a job loss and partner severe pay cuts) can a bank seek an attachment of earnings for outstanding amount i.e x amount per month outof yer pay from source.

Just wondering if its not better to emergrate rather than have a huge debt arounf yer neck for the rest of your life?
 
They are extremely rare if they even happen at all, as only the official assignee in bankruptcy can make such an order. The standard practice for a civil debt is to drag you down to the district court for an instalment order to me made. You make the payments yourself to the bank.

If you are never returning and you want to disappear for good then emigration is the way to go.
 
Emigration does not solve the problem.

You would also have to go bankrupt in the country to which you emigrate.

Brendan
 
From:

Spotlight: Debt_Part_3-_The_imprisonment_of_civil_debtors (discussion of alternatives).pdf (application/pdf Object)

 
Emigration does not solve the problem.

You would also have to go bankrupt in the country to which you emigrate.

Brendan

Assuming I was buying another property and needed to have a credit check here, but even in this instance bankrupt laws are FAR more forgiving than in Ireland
A recent case in spain where a judge found against a bank seeking to make a lendee pay back money after the bank had sold house for half of outstanding mortgage, stating the lender took the risk in lending to the lendee and it was their reckless lending practices that lead ultimately to losses.

Ireland's debt legal system is set to hang a noose around a lendee's neck other countries show more social awarness of the plight and injustices of such practices, and a willingness to alow them to breath again after a relatively short period of time.
So YES emergration does solve the problem, my children will have a life (and heating)
 
A recent case in spain where a judge found against a bank seeking to make a lendee pay back money after the bank had sold house for half of outstanding mortgag

Absolutely no relevance to Ireland.
 
But should it be? What lessons are the banks going to learn from this? Its a two way street.


True if they can look at models used in other countries to solve banking crisis why not look at mortgage bedt which is heading to a second crisis for the Irish economy, shorted sighted policies that don't take into consideration the wider picture and all possible ramifications is what got the country into this mess, with no small help from our equally wreckless euro neighbours, good to see a judge standing up for the common man