I would like to get cash for money judgement












17














I am a landlord who got a settlement via garnishment of my ex tenant's account. The total of money owed came to about $30,000. I have collected about $11,000 and would like to get cash for what is left. The money is consistently paid every two weeks and the debtor has had the same job for more than 20 years, so it is quite secure. How I can get what is left in a lump sum?










share|improve this question









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Yogirl is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • 6




    What does a tenant have to do to owe a landlord $30,000?
    – Azor Ahai
    18 hours ago






  • 2




    Depends on what "money is consistently paid every two weeks" - 1$ or 1000$?
    – Hagen von Eitzen
    11 hours ago






  • 2




    Just because the debtor is (apparently) "quite secure" doesn't mean he/she has any savings. Some people run their finances on a "spend as you earn" basis.
    – alephzero
    5 hours ago






  • 1




    Queue the J G Wentworth jingle here.
    – corsiKa
    4 hours ago
















17














I am a landlord who got a settlement via garnishment of my ex tenant's account. The total of money owed came to about $30,000. I have collected about $11,000 and would like to get cash for what is left. The money is consistently paid every two weeks and the debtor has had the same job for more than 20 years, so it is quite secure. How I can get what is left in a lump sum?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Yogirl is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 6




    What does a tenant have to do to owe a landlord $30,000?
    – Azor Ahai
    18 hours ago






  • 2




    Depends on what "money is consistently paid every two weeks" - 1$ or 1000$?
    – Hagen von Eitzen
    11 hours ago






  • 2




    Just because the debtor is (apparently) "quite secure" doesn't mean he/she has any savings. Some people run their finances on a "spend as you earn" basis.
    – alephzero
    5 hours ago






  • 1




    Queue the J G Wentworth jingle here.
    – corsiKa
    4 hours ago














17












17








17







I am a landlord who got a settlement via garnishment of my ex tenant's account. The total of money owed came to about $30,000. I have collected about $11,000 and would like to get cash for what is left. The money is consistently paid every two weeks and the debtor has had the same job for more than 20 years, so it is quite secure. How I can get what is left in a lump sum?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Yogirl is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











I am a landlord who got a settlement via garnishment of my ex tenant's account. The total of money owed came to about $30,000. I have collected about $11,000 and would like to get cash for what is left. The money is consistently paid every two weeks and the debtor has had the same job for more than 20 years, so it is quite secure. How I can get what is left in a lump sum?







payment cash






share|improve this question









New contributor




Yogirl is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




Yogirl is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited yesterday









yoozer8

2,04131023




2,04131023






New contributor




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asked yesterday









Yogirl

8613




8613




New contributor




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New contributor





Yogirl is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Yogirl is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








  • 6




    What does a tenant have to do to owe a landlord $30,000?
    – Azor Ahai
    18 hours ago






  • 2




    Depends on what "money is consistently paid every two weeks" - 1$ or 1000$?
    – Hagen von Eitzen
    11 hours ago






  • 2




    Just because the debtor is (apparently) "quite secure" doesn't mean he/she has any savings. Some people run their finances on a "spend as you earn" basis.
    – alephzero
    5 hours ago






  • 1




    Queue the J G Wentworth jingle here.
    – corsiKa
    4 hours ago














  • 6




    What does a tenant have to do to owe a landlord $30,000?
    – Azor Ahai
    18 hours ago






  • 2




    Depends on what "money is consistently paid every two weeks" - 1$ or 1000$?
    – Hagen von Eitzen
    11 hours ago






  • 2




    Just because the debtor is (apparently) "quite secure" doesn't mean he/she has any savings. Some people run their finances on a "spend as you earn" basis.
    – alephzero
    5 hours ago






  • 1




    Queue the J G Wentworth jingle here.
    – corsiKa
    4 hours ago








6




6




What does a tenant have to do to owe a landlord $30,000?
– Azor Ahai
18 hours ago




What does a tenant have to do to owe a landlord $30,000?
– Azor Ahai
18 hours ago




2




2




Depends on what "money is consistently paid every two weeks" - 1$ or 1000$?
– Hagen von Eitzen
11 hours ago




Depends on what "money is consistently paid every two weeks" - 1$ or 1000$?
– Hagen von Eitzen
11 hours ago




2




2




Just because the debtor is (apparently) "quite secure" doesn't mean he/she has any savings. Some people run their finances on a "spend as you earn" basis.
– alephzero
5 hours ago




Just because the debtor is (apparently) "quite secure" doesn't mean he/she has any savings. Some people run their finances on a "spend as you earn" basis.
– alephzero
5 hours ago




1




1




Queue the J G Wentworth jingle here.
– corsiKa
4 hours ago




Queue the J G Wentworth jingle here.
– corsiKa
4 hours ago










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















34














Have you considered contacting the debtor directly and offering them a cash settlement? If they have any money set aside, they may be minded to accept a discount in return for giving you a lump sum. Instead of accepting pennies in the dollar from a "settlement services" company, you could end up gaining a much bigger chunk.




Dear Debtor,

As you have been successfully making payments now for x years, I would like to offer you the opportunity to make a full and final settlement by making a single cash payment of $whatever. This offer is made without prejudice. You are under no obligation to accept and you are free to continue making payments as before. Please note that failure to accept will not result in this discount being applied to your previously agreed settlement figure of $xyz



I look forward to hearing from you in the next 30 days if this is of interest. If you do not respond, I will assume that you simply wish continue the present arrangement.



Yours etc,

Landlord.




If you start off with quite a high figure (say, 85% of the final settlement), the debtor, if they've got any sense, will try to haggle you down to a more friendly number. You simply need to decide how low you're willing to go.



The great thing is that with a settlement order in place, there's very little risk to you since you can always turn around and say "sorry, too low" and the existing order will remain in place.






share|improve this answer

















  • 6




    This should be the preferred answer. Negotiating directly with the debtor over such a small debt is likely to provide landlord with a much higher payout. It eliminates collections/due diligence costs, and information asymmetry risk. The debtor may jump at a relatively small discount. And if a deal can't be reached immediately, it opens the door to doing this later when the debtor gets in a better financial situation.
    – SafeFastExpressive
    yesterday






  • 3




    I expect the debtor to say "am unable" or something to that effect.
    – Joshua
    yesterday






  • 8




    @Joshua - But asking them hurts nobody. If they say "no thanks", then it's no-harm, no-foul and OP can carry on collecting their money in little dribs and drabs. But for all you know, they may say "Ok then" and then OP has their money, minus a small discount
    – Valorum
    yesterday










  • "such a small debt", seriously?
    – Gras Double
    18 mins ago



















15














I won't list a specific one here, but there are tons of structured settlement companies that will buy your settlement agreement at a discounted price. You have probably see tons of these ads on daytime tv. I have never needed this type of service, but I can quote the phone number from memory because of those dang catchy jingles.



I suggest Googling "structured settlement" to find a few examples, but keep in mind you will be giving up perhaps as much as 15% of the money you are owed for this service. Other terms that might yield results is "Annuity purchasers" and "Settlement advance"



This website provides some information about how this process works.






share|improve this answer























  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – JohnFx
    8 hours ago



















0














Your own bank may accept the note on this loan as collateral for another (probably smaller) loan to you; this is not quite the same as getting someone to buy the note outright, but would have the effect of generating some cash flow for you, while not devaluing the loan too much.



Of course there would also be interest on your loan, so you'd want to run some numbers first, but it is an option worth investigating.






share|improve this answer








New contributor




jkf is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.


















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    3 Answers
    3






    active

    oldest

    votes








    3 Answers
    3






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    34














    Have you considered contacting the debtor directly and offering them a cash settlement? If they have any money set aside, they may be minded to accept a discount in return for giving you a lump sum. Instead of accepting pennies in the dollar from a "settlement services" company, you could end up gaining a much bigger chunk.




    Dear Debtor,

    As you have been successfully making payments now for x years, I would like to offer you the opportunity to make a full and final settlement by making a single cash payment of $whatever. This offer is made without prejudice. You are under no obligation to accept and you are free to continue making payments as before. Please note that failure to accept will not result in this discount being applied to your previously agreed settlement figure of $xyz



    I look forward to hearing from you in the next 30 days if this is of interest. If you do not respond, I will assume that you simply wish continue the present arrangement.



    Yours etc,

    Landlord.




    If you start off with quite a high figure (say, 85% of the final settlement), the debtor, if they've got any sense, will try to haggle you down to a more friendly number. You simply need to decide how low you're willing to go.



    The great thing is that with a settlement order in place, there's very little risk to you since you can always turn around and say "sorry, too low" and the existing order will remain in place.






    share|improve this answer

















    • 6




      This should be the preferred answer. Negotiating directly with the debtor over such a small debt is likely to provide landlord with a much higher payout. It eliminates collections/due diligence costs, and information asymmetry risk. The debtor may jump at a relatively small discount. And if a deal can't be reached immediately, it opens the door to doing this later when the debtor gets in a better financial situation.
      – SafeFastExpressive
      yesterday






    • 3




      I expect the debtor to say "am unable" or something to that effect.
      – Joshua
      yesterday






    • 8




      @Joshua - But asking them hurts nobody. If they say "no thanks", then it's no-harm, no-foul and OP can carry on collecting their money in little dribs and drabs. But for all you know, they may say "Ok then" and then OP has their money, minus a small discount
      – Valorum
      yesterday










    • "such a small debt", seriously?
      – Gras Double
      18 mins ago
















    34














    Have you considered contacting the debtor directly and offering them a cash settlement? If they have any money set aside, they may be minded to accept a discount in return for giving you a lump sum. Instead of accepting pennies in the dollar from a "settlement services" company, you could end up gaining a much bigger chunk.




    Dear Debtor,

    As you have been successfully making payments now for x years, I would like to offer you the opportunity to make a full and final settlement by making a single cash payment of $whatever. This offer is made without prejudice. You are under no obligation to accept and you are free to continue making payments as before. Please note that failure to accept will not result in this discount being applied to your previously agreed settlement figure of $xyz



    I look forward to hearing from you in the next 30 days if this is of interest. If you do not respond, I will assume that you simply wish continue the present arrangement.



    Yours etc,

    Landlord.




    If you start off with quite a high figure (say, 85% of the final settlement), the debtor, if they've got any sense, will try to haggle you down to a more friendly number. You simply need to decide how low you're willing to go.



    The great thing is that with a settlement order in place, there's very little risk to you since you can always turn around and say "sorry, too low" and the existing order will remain in place.






    share|improve this answer

















    • 6




      This should be the preferred answer. Negotiating directly with the debtor over such a small debt is likely to provide landlord with a much higher payout. It eliminates collections/due diligence costs, and information asymmetry risk. The debtor may jump at a relatively small discount. And if a deal can't be reached immediately, it opens the door to doing this later when the debtor gets in a better financial situation.
      – SafeFastExpressive
      yesterday






    • 3




      I expect the debtor to say "am unable" or something to that effect.
      – Joshua
      yesterday






    • 8




      @Joshua - But asking them hurts nobody. If they say "no thanks", then it's no-harm, no-foul and OP can carry on collecting their money in little dribs and drabs. But for all you know, they may say "Ok then" and then OP has their money, minus a small discount
      – Valorum
      yesterday










    • "such a small debt", seriously?
      – Gras Double
      18 mins ago














    34












    34








    34






    Have you considered contacting the debtor directly and offering them a cash settlement? If they have any money set aside, they may be minded to accept a discount in return for giving you a lump sum. Instead of accepting pennies in the dollar from a "settlement services" company, you could end up gaining a much bigger chunk.




    Dear Debtor,

    As you have been successfully making payments now for x years, I would like to offer you the opportunity to make a full and final settlement by making a single cash payment of $whatever. This offer is made without prejudice. You are under no obligation to accept and you are free to continue making payments as before. Please note that failure to accept will not result in this discount being applied to your previously agreed settlement figure of $xyz



    I look forward to hearing from you in the next 30 days if this is of interest. If you do not respond, I will assume that you simply wish continue the present arrangement.



    Yours etc,

    Landlord.




    If you start off with quite a high figure (say, 85% of the final settlement), the debtor, if they've got any sense, will try to haggle you down to a more friendly number. You simply need to decide how low you're willing to go.



    The great thing is that with a settlement order in place, there's very little risk to you since you can always turn around and say "sorry, too low" and the existing order will remain in place.






    share|improve this answer












    Have you considered contacting the debtor directly and offering them a cash settlement? If they have any money set aside, they may be minded to accept a discount in return for giving you a lump sum. Instead of accepting pennies in the dollar from a "settlement services" company, you could end up gaining a much bigger chunk.




    Dear Debtor,

    As you have been successfully making payments now for x years, I would like to offer you the opportunity to make a full and final settlement by making a single cash payment of $whatever. This offer is made without prejudice. You are under no obligation to accept and you are free to continue making payments as before. Please note that failure to accept will not result in this discount being applied to your previously agreed settlement figure of $xyz



    I look forward to hearing from you in the next 30 days if this is of interest. If you do not respond, I will assume that you simply wish continue the present arrangement.



    Yours etc,

    Landlord.




    If you start off with quite a high figure (say, 85% of the final settlement), the debtor, if they've got any sense, will try to haggle you down to a more friendly number. You simply need to decide how low you're willing to go.



    The great thing is that with a settlement order in place, there's very little risk to you since you can always turn around and say "sorry, too low" and the existing order will remain in place.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered yesterday









    Valorum

    1,081513




    1,081513








    • 6




      This should be the preferred answer. Negotiating directly with the debtor over such a small debt is likely to provide landlord with a much higher payout. It eliminates collections/due diligence costs, and information asymmetry risk. The debtor may jump at a relatively small discount. And if a deal can't be reached immediately, it opens the door to doing this later when the debtor gets in a better financial situation.
      – SafeFastExpressive
      yesterday






    • 3




      I expect the debtor to say "am unable" or something to that effect.
      – Joshua
      yesterday






    • 8




      @Joshua - But asking them hurts nobody. If they say "no thanks", then it's no-harm, no-foul and OP can carry on collecting their money in little dribs and drabs. But for all you know, they may say "Ok then" and then OP has their money, minus a small discount
      – Valorum
      yesterday










    • "such a small debt", seriously?
      – Gras Double
      18 mins ago














    • 6




      This should be the preferred answer. Negotiating directly with the debtor over such a small debt is likely to provide landlord with a much higher payout. It eliminates collections/due diligence costs, and information asymmetry risk. The debtor may jump at a relatively small discount. And if a deal can't be reached immediately, it opens the door to doing this later when the debtor gets in a better financial situation.
      – SafeFastExpressive
      yesterday






    • 3




      I expect the debtor to say "am unable" or something to that effect.
      – Joshua
      yesterday






    • 8




      @Joshua - But asking them hurts nobody. If they say "no thanks", then it's no-harm, no-foul and OP can carry on collecting their money in little dribs and drabs. But for all you know, they may say "Ok then" and then OP has their money, minus a small discount
      – Valorum
      yesterday










    • "such a small debt", seriously?
      – Gras Double
      18 mins ago








    6




    6




    This should be the preferred answer. Negotiating directly with the debtor over such a small debt is likely to provide landlord with a much higher payout. It eliminates collections/due diligence costs, and information asymmetry risk. The debtor may jump at a relatively small discount. And if a deal can't be reached immediately, it opens the door to doing this later when the debtor gets in a better financial situation.
    – SafeFastExpressive
    yesterday




    This should be the preferred answer. Negotiating directly with the debtor over such a small debt is likely to provide landlord with a much higher payout. It eliminates collections/due diligence costs, and information asymmetry risk. The debtor may jump at a relatively small discount. And if a deal can't be reached immediately, it opens the door to doing this later when the debtor gets in a better financial situation.
    – SafeFastExpressive
    yesterday




    3




    3




    I expect the debtor to say "am unable" or something to that effect.
    – Joshua
    yesterday




    I expect the debtor to say "am unable" or something to that effect.
    – Joshua
    yesterday




    8




    8




    @Joshua - But asking them hurts nobody. If they say "no thanks", then it's no-harm, no-foul and OP can carry on collecting their money in little dribs and drabs. But for all you know, they may say "Ok then" and then OP has their money, minus a small discount
    – Valorum
    yesterday




    @Joshua - But asking them hurts nobody. If they say "no thanks", then it's no-harm, no-foul and OP can carry on collecting their money in little dribs and drabs. But for all you know, they may say "Ok then" and then OP has their money, minus a small discount
    – Valorum
    yesterday












    "such a small debt", seriously?
    – Gras Double
    18 mins ago




    "such a small debt", seriously?
    – Gras Double
    18 mins ago













    15














    I won't list a specific one here, but there are tons of structured settlement companies that will buy your settlement agreement at a discounted price. You have probably see tons of these ads on daytime tv. I have never needed this type of service, but I can quote the phone number from memory because of those dang catchy jingles.



    I suggest Googling "structured settlement" to find a few examples, but keep in mind you will be giving up perhaps as much as 15% of the money you are owed for this service. Other terms that might yield results is "Annuity purchasers" and "Settlement advance"



    This website provides some information about how this process works.






    share|improve this answer























    • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
      – JohnFx
      8 hours ago
















    15














    I won't list a specific one here, but there are tons of structured settlement companies that will buy your settlement agreement at a discounted price. You have probably see tons of these ads on daytime tv. I have never needed this type of service, but I can quote the phone number from memory because of those dang catchy jingles.



    I suggest Googling "structured settlement" to find a few examples, but keep in mind you will be giving up perhaps as much as 15% of the money you are owed for this service. Other terms that might yield results is "Annuity purchasers" and "Settlement advance"



    This website provides some information about how this process works.






    share|improve this answer























    • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
      – JohnFx
      8 hours ago














    15












    15








    15






    I won't list a specific one here, but there are tons of structured settlement companies that will buy your settlement agreement at a discounted price. You have probably see tons of these ads on daytime tv. I have never needed this type of service, but I can quote the phone number from memory because of those dang catchy jingles.



    I suggest Googling "structured settlement" to find a few examples, but keep in mind you will be giving up perhaps as much as 15% of the money you are owed for this service. Other terms that might yield results is "Annuity purchasers" and "Settlement advance"



    This website provides some information about how this process works.






    share|improve this answer














    I won't list a specific one here, but there are tons of structured settlement companies that will buy your settlement agreement at a discounted price. You have probably see tons of these ads on daytime tv. I have never needed this type of service, but I can quote the phone number from memory because of those dang catchy jingles.



    I suggest Googling "structured settlement" to find a few examples, but keep in mind you will be giving up perhaps as much as 15% of the money you are owed for this service. Other terms that might yield results is "Annuity purchasers" and "Settlement advance"



    This website provides some information about how this process works.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited yesterday

























    answered yesterday









    JohnFx

    34.6k883186




    34.6k883186












    • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
      – JohnFx
      8 hours ago


















    • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
      – JohnFx
      8 hours ago
















    Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – JohnFx
    8 hours ago




    Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – JohnFx
    8 hours ago











    0














    Your own bank may accept the note on this loan as collateral for another (probably smaller) loan to you; this is not quite the same as getting someone to buy the note outright, but would have the effect of generating some cash flow for you, while not devaluing the loan too much.



    Of course there would also be interest on your loan, so you'd want to run some numbers first, but it is an option worth investigating.






    share|improve this answer








    New contributor




    jkf is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.























      0














      Your own bank may accept the note on this loan as collateral for another (probably smaller) loan to you; this is not quite the same as getting someone to buy the note outright, but would have the effect of generating some cash flow for you, while not devaluing the loan too much.



      Of course there would also be interest on your loan, so you'd want to run some numbers first, but it is an option worth investigating.






      share|improve this answer








      New contributor




      jkf is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.





















        0












        0








        0






        Your own bank may accept the note on this loan as collateral for another (probably smaller) loan to you; this is not quite the same as getting someone to buy the note outright, but would have the effect of generating some cash flow for you, while not devaluing the loan too much.



        Of course there would also be interest on your loan, so you'd want to run some numbers first, but it is an option worth investigating.






        share|improve this answer








        New contributor




        jkf is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.









        Your own bank may accept the note on this loan as collateral for another (probably smaller) loan to you; this is not quite the same as getting someone to buy the note outright, but would have the effect of generating some cash flow for you, while not devaluing the loan too much.



        Of course there would also be interest on your loan, so you'd want to run some numbers first, but it is an option worth investigating.







        share|improve this answer








        New contributor




        jkf is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.









        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer






        New contributor




        jkf is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.









        answered 2 hours ago









        jkf

        1011




        1011




        New contributor




        jkf is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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        New contributor





        jkf is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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