View Full Version : Statue of Limitations on Judgments
unsafehannah
Jun 29, 2009, 09:36 PM
I have a judgment that was filed on dec 13 2004 and I was wondering when it will reach it's SOL date.
From everything that I have read online I would have to think that it would be on Dec 13 2010 is this right?
And can they renew this judgment? I live in Ontario and I haven't been able to locate anything stating yes or no?
How long to they last for? 6, 7,10 20 years?
I have read a lot about as long as you don't take responsibility they can try and collect but they can't legally come after me.
Is that right?
Thanks for your help
Hannah
JudyKayTee
Jun 30, 2009, 06:20 AM
The Statute of Limitations (SOL) is the time frame during which a lawsuit must be filed before a "debt" goes stale. It has nothing to do with a Judgment. I twould appear that a Judgment was obtained against you within the SOL.
Are you asking about the length of time a Judgment can be enforced in Ontario? If so I find a reference that the Judgment is "good" for 10 years and renewable for another 10 but I cannot find the actual law.
I have asked a Canadian counterpart to take a look at this thread.
unsafehannah
Jun 30, 2009, 08:27 AM
"Are you asking about the length of time a Judgment can be enforced in Ontario? If so I find a reference that the Judgment is "good" for 10 years and renewable for another 10 but I cannot find the actual law."
Yes I was wondering about the time line in which it can be enforced.
I too have looked and I have not been able to come up with any results.
Please let me know if you find anything regarding this matter and I too will
Post anything new that I have found.
Thanks Hannah:)
unsafehannah
Jun 30, 2009, 08:33 AM
I would just like to let people who read this know that I called and found out that Judgments in Ontario last for 20 years. After which they are removed. At that point they can not be renewed!
Hope this helps anyone looking for this information.
I contacted London court services to get this information
Their number is 519-660-3013
Thanks again for all your help
:D
JudyKayTee
Jun 30, 2009, 12:30 PM
Is it 10 years, renewable for 10 for a total of 20 OR 10 years and if the creditor doesn't extend it, then it's "dead?"
Great info and research by the way - good work and very helpful.
unsafehannah
Jun 30, 2009, 06:55 PM
Is it 10 years, renewable for 10 for a total of 20 OR 10 years and if the creditor doesn't extend it, then it's "dead?"
Great info and research by the way - good work and very helpful.
When I called and asked a few questions they told me that it's 20 years with no renewal!
As I did ask if she meant 10 years and then a renewal of another 10 years and she said "NO"
It's 20 years, with no renewal!!
Hope this helps out. (This in in Ontario, Canada)
Thanks Again for your help Judy