After a judgment is entered, the real fight often begins. KOR Law LLP defends individuals and businesses against aggressive collection efforts, asserts available exemptions, and protects assets that creditors may not be entitled to reach.
Overview
Post-judgment enforcement is governed by a dense set of procedural rules and substantive protections that creditors do not always respect. Turnover petitions, restraining notices, information subpoenas, and motions to appoint receivers are tools that move quickly and can deprive judgment debtors of assets if no one is pressing back.
KOR Law LLP represents judgment debtors and asset holders in defending against improper enforcement actions, asserting homestead and other exemptions, and challenging the procedural and substantive bases for creditors’ reach. Our experience on both sides of these matters lets us identify weak points that less-experienced counsel might miss.
What We Handle
Defending against petitions seeking turnover of property, including coop shares, bank accounts, and personal property.
Asserting the homestead exemption to protect a debtor’s primary residence from forced sale or execution.
Opposing creditor motions to appoint a receiver over the debtor’s assets, business, or income stream.
Protecting marital property held as tenants by the entirety from creditors of one spouse.
Defending against fraudulent conveyance claims, including ripeness, standing, and statutory defects.
“Powerful in Court.
Trusted Beyond It.”