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Liens are valid for five years from the original filing date. Florida law allows judgment liens to be filed a second time to extend the liens validity five more years.
As a judgment creditor, you can have a lien placed on the Defendants property which may prevent him or her from selling the property without paying the judgment. You can also have the sheriff seize and sell any non-exempt property the Defendant owns, garnish non-exempt wages, or take non-exempt bank accounts, etc.
In Florida, a judgment lasts for 20 years. It can be renewed after the 20 year period, although this is rarely done. Judgments that are not recorded as liens, or are recorded as junior liens, are still valid judgments that can be executed against the debtors property.
A judgment is an order entered by the court making the debtor liable to the creditor for an amount of money. A judgment lien is the recording of a monetary judgment with the Florida Secretary of State, giving the holder of that judgment priority in attacking property owned by the judgment debtor.
A judgment is good for 10 years and Florida allows a creditor to renew a judgment before the expiration of the 10 years for an additional 10 years, thus giving a judgment almost unending life.
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The public is able to view non-confidential court records via the internet in all non-confidential case types with the exception of cases governed by the Florida Rules of Family Law or the Florida Probate Rules.
A judgment is good for 10 years and Florida allows a creditor to renew a judgment before the expiration of the 10 years for an additional 10 years, thus giving a judgment almost unending life.
How long does a judgment lien last in Florida? A judgment lien in Florida will remain attached to the debtors property (even if the property changes hands) for ten years (real estate lien) or five years (personal property lien).
Presently there is a Florida statute that limits judgment liens to 20 years,3 and there is a Florida statute that limits actions on certain judgments to 20 years and other judgments to five years. There is, however, no statute or court rule that places a time limit on the execution of judgments.
(1) A judgment, order, or decree becomes a lien on real property in any county when a certified copy of it is recorded in the official records or judgment lien record of the county, whichever is maintained at the time of recordation, provided that the judgment, order, or decree contains the address of the person who

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