Step 1: Docket the judgment. Step 2: Request an Order for Disclosure. Step 3: Request an Order to Show Cause. Step 4: Send the judgment debtor notice that you plan to start collecting. Step 5: Request a Writ of Execution from court administration. Step 6: Take the paperwork to the sheriff's office.
If you are interested in obtaining a will filed in Hennepin (including Minneapolis), Marshall, or St. Louis (including Duluth) counties, please contact that county's court records or court administration department.
Call the non-emergency line for Hennepin County Dispatch at 952 258 5321.
Hennepin County Service Centers Phone: 612-348-8240 (calls taken until p.m.) M-F, 8 a.m. - 4 p.m. We are receiving a high volume of calls. You may experience long wait times.
Call us. Call 612-348-3000, Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to p.m.
How long does a judgment last? Judgments last for ten years and then can be renewed for another ten years. There is no limit to how many times a judgment can be renewed as long as the creditor takes the appropriate steps every ten years. So a judgment against you will potentially last forever.
To begin a remote public search of probate records, one should use Minnesota's Public Access System. Interested parties can search by court file number or the name of an individual involved. The system will display the probate case number and a summary if a probate has commenced.
If your personal property exceeds $75,000 or you own real estate in your name alone, your estate must be probated.
You can get copies of divorce decrees, custody and child support orders, and other Hennepin Family Court documents from the 4th District Records Center.