Because of that, the 10-day deadline has not actually begun, but it will shortly as that registered mail will now be returned as "not picked up," which kicks off the clock. Patrick can, of course, hustle his pasty ass back to the Lloyd and sign for that mail, but that will also similarly start the clock. In short, the clock will start ticking one way or the other very soon now, and there is nothing Patrick can do to stop it.
None of this gets in the way of my current plan to register my 2010 judgment in the province of Alberta for the purpose of garnishment.
And now you know.
4 comments:
Wow, Twatsy is sure owning you by dragging this out so interest payments continue to compound, and enforcement fees continue to get tacked on. Every single day he lets this drag on, he owes you another $15 in interest alone, on top of at least $115K in debt.
Surely, the brilliant strategist Twatster is playing 3-D chess here.
Truly, he has a dizzying intellect. Ironically, 5% interest is better than you would get with a simple chequing account, so I'm fine simply starting to garnish his wages and having that last over years. I can think of it as my old age pension.
At this rate, the judge is gonna decree that he be your butler. SHUDDER!
I wouldn't trust that imbecile to put two coats of wax on my car.
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