The sentence is simple because the problem is simple. If meaningful post-judgment work takes professional time, somebody has to fund it. When nobody funds it, the judgment usually slows down.

The debtor knows the math

A debtor may understand that you already spent money getting the judgment. The next bet is whether you will keep spending after the judgment. If the answer is no, the debtor may simply keep waiting.

Invoices change behavior

Most judgment holders do not stop because they stopped caring. They stop because another invoice, another month, and another uncertain step feels like throwing good money after bad. That is the emotional and financial trap.

Selling turns the question around

A cash offer lets you compare a fixed price today against continued spending tomorrow. The offer may not be the face value of the judgment, but it may beat years of delay and more out-of-pocket decisions.

Keep the legal line clean

EnforcePay is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. If EnforcePay buys a judgment, counsel retained by EnforcePay represents EnforcePay, not the seller. Sellers should use their own attorney if they want legal advice about a sale.

Important:

EnforcePay is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. If you need legal advice about your judgment or a sale agreement, consult your own attorney.