Tag Archive for lawsuits

What if you stop paying your credit cards and other financial headlines

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Canceled debts and the IRS

 

 

 

STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS FOR DEBTS ALL STATES

STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS FOR DEBTS

Full explanation of how to apply the statute of limitations for debts.

The legal meaning for statute of limitations is: THE TIME OF COMMENCING ACTIONS-Time allowed that litigation-lawsuit can be brought. (See complete legal meaning of Statute of Limitations). After that time, it has expired. Statute is a law. Passed by legislation and varies by state. The original statute of limitations begins at the onset of the contract signing (see more below for time barred debts).

Statute of limitations vary from state to state but it is usually 4-6 years depending on the state. The term statute of limitations means the time allotted to legally enforce the debt. If a statute expires and someone sues you, It is up to you to bring the expired SOL defense to the other parties attention.

(Links below will take you to an external website so you may want to open them in a separate window)

Fix your credit by lawsuit? Yes you can

If you have decided to take action against a collection agency for violating the FDCPA we have some tips for you. It’s not easy but it is very do-able and with a little education about the process you can limit the risk of getting your case dismissed.

Do you have a case
First off you need to determine what they did and if it qualifies for a law suit? If you were nothing more than inconvenienced a time or two you may lose or the judge may dismiss the case altogether. Suing a collection agency is meant to give you closure and perhaps damages for a violation but too many consumers run into court and only end up annoying everyone because their case is so flimsy. So what is a good case? Just read some of the successful lawsuits filed by the FTC against collection agencies.

They usually involve repeated phone calls at all hours, threats, harassment or intimidation or obvious violations such as refusing to validate the debt at your request yet continuing to try and collect. Those are all good reasons to take action. It’s also important to show what you did before you took that final step and filed your lawsuit. Keeping good records and receipts is paramount to building a good case.

Building the case
Prior to filing your lawsuit you should have asked the collection agency to stop whatever it was they were doing. For example if you told them to stop calling you and they refuse then you need to follow up with a letter to the collection agency certified mail- return receipt requested putting your demand in writing. Then if the agency refuses to stop you have proof that a letter was sent and received by them and yet they continued. Just claiming you told them by phone doesn’t preserve your rights.

If you have witnesses to the harassment then take notarized statements from them to back up your case. If you sent them a validation of debt request certified mail but they never responded then you have the certified receipt with the person’s signature to prove you asked. These paper trails can be the difference between winning and losing so document everything. No matter how many letters, faxes, emails or phone calls you made, take time to include copies of your phone bills, emails or fax confirmations so that you can quickly show the judge the agency’s neglect.

Serving the Collection Agency
Where do you sue?
How much can I get?
What if I want to sue them in federal court
What if I want to sue them in state court
Can I go Pro Se

Read more about this topic or find related articles about credit and collection issues>

Court orders credit bureaus to clean up consumer credit reports

We just covered this issue again last week in the members area. Old zombie debts that just live on and on, often outliving you. Our credit system is very unforgiving. If they don’t get you for 7 years from the bankruptcy, they’ll try to get you for another 6-10 through erroneous reporting, either on the suppliers end or the credit bureaus end.

It’s a vicious cycle and is it a wonder people give in and hire credit repair attorneys?

This court order is going to make some consumers and credit repair agencies very happy- and make their jobs easier when it comes to deleting negative trade lines that were part of a bankruptcy.

The issue is millions of debts that were included in a bankruptcy are being reported incorrectly as delinquent or past due with a balance. The debts, however, should be listed as “included in bankruptcy” with a zero balance. This can have a major impact on your credit score.

According to the WSJ; Erica Noe of Burke, Va., says an old debt on her husband’s credit file cost them their home — in part because it prevented them from being able to refinance their interest-only adjustable-rate mortgage last year. Her husband, Kenneth, had filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy in 2002; in that proceeding, the court discharged his prior debts. Nevertheless, they were unaware that a previous $7,000 credit-union loan remained on his report, pulling down his credit score for several years.

“We thought that once we filed for bankruptcy, it would go away,” says Ms. Noe. “But it didn’t. It affected everything.” The 31-year-old nurse says they didn’t find out about the error until they tried — but failed — to refinance their mortgage. When the rate reset, the Noes’ monthly mortgage payments shot up by about $1,000; they lost their home to foreclosure last November. “It was a snowball effect,” she says. “Unfortunately, everything just kind of worked against us at the same time.

“I tried to fix the error on the report by calling the credit union and telling them to stop reporting,” she says. Currently, their lawyer, Robert Weed, is filing a separate lawsuit against Equifax and the credit union. Equifax declined to comment on an ongoing suit.

A recent court order requires the three major credit-reporting bureaus — Experian Group Ltd., Equifax Inc. and TransUnion LLC — to clean up the credit files of millions of consumers who have filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy. The problem: Old debts, which are typically forgiven by the courts in a bankruptcy filing, are still being reported as active on many consumers’ credit reports.

The changes could be particularly important to borrowers now, as consumer credit tightens across the board. It is perhaps more important than ever for people to make sure their credit scores are accurate and as high as possible.

This ruling is expected to clean up the credit files — and potentially boost the credit scores — of an estimated six million to 10 million people who have filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy but still had errors in their files, according to plaintiffs’ attorneys. Consumers with so-called zombie debt — old loans they may have paid off years ago that can resurface when an aggressive debt collector erroneously demands payment — are also likely to get some relief, if those debts also were discharged under Chapter 7 protection.

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