The best way to fight repossession is to pay your bills on time. If you can't do that call your creditors and see if you can work something out. The sooner you call the better chance you have of keeping your stuff.
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Accounts Payable releted to Creditors and Bills payable releted to bank.
Creditors are people or organizations (companies, councils, tax man etc) to whom you owe money. Bills, people you owe money to
There are certain laws regarding times that creditors can call. You should most likely consult a legal professional for all your current options.
Unless he had insurance to cover bills in the case of his death, the creditors will be looking to the heirs of his estate to pay them. The issue will more than likely be presented by his creditors in the Probate court.
They are the responsibility of the estate. They are either paid or the creditors are left without payment.
You are always going to be better off by paying your bills.
Is is very important for a person to pay bills owed to creditors in a timely manner, because if they don't, they will end up getting millions of phone calls from the collection agency, and will get sued.
If you know the actual creditors, you are required to notify them. Which means you have to contact any debtors with bills that have been sent.
The creditors will just have to write off the debt. You are under NO obligation to pay his bills. They will try to get you to do it, but you don't have to take it on.
Creditors can make claims against any estate left by the decedent. If the car loan is not paid the lender will repossess the car. If there is no other estate the creditors are out of luck unless there was a co-signer on any of the accounts. As bills come in the creditors should be notified of the death.