Yes. If you mean that do they have to pay you for the day you worked, yes. Will they pay you for the "extra" time, no.
If the insurance company does not pay the bill, yes, you are still responsible.
as long as you are in DEFAULT of the contract, they can repo the car. Dont forget the time element involved between you paying up and the repo co. being notified that you did pay. Have your reciept ready to show the repopeople that you DID pay and WHEN.
I am not an attorney. But my thought is, yes of course. You still have a debt and you made an arrangement to pay it back. The company still has assets in the form of outstanding debt, and these assets will be used to pay the company's own debt. If I were one of the company debtors, you can be sure I'd be expecting people to pay the company what is rightfully owed. Again, I am not an attorney.
No.
Yes. The insurance company will pay their portion of the claim which does not include the deductible because that is your portion .
You have to pay the new company. It's still a debt and as such the debt was sold as an asset of the old company. It would be NICE if you didn't have to pay it, but you do. Yea, wouldn't it be nice if we didn't have to pay after the local finance company sold my note to GMAC?
It is, but you still have to pay the utility company to pump it into your home.
No. That would still be your responsibility.
Sent them a letter which clearly states that will not pay anything to the company you are suing. According to the law you are entitled to do so (IF you have sent the letter, if you didn't do so you will still have to pay!!).
yes and with no pay
Yep....It is still your responsibility to pay your debts...
Employees use punch clocks for many reasons. Punch clocks keep track of when an employee is working and when they are not. This can automate time cards and pay checks in some cases. In all cases it's something that helps keep the employee on time to work and it keeps them from taking funds from the company by staying on the clock too long.