It depends upon the creditor/plaintiff, but most are more than willing to negotiate a settlement or terms of repayment outside of litigation. A judge will sometimes request that the plaintiff and defendant(s) meet outside the courtroom (with or without a mediator) to try and resolve the issue before the case is heard.
credit sales are sales you have made on credit, so they still owe you the money for that item. credit purchases are things you have purchased from your suppliers on credit and therefore you owe the money for
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no. you aren't a human being until you're 18 in the eyes of contracts/credit.
When it comes to line of credits, lenders look at elements like cash flow, credit records and companies’ assets. In case you are still worried about a personal bad credit score can hurt, there are still alternative options.
If there is A ballance still owed on it then the interest is still being billed to the ballance, If you have not closed the card account,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,DO NOT CLOSE IT UNTILL ITS PAID IN FULL. That is terrible for credit score.
No - its still a credit transaction. The PIN is simply used to verify you are the registered owner of the card.
One of two things. First, you still owe the money. but you can not use that credit account anymore. or Second, you have paid off the account and the creditor has not notified the credit bureaus that you have paid this account in full. If it is paid in full, I suggest you notify the credit agencies.
You could open a credit card business but you would still need to use a bank. It would be just like having multiple credit cards. You manage all the accounts but you still need the bank to do so.
Your bankruptcy is on your credit report 10 years. The fact of having a bankruptcy can influence whether someone gives you credit or not, as can just about anything else. obviously, your more recent credit history, job, general stability and financial actions will begin to have more of an influence than the older ones.And of course, even without BK, you still can be denied credit...it is always the option of the one providing it to decide if they want to extend any credit to you at all, ever.I think one of the things it is hoped one learns from the whole going bankrupt experience is that you do NOT have any "right" to credit.
Yes. If they extend the line of credit to you, and you do not activate it, it will still show up on your credit report.
i think that we still have education so we can learn new things and that every one has the right to learn.
It will take about two years of on-time bill paying to recover. Of course, if your event was bankruptcy, that will remain on your record for seven years. Still, you can be well on the road to recovery within a few years. "When you are doing the right thing, the right things happen."