The estate of the deceased will be ordered to pay before any funds are disbursed to the family. IF the estate cannot cover the entire amount owed, then other state laws may apply.
It means a credit card company wants to put you into debt by giving you a credit card you can use.
depends on the company giving the card,read the policy and the disclosure statements
They owe them money and are repaying a debt or are loaning them some.
Giving to charity is one way they might be, but it alone does not make them a socially responsible company.
No, they have to offer you the balance transfer.
Dont know who is 'responsible' but the loss if reported to an insurance company would not be covered. //
When you pay someone back you are usually giving them money back, you are repaying that person.
You'd have to prove that giving her the information caused damage to you. If she hasn't used the information for anything, you wouldn't have grounds to sue.
The best thing to do is try and get in touch with the management or the person that was responsible for giving you that equipment. If you cannot find anyone from the company, its best to keep the equipment.
don't consolidate, pay the debt off. To answer your question, it depennds on the company giving you the loan?
Credit card company is different from bank, they provide you the credit on their own risk, if you don't pay them back, than they even can't ask your bank to pay them.. So you can say that- they are charging the high interests for the money they are giving you at the time- you need it most, and you don't have anyother sources to borrow money. they charge the fees for the product they are giving, and giving services.
Sure! As long as they report to the credit bureaus and you pay them on time, they can definitely help your score. That is how a lot of people with damaged credit are able to help rebuild their credit. If someone's credit is so bad (350-500 credit score), typically no credit card company will extend credit to them, so they would not be able to build up their score. Secured credit cards are a great way to reduce a credit card company's risk when giving someone a credit card, while still allowing them to showcase their ability to make an on-time monthly payment and improve their credit!