When a collection agency sells your debt they no longer have any claim to your debt. It's like selling a car, once it is gone it is gone.
Management account, cardholder account, transaction list
Management account, cardholder account, transaction list
The correct sequence of steps are as follows: a. Submit a written request for issuance of ATM card at a SBI branch b. You get a letter containing the PIN of your ATM card to your house c. Take the letter and your passbook to the SBI branch where you have the account and request for collection of the ATM card d. Use the card and PIN number to access your account through the ATM.
Affected account Affect mean something made it happenEffect means something already happen
Reversing the JE
Jose. DID they repo the car?? If not, I dont see how it could be correct. Was this vehicle a repo at the time and were you paying the remaining balance to the collection agency or was the account a charge off? I am assuming that you are refering to Ford Motor Creit which I used to collect for. In most cases a 3rd party collection agency will purchase the account at pennies on the dollar or the account will be placed with a fee once the account is collected. It is the collection agency responsiblity to update the creditor of payments and in some cases update credit reports. Also it is a good idea to get a confirmed paid in full letter and to send it to the original creditor to make sure they update your credit report correctly.
No. A creditor can report a paid derogatory account as delinquent PRIOR to being paid. But if you paid it off, the correct status is "paid" (collection or charge off).
Measures to correct the deficit in the balance of payments include deflation, depreciation, and devaluation. In addition, there is exchange control.
A surplus on the current account of its balance of payments (and a matching deficit on the capital account). These are not to be confused with fiscal surplus or budgetary surplus since they are concerned with only Government expenditure and Income. And the correct word is "than" not "then".
It is always a good policy to attempt this. But whether or not you succeed in getting a paid collection account removed from your credit report is totally within the discretion of the creditor. There is no law that requires or compels credit reporting. The Fair Credit Reporting Act states that IF an account is reported, then it must be correct. Therefore, collection agencies and creditors usually will tell a consumer that they "must" by law report the accurate nature of the account, which would be a paid collection, as opposed to removing the account.
The only person that can accept payment once an account has been charged off is the purchasing agent. When a collection agency purchases your debt, they purchase all legal rights to it, including any payments made towards the account. If you were to pay the original creditor after a chargeoff, they are required to forward that payment to the purchasing agency and this can be a rather lengthy process. Understand that many debts that go to collections are interest bearing and the longer a payment takes to get to the correct party, the more you may be paying in the end.
The collection company has probably charged interest sincethe day they received the account. The interest rate can differ from state to state on a charged off account. So yes, they can but that amount is not just for two months. You need to ask for a total breakdown on the account and see if the interest charged is correct.
You can see the actual wording of the code at this site. It boils down to 7 years from the first day the account was placed for collection for the last delinquent payment. Sound confusing? Say you paid Jan 1, 1997 and didn't pay for 4 months. The account went into collection. You paid on May 1, 1997 and then never made another payment. If the account went into collection on June 1 1997, that's where the clock starts ticking. Even if the creditor sells the debt, the clock still ticks from the June 1 date. As long as you have not made a payment, the date stays the same. I still have one outstanding question. Say you made a payment on Oct 1, 1997. The account was still in collection because you were still delinquent. Does that restart the clock 180 days after Oct 1? The answer depends on whether the account achieved collection/charged off status prior to the additional payment. Once an account becomes a collection account, its' status changes. The standard amount of time for this is 180 days, but certain factors may shorten or lengthen that period. Once the account becomes a collection/charge off, the complete balance is due in full. The consumer no longer has any rights to make payments, and the original amortization terms no longer apply. The FCRA 15 USC 1681c Section 605(c)(1) states that: "The 7 year period...shall begin...upon the expiration of the 180 day period BEGINNING ON THE DATE OF THE COMMENCEMENT of the delinquency, which immediately preceeded the collection activity, charge to profit and loss, or similar action." So, once the account becomes a collection, or charge off, nothing can legally restart or change the DLA. If however, the consumer makes an additional payment prior to the account becoming a collection or charge off, then that month/year is established as the correct DLA.
The balance of payments, then, is the sum of the balance on current account and the balance on capital and financial account. It is important to understand that the deficit indicated by the current account is financed through activities recorded on the capital and financial account. The deficit on the current account must be exactly offset by the surplus on the capital and financial account (if it is not, net errors and omissions will correct it). This means then that the sum of the current account and the capital and financial account is equal to zero.
You had not taken that into account. Would be the grammatically correct version of that sentence.
Which of the following represents the correct way to account for depreciation on the books
is this account mumber is correct 037-753-80-100 what is the name of user of this account. what are the details about this account