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A judgement is issued by a court. If the court found in your favour and the collection agency is still after you, you will need to get a copy of the Judgment and provide it to the debt collector. You should also complain to the BBB and the appropriate local government agency about the potentially illegal attempt at collection. If you mean the credit card company or other lender wrote it down and did not provide a letter of discharge then they will sell the debt and you will be chased for it. Best to pay it if you can.
Yes, the estate has to pay off the debts including credit cards. If the estate cannot do so, they distribute as best they can. If the court approves the distribution, the debts are ended.
No. Filing a bankruptcy creates a public record that does not go away because you did not complete the bankruptcy. - once you file and get a case number you have filed for bankruptcy. if you didn't follow through and it got dismissed is regardless. you still filed for bankruptcy and it will still be on your credit report.
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
Tell them you will take them to court if they don't give you your money . If they still don't . TAKE THEM TO COURT
Yes.
You need to ask the court to issue a dismissal order, with prejudice. If the case is dismissed without an order at all, the other side can ask that the case be reinstated, with prejudice means that they filed the case for the purposes of harassment and cannot refile it again for any reason. Caveat; you could still ask that the case be dismissed for failure to timely prosecute the case and that the case is brought solely for the purposes of harassment to injure your credit, plus the fact that the case has already been tried and dismissed.
A judgement is issued by a court. If the court found in your favour and the collection agency is still after you, you will need to get a copy of the Judgment and provide it to the debt collector. You should also complain to the BBB and the appropriate local government agency about the potentially illegal attempt at collection. If you mean the credit card company or other lender wrote it down and did not provide a letter of discharge then they will sell the debt and you will be chased for it. Best to pay it if you can.
I've heard from two close friends that upon their case dismissals, there were NO court costs.
If the cases are dismissed by both parties in small claims court, then there shouldn't be any judgment on your credit report related to those cases. It's important to make sure that all legal documentation reflects the dismissal to avoid any potential errors on your credit report.
No. "Dismissed" means exactly what it says.. the charge was dismissed!
Yes, the estate has to pay off the debts including credit cards. If the estate cannot do so, they distribute as best they can. If the court approves the distribution, the debts are ended.
No. Filing a bankruptcy creates a public record that does not go away because you did not complete the bankruptcy. - once you file and get a case number you have filed for bankruptcy. if you didn't follow through and it got dismissed is regardless. you still filed for bankruptcy and it will still be on your credit report.
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
The case will be dismissed for "Want Of Prosecution." However, if you were turned over to the police by the store, and were "booked," (formally arrested and entered into the arrest register) even if the disposition of the case is 'dismissed,' the arrest will still remain on record.
Not if you go to court! They cannot garnish your wages without going to court to get a judgment. If you fail to show up in court and simply tell the court that the debt is outside the statute of limitations, then you may have a judgment against you. And yes they can garnish your wages if a judgment has already been awarded. So go to court if it goes that far and immediately ask that the case be dismissed based on the statute.
what's the use of the court dismissing the debt, if it doesn't change anything or it doesn't stop the creditors ,from continuing to pursue the debt or the information in the credit bureau still reflects on debts with derogatory statements and old balances