Apparently so.I recently received a letter informing me that I was being sued for a hospital bill from 2005 that I had never received a bill for.Luckily I was able to set up a payment plan and keep it from going to court and becoming a judgment against me.
The guarantor is the person responsible for a medical bill. For a child, the guarantor is usually a parent.
Yes
Material Acquisition
YES ...
BP on your bank statment stands for Bill Payment
It would not be cost effective and your favorable outcome is doubtful.You would have difficulty proving the bill was never sent. It could have been lost in the mail.You knew you had an obligation to pay your monthly bill even if you didn't receive the statement.
If the bill is unpaid, a collection agency can attempt to collect forever if they choose to. Nothing illegal about it.
Pay the full balance when you receive your monthly statement. (PLATO) TIME TRAVEL IS POSSIBLE SWAG
Yes. If you made the purchase, you owe the bill. If it has been two months and no charge has appeared on your bill, you need to contact the Customer Service department at the credit card company. You are liable for the amount you charged even if you never receive a bill. If the item was billed, you never got a statement, and it went unpaid, you have just incurred a delinquency on your credit report.
beak can also mean bill and a statement of money is a bill
It can be dependent on many factors. The primary insurance holder is always going to be held responsible. The parent of a minor is going to be responsible as well.
If you dine and dash, you are responsible for covering the bill.
Yes, the statement Bill is nice is true, given those conditions.
I was sent a bill from an agency , the bill was from 7 years ago I have never been sent a notice about this bill before now collections has sent a statement to me. Since I have not gotten anything about this before then can I fight this account?
It is valid to conclude that Bill is nice since the first statement indicates that all Mots are nice, and Bill is identified as a Mot in the second statement.
The guarantor is the person responsible for a medical bill. For a child, the guarantor is usually a parent.
Yes. If your name is on anything you are jointly responsible for a bill and vice versa.