Hello,
Please search in Google for State Statute of limitation.
I could have answered that, if i knew which type of debt it is and which type of contract you have along with your state.
You should get the answer, there are a lot of websites that have State Statute of limitation.
Thanks!
No! You need to be careful if considering paying the collection agency. At that point it will start the 7 years entry. Bad credit remains on a credit report 7 years from the last date of activity, in other words, the date you make a payment. Make sure you negotiate a deletion prior to paying any collection account. Source: Credit Bible by Phil Turner.
No because the original company has 'sold' the debt to the credit company or in other words the credit company has bought the debt account from the original company for less than what you owe. That is why credit companies keep chasing you to pay them.
The best thing you can do is put a little time between when the collection agency first contacted you and when you plan to pay. Don't do anything fast. Slow it down. They will get tired of calling and be willing to settle after 30 to 60 days have passed.
No, it is not possible to use a credit card after the payment due date has passed.
Statute of limitations is a term that applies to how long a consumer can be sued to recover a defaulted debt. It has no bearing on collection activity. There is a separate time period for how long a charge off can show on your credit report. A creditor can attempt collection on an unpaid debt forever. It's just that after these two time frames have passed, their collection efforts have no "teeth".
Yes - absolutely a debt can be passed from one debt collection agency to another.
Absolutely they can ! The only reason a person needs to deal with a collection agency, is because they defaulted on payments to the original company. That company passed the account to a debt-recovery agency, who paid the sum YOU owe to the original company. If you simply refuse to pay the collection agency, they have the legal right to take you to court to recover the debt !
Either you can ask what collection agency the company you originally owed deals with or you will have to obtain your own credit report. * If the debtor did not respond to the 30 day clarification notice, the collection agency has no legal obligation to inform the debtor of the creditor, amount owed, etc. unless litigation is initiated. The debtor's credit report may or may not indicate which account has been sent to collections, as credit bureaus are very lax in keeping timely data on consumer's.
No, C.A'a have no form of legal recourse if the SOL date has passed
1. Get a copy of your current credit report. (I have used www.freecreditreport.com which can provide all reports from all 3 credit agencies for around $40.) 2. Write up letters to each collection agency asking why each account was opened along with the account balance. 3. Get the letter certified, copied and send them to the collection agency. 4. (Read both of these steps) If the collection agency replies: you can "Ask For Forgiveness" from them and offer a different ammount than the full balance and barter, be sure that the letter of forgiveness stats that even though you did not pay the shown balance that they close the account and say it was paid in full. If after 30 days the collection agencies do not reply you can contact the collection reporting agencies in which the negative note was placed and provide them with the copied documents showing that 30 days has passed and the collection agency has not replied. The mark will be then be removed.
No! You need to be careful if considering paying the collection agency. At that point it will start the 7 years entry. Bad credit remains on a credit report 7 years from the last date of activity, in other words, the date you make a payment. Make sure you negotiate a deletion prior to paying any collection account. Source: Credit Bible by Phil Turner.
It is considered a "write off"; which benefits the original creditor due to financial loss. Some creditors will keep your original information, and others simply give up those rights to third party collection agency. Once a payment is made, they notify the original creditor that your account was paid off in full in order to update this informaiton with the bureaus that they are reporting with.
No because the original company has 'sold' the debt to the credit company or in other words the credit company has bought the debt account from the original company for less than what you owe. That is why credit companies keep chasing you to pay them.
I am in the middle of a dispute at this time over the same question. I did not know that our insurance company had not paid a service provider 100% of the charge. Two years later I receive a notice from a collection agency. The collection agency stated the company mailed 11 statements and after the last statement was returned and another 7 months they turned it over to a collection agency. All they had to do was call the insurance company they had received payment from to verify our address or the referring physician. Now because of their handling, the appeal period for the insurance claim has passed and my credit is being adversely effected. If a bureau is supposed to be an accurate presentation of a consumer's payment history, this should not be included..not to mention the rudeness of the collection agency in their communication. I have contacted the Attorney General's office of our state...they keep referring me to a private attorney. My next step is a formal complaint to the FTC.
The best thing you can do is put a little time between when the collection agency first contacted you and when you plan to pay. Don't do anything fast. Slow it down. They will get tired of calling and be willing to settle after 30 to 60 days have passed.
Next contact tell them that this was an identity theft issue that was more than 10 years ago and any further attempt to collect this debt from you will be considered illegal. It has also run passed the statue of limmitation for collection. So say it, write it, do what you have to but make sure to tell them.
Yes, any and all expenses that the lender incurs can be passed to the customer when they are attempting to collect a debt.