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Pre-Judgements

Date: Thu, 09/11/2008 - 14:00

Submitted by anonymous
on Thu, 09/11/2008 - 14:00

Posts: 202330 Credits: [Donate]

Total Replies: 2


If a company has submitted your information to a legal firm, and that firm has already submitted your information to the courts to file suit against you, what is my options if I call that company to try to rectify the debt and they will not adjust the late/overdraft fees and is requiring to pay more when I just can't afford to? I am just trying to recover from 2 garnishment back to back in the past 2yrs that cause this mess in the first place and I just can't deal with this again. The company says I owe $1246.80, payoff $980, $624 down payment, at $150 a month. When the original charges was for only $487. How can I better negotiate to get the fees reduced and pyoff much lower then $980?


I had an arrangement with a debt collection agency to pay a little over half the balance I owed. On the last payment I only had half the money, willing to pay the balance the next week. They took the half payment and now Say I defaulted on the agreement and want the balance in full. What are my options.


lrhall41

Submitted by on Fri, 01/09/2009 - 11:43

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This is why I never recommend to settle in payments because they are just waiting for you to miss a payment. Once the payment is missed the collector starts screaming default and demanding payment in full.

I see three options.
1. Continue to pay the agreed amount even though you were a week late on one payment. Keep a copy of all the cashed checks and the singed agreement so you can prove you paid the agreed amount. After that they will either sue for the remainder but I think they would lose or they will continue collection on the remainder or they will accept the settlement in full.

2. You can go through the hassle of getting a new agreement. Personally I would do a lump sum one payment agreement if you have the cash. I wouldn't settle for anymore than the previous agreement if you are doing payments or lump sum.

3. Quit paying and deal with their harassment and risk being sued eventually.

I would probably go with option one unless you owe months worth of payments. For example if your payment plan is up in two months and you owe $200/ month then you are only risking $400 dollars to continue with a payment plan but if you owe $500/month for 20 months then it is a lot more risky to continue that plan with a possibly void agreement. If the second scenario is your case then I would renegotiate the deal.


lrhall41

Submitted by DOLLARSandSINCE on Sat, 01/10/2009 - 21:41

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