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Pullling CR and being sued

Date: Mon, 01/14/2008 - 07:48

Submitted by anonymous
on Mon, 01/14/2008 - 07:48

Posts: 202330 Credits: [Donate]

Total Replies: 9


Hi, I hope some of you good folks can help me?

I have just received a copy of a lawsuit filed against me by CACH LLC. The OC is not even on my credit report any longer, so this debt is definately past SOL (4 years in Texas).

On reading my CR I noticed that CACH pulled a hard inquiry back in 06 with permissable purpose to aquire/service/insure account. Can they legally do this??

Also, I received notice back end of Nov that if I did not respond within 35 days then action would be taken. A lawsuit was filed Dec 17th. They did not give me the full 35 days before filing. Can they legally do this?

Any help on this matter would be appreciated.


I called the County Clerks office and there is a lawsuit filed. The copy I received said I had 30 days to respond but the cover letter from CACH's attorney said I did not have to respond. I have not officially been served by a constable but the County Clerk said it was in fact a lawsuit.

I do plan on showing up to court but have yet to be officially served. Should I go ahead and answer the copy of the lawsuit? The lawsuit was filed in another precinct to the one that I reside, does this make a difference?


lrhall41

Submitted by on Mon, 01/14/2008 - 08:09

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Unless you are the type that feels extremely comortable in a court without an attorney, you shoud go to www.naca.net and fingd an attorney that specializes in these things. They will very often work on a contingency basis. There appears to be violations of the FCRA here and possibly the fdcpa. CACH is know for thier sloppy behavior. A good attorney would eat them for lunch!


lrhall41

Submitted by Frogpatch on Mon, 01/14/2008 - 09:06

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fdcpa violations, thanks CACH!
1. They told you that you didn't have to respond, as a collection agency they cannot legally tell you that.

2. Filing suit when they have no grounds to do so

Get yourself a attorney and get their case thrown out as the SOL has expired, then nail them for the FDCPA violations plus punitive damages, your attorney's fees, and court costs.


lrhall41

Submitted by JCEMT on Mon, 01/14/2008 - 15:07

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