Monday, February 24, 2014

Creditors Sometimes Assign Discharged Debt to Collection Agencies

Recently I worked on a petition against a Colorado collection agency that called our client six times afrer receiving the account from the orignal creditor who was listed in their chapter 13 bankruptcy.  This is a blatant violation of the automatic stay and/or discharge injjunction. In this instance the case was later converted to chapter 7 so it was a discharge violation. Then, to make matters worse, the collection agency assigns the case to an attorney for collection, yet another violation.
 
How does something like this happen? Is it intentional or simply negligence? The excuse we almost always get from collection agencies is that they had no knowledge of the bankruptcy because the creditor who sold or assigned the account didn't tell them about it. Unfortunately for the collection agencies, ignorance of the bankruptcy is no excuse. When they try to collect a debt that is no longer collectable they violate the Texas Unfair Debt Collection Act and if they report it to a credit bureau they can be guilty of liable as well.. It is irrelevant whether they knew about the bankruptcy or not.
 
What is fairly clear is that when the original creditor gets the conversion and discharge notices it will not pass on those notices to the current holder of the debt. I think this is a matter of logistics. The original creditors simply have too many accounts that have been assigned for collection or sold and have no mechanism in place to forward notices from the bankruptcy court.
 
So, the consumer loses and has to suffer through the mental anguish that always results from taking nasty phone calls and/or receiving collection letters from attorneys long after the debt is discharged.  Lucky there is a remedy to the consumer.

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