Showing posts with label collections. Show all posts
Showing posts with label collections. Show all posts

Monday, May 12, 2014

Common Mistakes Made by Bankruptcy Filers and Their Attorneys - #5

5. Ignoring Creditor Collection Attempts after Filing and Discharge.

There are a number of mistakes that debtors and their bankruptcy attorneys make that often cause  problems after discharge or after their chapter 13 is confirmed. These mistakes often make it difficult to enforce the discharge or the automatic stay and can cause the debtor to suffer a serious financial loss.

It’s human nature to avoid embarrassment and conflict, if at all possible. So, it is not understandable that Debtors would ignore calls and letters from creditors after filing bankruptcy. They know the debt is no longer collectible, so they throw away the collection and letters and ignore the calls that keep on coming after filing and even, sometimes, after a discharge is received. This, however, is a mistake.

Some creditors intentionally ignore a bankruptcy notice hoping that the debtor can still be coerced to pay. Whether it is to buy peace, ease feelings of guilt, or believing it will help improve their credit, debtors will often pay discharged debt even though they have no obligation to do so. The problem with ignoring these illegal contacts after bankruptcy is that the creditors will just continue to harass the debtor with calls, letters, by illegally pulling their credit reports, and they may even report the debt as active and collectible to the credit bureaus.

These acts may prevent a debtor’s credit score from properly rebounding after filing bankruptcy and threaten the fresh start they were expecting. What all debtors should do is keep every letter or email received from creditors, document each phone call carefully and report these contacts to their attorneys.

There are various laws that protect bankruptcy filers from these types of illegal contacts, but they can only be successfully prosecuted if there is evidence to show the court and jury. The actual letters, telephone records and documentation of damages are all needed to prevail in bankruptcy court, in state courts, or the federal district courts.  But nothing will happen unless an attorney who handles these type claims is retained and he has the proof necessary to prevail.

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Monday, March 3, 2014

How Creditors Collect Discharged Debt

We all know that when a debt is discharged in bankruptcy that’s the end of it, right? Think again. Creditors have a sack full of tricks to get consumers to pay debts that they don’t have any legal obligation to pay. In fact, there is an entire industry of debt buyers out there that most people don’t even know about. I’m not talking about the collection agencies, but companies and trusts that do nothing but buy and sell debt—some of it discharged. Obviously if they are buying the debt they intend to collect it. Below are a few of the ways it’s done.

1) Closing on a house or car. When your bankruptcy is over you will eventually need to finance a new car or buy a home. When you go to apply for a loan your loan officer will pull your credit and may tell you that you don’t qualify—unless you can pull up your credit score a few points. They suggest you contact some of your creditors that are negatively reporting on your credit report and settle the debt. You protest that the debt has been discharged but they just shrug. So, you take their advice, contact the creditors and pay off some of your discharged debt. What you were not told was the negative reporting should not have been on your credit report in the first place.

2) Several months after you bankruptcy discharge comes through you start receiving telephone calls or letters from a company you don’t recognize. You think perhaps you didn’t list them on your bankruptcy and are still liable for the debt or the collector says this debt isn’t discharged by the bankruptcy. It gets ugly from there on and you end up settling with them. What they don’t tell you is that they bought the debt from a creditor who was listed in the bankruptcy or that, in a no asset case which is the norm, an unlisted debt is still usually discharged.

3) After your bankruptcy is over you continue to pay an auto loan or home mortgage, although you don’t formally reaffirm that debt. Later on you get behind on the payments and the car is repossessed or the house foreclosed. Months later a collection agency comes along and tries to collect the deficiency. They tell you or you assume that you still owe the debt since you continued to pay on it after the bankruptcy is over. What they don’t tell you is that the debt is still discharged and usually not collectible. The creditors sole remedy, in most cases, is to take back their collateral and that’s it.

4) After your bankruptcy is filed some of your creditors will quit updating your credit report so they don’t have to report that their debt has been discharged. They hope you will voluntarily pay them later to improve your credit score. What you should know is that this trick called “parking an account” and you can dispute the account and make them update it without paying them a nickel.
 
These are just a few of the ways creditors will try to collect a debt that legally isn't collectible. They are very resourceful and will do just about anything if they think they can get away with it. That's why we decided to practice in this area. We believe everyone who filed bankruptcy to get a fresh start should get what was promised them.
 
For further information go to our website or visit us on Facebook.

Saturday, February 15, 2014

Reporting to the Credit Bureaus Is Debt Collection Activity

The courts have held that credit reporting is debt collection activity and this makes sense as the credit bureaus were established for one simply reason, creditors wanted to make sure that the money then lent would be repaid. The credit bureaus have two functions. First to make sure the money their members lend goes to people who are likely to pay it back. Secondly, if the debt isn’t repaid there is an effective way to force the debtor to pay it back. Since having good credit is critical today for home ownership, to rent an apartment, to get a car or finance large consumer items, most people will do just about anything to keep their credit clean. The reality is depriving someone of good credit is a more effective collection technique that dunning letters, harassing phone calls, or even threat of litigation. This is particularly true in Texas where the generous exempt property laws make collecting from the average citizen a hopeless endeavor. So, when creditor report on their customers after they file bankruptcy they must comply with the Fair Credit Reporting Act and it is imperative for consumers who file bankruptcy to make sure their creditors follow the dictates of the FCRA so their credit will come back as quickly as possible

If you have filed bankruptcy you should visit us on facebook. Manchee & Manchee, PC