Are you being sued by credit card company? This situation
may prove to be difficult if you don’t know what steps to take to fight off
debt claims in court. Thousands of Americans are being sued by credit card
company and it is up to you to exercise your rights and defend yourself. If the
lawsuit pushes through the Interrogatories phase, chances you, are will be
given a set of questions you need to answer.
Now, this is a tricky part as those being sued by creditcard company are asked to provide sensitive personal details like their social
security numbers and/or bank and employment information. Remember, you can
object to these questions and you need to do so with cited grounds to your
objections.
Note that in this phase, your creditor will wait for you to
mess up the questions and get you to admit that you own the debt. This way,
they can file a default judgment against you. Meaning, one wrong answer and
they will win the case! The set of questions will include asking about your
bank account, your job and personal details that has nothing to do with being
sued by credit card company. These information are rather sensitive so think
twice about giving them a straight answer!
The important thing to remember when being sued by creditcard company or junk debt buyers is that if they do not have proof that would
otherwise prove that the debt is yours, they don’t have a case. For junk debt
buyers, you are in luck because these agencies do not have the necessary
documents that would prove you own the debt, like a signed contract between you
and the original creditor, as these documents are never released by the
original creditor. When the original creditor closed the book on an account,
that account will stay closed even if it is sold to a third party collection
agency. If the junk debt buyer has no evidence that would prove you own the
case, then their chances of winning by default is slim.
Click here to order your own copy of the complete Answering a Summons eDocument package and end all debt claims without the hefty legal costs.
No comments:
Post a Comment