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Help! I’ve Just Been Sued by a Creditor! What Do I Do Now?

Posted by Kevin on March 31, 2016 under Bankruptcy Blog | Be the First to Comment

Don’t react to getting lawsuit papers by avoiding them. React by helping yourself.  Get some competent legal advice about what this lawsuit really means, whether and how it can hurt you, and what you likely can do about it.

Lawsuits by most creditors aren’t “personal.” They’re just a business decision. The lawsuit papers you have in your hands tell you that the creditor has decided that suing you is a good bet.  It thinks that the lawsuit will help get the debt paid. The creditor likely even has in mind specifically how it expects to get paid.  It may well be targeting your bank account, your paycheck, your home, or some other income or asset.

The creditor is also making another easy bet—that in fact you won’t do anything about the lawsuit papers after getting them. At least not in time to prevent the lawsuit from turning into a judgment against you.  Most people don’t.

So the creditor is banking on you letting them get a “default judgment,” a court decision in favor of the creditor which happens automatically (or at least without a trial)  if you do not formally reply to the lawsuit on time.

Once armed with a judgment,  the creditor to start grabbing your money and your assets, through orders of the court, sometimes in ways you might not expect.

A Judgment against You is More than Just an Admission that You Owe the Debt

But even if the judgment does not result in giving a creditor a way to get money out of your right away, it has longer-term consequences.  For one,  judgments can be reported to credit agencies.  Affects your FICO score and, therefore, your ability down the line to get credit.   In addition, once the deadline to respond passes and a judgment is entered, you’ve give up on some important rights:

a) Your right to raise possible defenses. Creditors and collection agencies can be shockingly cavalier about whether the debts they are pursuing are legally valid. Think about it: since in the vast majority of the time consumers don’t respond to lawsuits and judgments are rubber stamped, there’s not much incentive for the creditors to get their paperwork right. You need to have an attorney review the lawsuit to find out if the statute of limitations on the debt has expired, or if you have any other defenses.  After the judgment is entered against you, it is extremely difficult, and a lot more expensive,  to raise any such defenses.

b) Your right to raise counterclaims. A counterclaim is your argument that the creditor did something wrong—in the way the debt was created or in how it was collected. Counterclaims say that you have been legally damaged, entitling you to compensation. A default judgment against you either waives your right to bring a counterclaim, or takes away the counterclaim’s leverage when it would do you the most good.

c) Your right to dispute facts. The debt could become more difficult to write off in bankruptcy after a judgment is entered, if certain facts are alleged in the lawsuit (and deemed admitted by your lack of a response).  This could put you at a serious disadvantage if you ever need to file bankruptcy.

That is not to say that you cannot, within a set period of time, come into court to set aside the default judgment and then raise those defenses. But, in NJ at least, you must file a motion and appear in court, and a judge makes the call.  It is difficult to do and expensive as opposed to filing your answer on time and putting forth your defenses as a matter of right.

If you do get sued, do not bury your head in the sand.  Consult and attorney.

Discharge in Chapter 7

Posted by Kevin on March 27, 2016 under Bankruptcy Blog | Be the First to Comment

The policy behind bankruptcy is to give an honest debtor a fresh start.  The fresh start begins with the filing of the bankruptcy petition.  By just filing, almost all attempts at collection of a debt are stopped by the automatic stay.  The fresh start is completed when the debtor receives a discharge.  A discharge means that the debt is cancelled, wiped out.

Not all debts are discharged, however.  And a discharge does not mean, in certain circumstances, that a creditor cannot make some recovery.  For example, in the case of a mortgage on your house, the bankruptcy discharge only applies to the debt.  Say, you borrower $500,000 from the bank.  You sign a note which is a promise to pay back the $500,000 with interest.  That is the debt.  And you sign a mortgage which is the collateral for the debt.  The mortgage says that if you do not pay back the $500,000, the bank can take your house.  The bankruptcy discharge knocks out the note, the debt, but not the mortgage.  So, the lender can foreclose on the house and get what it is owed from the house.  What if the house is only worth $300,000?  Then, that is what the bank gets.  The bank cannot come after you for the deficiency because the debt is discharged.

What debts are discharged in bankruptcy? Credit card debt, medical bills, personal loans without collateral, as stated above deficiencies on home mortgages but also deficiencies on car loans, most claims for injury based on negligence (car accidents, slip and fall, etc.), most judgments, business debts, guarantees, leases and older taxes for which you have filed a return which is not fraudulent, and the taxing authority has not filed a tax lien.

The Bankruptcy Code, however, does not discharge all debts.  Some are dischargeable sometimes.  Some are not dischargeable. For example, students loans are not usually dischargeable absent a showing of undue hardship.  The burden is on the debtor to prove undue hardship which is not easy in New Jersey.  Willful and malicious injury by the debtor to another, some debts incurred by fraud and/or dishonesty, and embezzlement may not be dischargeable, but the creditor must go to court to challenge the discharge.  The bankruptcy judge makes the decision whether the debt is dischargeable in these cases.

Payroll and sales taxes are not dischargeable (called trust fund taxes).  Other debts not dischargeable include income taxes recently incurred, domestic support obligations, criminal fines or restitution, injuries suffered when the debtor is intoxicated because of alcohol or drugs, post filing condo fees, and debts not put down in your schedules except in a no asset case.

So, if you are thinking about filing bankruptcy, you should speak first with an experienced lawyer so you can determine which of your debts may or may not be dischargeable.

Why You Should Not Allow a Creditor to Get a Default Judgment against You

Posted by on March 26, 2016 under Bankruptcy Blog | Be the First to Comment

Not responding to a lawsuit by a creditor can harm you in more ways than you think.

 

Three Different Sets of Reasons

Judgments can harm you in three distinct ways:

1) Give the creditor powerful collection tools against you to collect the debt.

2) Force you into filing bankruptcy when it’s not to your best advantage.

3) Makes it harder sometimes to discharge (write off) the debt later in bankruptcy.

Today’s blog addresses the first one of these. The other two will be covered in my next blogs.

The Temptation to Let a Lawsuit Turn into a Default Judgment

Most lawsuits filed by creditors and collection agencies to collect debts result in judgments against the people being sued. That’s because the main allegations in most of these lawsuits simple argue that the debt at issue is legally owed. And that’s usually not in dispute. So the people being sued understandably figure that there’s no point in responding to allegations that appear to be true.

Practically speaking, most of the time the people being sued are at the end of their financial rope. So they believe that they can’t afford to hire an attorney to find out what their options are, or the consequences of doing nothing.

What ARE the Consequences of Doing Nothing?

You may know that a judgment gives a creditor the right to garnish your wages and bank accounts. You may believe that you can prevent such garnishments from happening to you by keeping your money out of bank accounts and by being paid other than a regular wage or salary (although even those are not practical options for most people).  Perhaps, but the “judgment creditor” usually has other rights against you once it gets that judgment.

The laws differ state by state, but generally a judgment becomes a lien against any real estate you own, or will own in the future. Depending on the facts and applicable law, the creditor may then be able to foreclose on that real estate to get its debt paid. Think about not only property under only your own name, but also your rights to property held jointly with a spouse, parent, or through a trust or estate.

An aggressive creditor usually has other tools available. In most states it can get a judge to order you to go to court to answer questions under oath about what you own so that the creditor can find out what it can take from you. The creditor may be able to get a court order sending a sheriff’s deputy to your home or business to seize some of your possessions for payment of the debt. If someone owes you any money (or anything else), that person can be ordered to pay that debt to the creditor instead of to you.

Similarly, if you own a business, the creditor can force your customers to pay it instead of you. This can be devastating both to your cash flow and to your business reputation. Your business could even be subjected to a “till tap”: a sheriff’s deputy arriving at your place of business to take money directly out of the cash register to pay towards the judgment debt.

Will These Happen to You?

We don’t want to give the impression that these kinds of aggressive collection procedures are used in most cases, or will necessarily be used in yours. Some of these are unusual, taking a fair amount of extra work and fees for the creditor or its attorney, and so likely won’t happen in most simple collection cases. The point is that once creditors have a judgment against you, they have many powerful options against you. We meet all the time with distressed new clients who have been shocked at how creditors with judgments against them have been able to financially hurt them.

Why See an Attorney If You Have No Defense to the Debt?

Flying blind is scary and dangerous. Getting sued and not knowing the potential consequences of just letting the creditor win is like flying blind. Besides potentially finding out about possible defenses to the lawsuit, consulting an attorney gives you the opportunity to consider your broader financial situation, and your options for addressing it. A lawsuit by a creditor is usually a symptom of a broader problem. By consulting with a knowledgeable attorney, you may learn about potential solutions to both the lawsuit AND the rest of your financial problems.

 

Please visit our website again for the next two blogs about the other very important reasons why you should not allow a creditor to take a default judgment against you.