Hi all. Boy, do I have a story. I declared BK in 1992 (!) and had a business debt of 30K which had been in arbitration, and the creditor (private party lender, a wealthy individual) had gotten a judgment. As far as I knew, this 30K debt had been discharged nearly 20 years ago. I have not seen the guy for over 20 years.
Flash forward to last June, when out of the blue I got a bizarre letter from a CA, claiming the were trying to collect a judgment for $130,000!!!!! Turns out the creditor had filed an AP Case. I was not properly served and never knew about it. He got a default judgment and had been renewing the judgment every 10 years with interest--as is possible in California. He had alleged fraud--claiming I lied about assets at the time of the original loan in 1989.
Fortunately, I got a good lawyer and the judge (same judge, about to retire!) agreed that I wasn't properly served. The AP case has now been reopened.
I have made repeated offers to settle, but the guy refuses to respond to my offers. This creditor is an idle rich type of guy with oodles of money to spend, and (apparently) a big grudge. The guy from the CA that I was dealing with said the creditor was "really mad" and he'd "never seen anything like it." He said he thought it was a "personal vendetta that he'd been nursing all these years." Whew! And here I'd forgotten all about it.
The fraud allegations are utterly baseless. I never committed fraud, and can prove it. Problem is, the defense has now cost close to 30K, and will be more by the time I'm done. We thought we could get this dismissed in summary judgment. In discovery it was revealed that (of course) he has no evidence whatsoever. At the lawyers conference with the (new) judge last week, the judge ordered us to mediation, under threat of sanctions. Alas, the money I once had to negotiate a settlement with has now been spent on lawyers.
Question: what is typical and/or standard in AP Cases in terms of reimbursement for attorneys fees? Can I reasonably ask for my fees in the mediation or the trial (after showing my irrefutable proof that no fraud was committed)? Do I have a snowball's chance of recovering fees? How does this type of thing usually work? Does anybody know of any examples of cases where baseless AP fraud cases were dismissed and attorney's fees awarded to the defendant?
Thanks...
Flash forward to last June, when out of the blue I got a bizarre letter from a CA, claiming the were trying to collect a judgment for $130,000!!!!! Turns out the creditor had filed an AP Case. I was not properly served and never knew about it. He got a default judgment and had been renewing the judgment every 10 years with interest--as is possible in California. He had alleged fraud--claiming I lied about assets at the time of the original loan in 1989.
Fortunately, I got a good lawyer and the judge (same judge, about to retire!) agreed that I wasn't properly served. The AP case has now been reopened.
I have made repeated offers to settle, but the guy refuses to respond to my offers. This creditor is an idle rich type of guy with oodles of money to spend, and (apparently) a big grudge. The guy from the CA that I was dealing with said the creditor was "really mad" and he'd "never seen anything like it." He said he thought it was a "personal vendetta that he'd been nursing all these years." Whew! And here I'd forgotten all about it.
The fraud allegations are utterly baseless. I never committed fraud, and can prove it. Problem is, the defense has now cost close to 30K, and will be more by the time I'm done. We thought we could get this dismissed in summary judgment. In discovery it was revealed that (of course) he has no evidence whatsoever. At the lawyers conference with the (new) judge last week, the judge ordered us to mediation, under threat of sanctions. Alas, the money I once had to negotiate a settlement with has now been spent on lawyers.
Question: what is typical and/or standard in AP Cases in terms of reimbursement for attorneys fees? Can I reasonably ask for my fees in the mediation or the trial (after showing my irrefutable proof that no fraud was committed)? Do I have a snowball's chance of recovering fees? How does this type of thing usually work? Does anybody know of any examples of cases where baseless AP fraud cases were dismissed and attorney's fees awarded to the defendant?
Thanks...
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