You have to be careful about Statute of Limitations matters. If a debtor gives any sort of indication that a debt is owed, either by deliberate or even inadvertent response to cleverly worded correspondence or verbal communications, then the "clock" is reset to day one. In fact, any sort of response to collection efforts is tantamount to admitting that you owe a debt.
Let's say a debtor lives in a state where the SOL is five years on debt collections. If, after 4 years, the debtor gets a phone call from a collection agency, and the collector says "Mr. Jones, do you recall a $500 charge from Joes Department Store that was never paid?" If the debtor says anything but "no", the clock is reset to day one.
Most times, debt will never get that far without intense efforts at collection, and all denial will get you is a lawsuit. Do not rely on Statute of Limitations provisions to save your bacon. It will do no such thing unless you are just "stupid lucky".
Let's say a debtor lives in a state where the SOL is five years on debt collections. If, after 4 years, the debtor gets a phone call from a collection agency, and the collector says "Mr. Jones, do you recall a $500 charge from Joes Department Store that was never paid?" If the debtor says anything but "no", the clock is reset to day one.
Most times, debt will never get that far without intense efforts at collection, and all denial will get you is a lawsuit. Do not rely on Statute of Limitations provisions to save your bacon. It will do no such thing unless you are just "stupid lucky".
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