After reviewing the suit against me by Chiti, and spending much time down at the local courthouse reviewing court cases involving contracts (CC's and unsecured debt through ChitiFinancial,) I think I'll let the cards fall where they will. I do have wages to go after, but I'm now also subject to a permanent 15% student loan garnishment. I have zero assets.
I downloaded a blank "declaration of exempt wages and assets from a reliable online source and will file this with the county court under the civil file suit. I'll send a copy of this CMRR to the plaintiff's attorney. I included a notice of this year's contract and the reduction in wages due to state furloughs. I've also written a letter and a proposal to the plaintiff's attorney suggesting a minimum five-year payment plan that gives the plaintiff more than they would probably receive under a BK 13. I included a lot more in the letter, but won't go into that now. I will also file this with my county clerk to be included in the civil file.
It does appear that a defendant attempting to "work out" a compromise with a creditor can keep a local judge from signing off on a default judgment.
After carefully revieing the thousands fo dollars that I would be required to spend on an answer, motions, responses to plaintiff's motions, etc, I thnk my choice is the best choice. If I leived in a state where it costs nothing to file answer, motions, etc, I might reconsider.
Part of the kicker is that not only is the defendant responsible for costs of answers, etc in Oregon, they are also responsible for trial costs of several hundred dollars per day! If this were a JDB, I would approach this in a different manner, but this IS the OC going through an attorney firm, and it does appear they hold my original signed contract from 20+ years ago.
I downloaded a blank "declaration of exempt wages and assets from a reliable online source and will file this with the county court under the civil file suit. I'll send a copy of this CMRR to the plaintiff's attorney. I included a notice of this year's contract and the reduction in wages due to state furloughs. I've also written a letter and a proposal to the plaintiff's attorney suggesting a minimum five-year payment plan that gives the plaintiff more than they would probably receive under a BK 13. I included a lot more in the letter, but won't go into that now. I will also file this with my county clerk to be included in the civil file.
It does appear that a defendant attempting to "work out" a compromise with a creditor can keep a local judge from signing off on a default judgment.
After carefully revieing the thousands fo dollars that I would be required to spend on an answer, motions, responses to plaintiff's motions, etc, I thnk my choice is the best choice. If I leived in a state where it costs nothing to file answer, motions, etc, I might reconsider.
Part of the kicker is that not only is the defendant responsible for costs of answers, etc in Oregon, they are also responsible for trial costs of several hundred dollars per day! If this were a JDB, I would approach this in a different manner, but this IS the OC going through an attorney firm, and it does appear they hold my original signed contract from 20+ years ago.
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