ok, so i finally answered the door and accepted the papers from one of my creditors who is suing me. as far as i know, this is the only one.
i read the sticky about how to go about responding, but have some specific questions.
1. the short of it is that i do owe (obviously). the complaint attached a copy of my last statement. but i was wondering if i could buy some time by disputing the full value they are suing for. a couple months ago, i got a letter from the law firm to settle the debt for about 50% of the total. im sure it wouldnt fly, but would it at least buy me some time to dispute and then provide some semblance of reasoning to contest the amount using that settlement offer as my "evidence?" - and would i provide this "evidence" with my response?
1a. - or is there another tactic to use to buy time. i mean, i dont want to get too heavily into a trial process since i dont have an attorney for this. i just want to do what i can to answer myself and stall the process.
2. if i answer every point with "insufficient knowledge to confirm or deny" - does that help me or hurt me? does it buy me any time? does it do anything for me, as compared to doing nothing and not even answering?
3. the bottom line is im wondering if its worth it to even answer the complaint? i have no legitimate defense to put forth, so my only desire at this point is to further delay the inevitable judgment (with the goal of filing bk in sept. - which would be 1 year after my last charge). so my hope is to delay this judgment by another month or so, and, assuming it would take them another month to try and come after my paltry assets, i would be filing bk around the same time. good strategy?
thx
i guess i should say that i accepted the papers a couple weeks ago, and i think my response is due by this friday if i remember right.
which also raises another question for me - HOW do you respond? do i just type something up on my own paper? do i mail it in to the court, or personally drop it off?
i read the sticky about how to go about responding, but have some specific questions.
1. the short of it is that i do owe (obviously). the complaint attached a copy of my last statement. but i was wondering if i could buy some time by disputing the full value they are suing for. a couple months ago, i got a letter from the law firm to settle the debt for about 50% of the total. im sure it wouldnt fly, but would it at least buy me some time to dispute and then provide some semblance of reasoning to contest the amount using that settlement offer as my "evidence?" - and would i provide this "evidence" with my response?
1a. - or is there another tactic to use to buy time. i mean, i dont want to get too heavily into a trial process since i dont have an attorney for this. i just want to do what i can to answer myself and stall the process.
2. if i answer every point with "insufficient knowledge to confirm or deny" - does that help me or hurt me? does it buy me any time? does it do anything for me, as compared to doing nothing and not even answering?
3. the bottom line is im wondering if its worth it to even answer the complaint? i have no legitimate defense to put forth, so my only desire at this point is to further delay the inevitable judgment (with the goal of filing bk in sept. - which would be 1 year after my last charge). so my hope is to delay this judgment by another month or so, and, assuming it would take them another month to try and come after my paltry assets, i would be filing bk around the same time. good strategy?
thx
i guess i should say that i accepted the papers a couple weeks ago, and i think my response is due by this friday if i remember right.
which also raises another question for me - HOW do you respond? do i just type something up on my own paper? do i mail it in to the court, or personally drop it off?
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