The other day, I was in contact with one of the bigger consumer law firms in my state. I'm dealing with an out-of-state collection agency who refuses to ceaase and desist collection actions in this state (CAs must be registered. In particular the CA I am dealing with.)
The legal firm might consider representing me in a harrassment suit. I have plenty of documentation including copies of letters from the State telling the CA they are violating state laws. I think it will all depend on whether or not the legal firm thinks they can get a reasonable settlement chunk for themselves.
In the course of looking at my debt issues, the question of SOL came up. According to this firm, I should question any suits from C1. I have one of the CC agreements where C1 uses Virginia law in it's cardholder agreement. The CC SOL there is 3 years. I got the impression that one can use the Virginia laws to argue the SOL. Supposedly I can use the Virginia SOL as a carefully crafted affirmative defense in an answer to an Oregon suit. Does anyone know anything about how this works?
I have been sued on one C1 CC and garnishment will pay this off in another month or so. My other 3 C1 cards have not been paid on for over three years. The attorney seemed to think it is very unlikely that C1 will initiate a suit at this late stage.
Has anyone heard of a civil suit where one argues using another state's SOL while being sued in a completely different state? I can only guess that an answer might be, "Defendant and Plaintiff agreed to be bound by Virginia law. There has been no activity on the account for more than three years. As such, the debt is time-barred from legal recourse."
Thoughts? Just very curious.
The legal firm might consider representing me in a harrassment suit. I have plenty of documentation including copies of letters from the State telling the CA they are violating state laws. I think it will all depend on whether or not the legal firm thinks they can get a reasonable settlement chunk for themselves.
In the course of looking at my debt issues, the question of SOL came up. According to this firm, I should question any suits from C1. I have one of the CC agreements where C1 uses Virginia law in it's cardholder agreement. The CC SOL there is 3 years. I got the impression that one can use the Virginia laws to argue the SOL. Supposedly I can use the Virginia SOL as a carefully crafted affirmative defense in an answer to an Oregon suit. Does anyone know anything about how this works?
I have been sued on one C1 CC and garnishment will pay this off in another month or so. My other 3 C1 cards have not been paid on for over three years. The attorney seemed to think it is very unlikely that C1 will initiate a suit at this late stage.
Has anyone heard of a civil suit where one argues using another state's SOL while being sued in a completely different state? I can only guess that an answer might be, "Defendant and Plaintiff agreed to be bound by Virginia law. There has been no activity on the account for more than three years. As such, the debt is time-barred from legal recourse."
Thoughts? Just very curious.
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