Alrighty....
Stopped paying Discover some time last year, like March or April, something like that. Letter in July or so saying I had til the end of September to make payment/arrangements or they would forward my account to an attorney to obtain a judgment against me. They did that. I was served on 12/27/10.
Papers say I have 30 days from service to "appear and defend the complaint filed against [me] in the above entitled action" and "in case of your failure to do so, for want thereof, plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief demanded in the complaint."
"You must 'appear' in this case or the other side will win automatically. To 'appear', you must file with the court a legal paper called a 'motion' or 'answer'. The 'motion' or 'answer' must be given to the court clerk or administrator within 30 days, along with the required filing fee. It must be in the proper form and have proof of service upon the plaintiff's attorney or, if the plaintiff does not have an attorney, proof of service on the plaintiff".
I figured this to be taken care of when my attorney had everything completed and I filed later this month. A new snafu has arisen though, in that we are expecting a tax refund (federal and state). I have since learned that we cannot check the "apply to 2011 estimated taxes" on the return, and that the trustee will very likely take the refund to disburse to my creditors. We really need to avoid that, and are trying to find a way to file taxes, get and pay out the refund, and then file BK -- all before the 27th of this month! We are waiting on mortgage interest documents only to file taxes.
So, from what I gather there are a couple ways to do this:
1) File an answer to the suit to delay a bit ($137 if I am correctly understanding the court's fee schedule)
2) File taxes and pay quarterly taxes/other necessary expenses with the refund (carefully documented to the last penny)
3) File bankruptcy
OR
1) Let Discover get their default judgment
2) File taxes as above
3) File bankruptcy
My question is -- assuming Discover gets the default judgment, will that disappear in the BK? I have no wages to garnish, my bank accounts do not have anything significant in them.
What would you do?
If the suggestion is to file an answer -- how exactly do I do that? What do I say? How do I serve the plaintiff's attorney (name and address are on the papers, I cannot do it in person as they are several hours away and I don't know anyone in the area, at least not anyone that I want to involve in this).
Stopped paying Discover some time last year, like March or April, something like that. Letter in July or so saying I had til the end of September to make payment/arrangements or they would forward my account to an attorney to obtain a judgment against me. They did that. I was served on 12/27/10.
Papers say I have 30 days from service to "appear and defend the complaint filed against [me] in the above entitled action" and "in case of your failure to do so, for want thereof, plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief demanded in the complaint."
"You must 'appear' in this case or the other side will win automatically. To 'appear', you must file with the court a legal paper called a 'motion' or 'answer'. The 'motion' or 'answer' must be given to the court clerk or administrator within 30 days, along with the required filing fee. It must be in the proper form and have proof of service upon the plaintiff's attorney or, if the plaintiff does not have an attorney, proof of service on the plaintiff".
I figured this to be taken care of when my attorney had everything completed and I filed later this month. A new snafu has arisen though, in that we are expecting a tax refund (federal and state). I have since learned that we cannot check the "apply to 2011 estimated taxes" on the return, and that the trustee will very likely take the refund to disburse to my creditors. We really need to avoid that, and are trying to find a way to file taxes, get and pay out the refund, and then file BK -- all before the 27th of this month! We are waiting on mortgage interest documents only to file taxes.
So, from what I gather there are a couple ways to do this:
1) File an answer to the suit to delay a bit ($137 if I am correctly understanding the court's fee schedule)
2) File taxes and pay quarterly taxes/other necessary expenses with the refund (carefully documented to the last penny)
3) File bankruptcy
OR
1) Let Discover get their default judgment
2) File taxes as above
3) File bankruptcy
My question is -- assuming Discover gets the default judgment, will that disappear in the BK? I have no wages to garnish, my bank accounts do not have anything significant in them.
What would you do?
If the suggestion is to file an answer -- how exactly do I do that? What do I say? How do I serve the plaintiff's attorney (name and address are on the papers, I cannot do it in person as they are several hours away and I don't know anyone in the area, at least not anyone that I want to involve in this).
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