Hello. I posted this on a different thread but was asked to start a new one, so here it goes. I have a hearing on a Motion for Summary Judgment next week. Not sure how the Plaintiff's attorney appearing by phone works in a court room. Or maybe this would be held in a conference room of sorts? Can anyone please advise as to what I can expect at these type hearings?
I had been telling the court that they hadn't even provided an account number. But this weekend's mail brought a copy of a statement from June '09. ( I stopped paying 4 different CCs in Nov '08 ). So now I really have nothing to argue against it, except maybe a technicality, which is the fact that they used an account number which was "closed in good standing / card lost or stolen" when my wallet was stolen, and then converted to a different account number when the replacement card was issued. In theory it is still the "same" account in terms of "customer" history if not "account" history. Not sure it is even worth arguing other than to buy me some time until May when the 2-yr residency to file Chp7 in FL kicks in. It could very well be that I go to this hearing only to have the judge grant them the judgment. But I certainly MUST appear, right?
As it is, I don't expect the attorney to play nice after I've contested and made him work a bit. So not sure if he'll want to set up payment plan or what not. Is that even a possibility? I'm almost tempted to contact the firm and see if we can settle prior to hearing/judgment, and maybe offer a one-time payment of 25% or a user-friendly monthly payment. If they don't want to play along because they're certain to get the judgment, should I even say "well then you're not leaving me any other choice than to file bk" type thing?
This brings me to another question. I don't own a home or any assets other than an old car with a trade-in value averaging around $1200, some cash in the bank (which I could always practically empty out before hearing date) and then my wages. Bank account levy and wage garnishment, how do they work? Is that something that would automatically go into effect that day? I live in FL as I said, but my payroll check comes from out of state. Probably should stop direct-deposit asap, huh?
Sorry for rambling on and on.
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks!
I had been telling the court that they hadn't even provided an account number. But this weekend's mail brought a copy of a statement from June '09. ( I stopped paying 4 different CCs in Nov '08 ). So now I really have nothing to argue against it, except maybe a technicality, which is the fact that they used an account number which was "closed in good standing / card lost or stolen" when my wallet was stolen, and then converted to a different account number when the replacement card was issued. In theory it is still the "same" account in terms of "customer" history if not "account" history. Not sure it is even worth arguing other than to buy me some time until May when the 2-yr residency to file Chp7 in FL kicks in. It could very well be that I go to this hearing only to have the judge grant them the judgment. But I certainly MUST appear, right?
As it is, I don't expect the attorney to play nice after I've contested and made him work a bit. So not sure if he'll want to set up payment plan or what not. Is that even a possibility? I'm almost tempted to contact the firm and see if we can settle prior to hearing/judgment, and maybe offer a one-time payment of 25% or a user-friendly monthly payment. If they don't want to play along because they're certain to get the judgment, should I even say "well then you're not leaving me any other choice than to file bk" type thing?
This brings me to another question. I don't own a home or any assets other than an old car with a trade-in value averaging around $1200, some cash in the bank (which I could always practically empty out before hearing date) and then my wages. Bank account levy and wage garnishment, how do they work? Is that something that would automatically go into effect that day? I live in FL as I said, but my payroll check comes from out of state. Probably should stop direct-deposit asap, huh?
Sorry for rambling on and on.
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks!
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