Hello, I'm in SE Michigan. A creditor filed a writ of garnishment to garnish the tax refund of a person who has the same first and last name as my father. It was sent to our address, though this person is unrelated to us, has a different middle name and is about 50 years younger than my dad. The social security number on the form is wrong too, which we should probably be grateful for. The only thing on the form that is connected with my dad in any way is the address. My dad has no accounts with these creditors is not in default on anything - they just have the wrong guy. A nasty service processor tried to serve him last month for a different account, but went away (without apologizing, of course) when he saw my dad was clearly not in his early 20s.
We called the district court, and they told us to call the law firm. We did, and the law firm said just to mail the form back and mark it "wrong address." This sounds a little fishy to me. The writ request has small print that says if no objection is made, the garnishment will go through. How does my dad formally object that they have the wrong guy?
Is there a form we can fill out at the courthouse where we can state that the wrong person was filed against? Anything else we can do to stop my dad from being confused with this guy?
We called the district court, and they told us to call the law firm. We did, and the law firm said just to mail the form back and mark it "wrong address." This sounds a little fishy to me. The writ request has small print that says if no objection is made, the garnishment will go through. How does my dad formally object that they have the wrong guy?
Is there a form we can fill out at the courthouse where we can state that the wrong person was filed against? Anything else we can do to stop my dad from being confused with this guy?
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