I no longer just think that pro se debtors are preyed upon, I know that they are.
I have just filed an Adversary Proceeding for a Stay Violation and a Dischargeability Determination as well. If anything, this lawsuit (Adversary Proceeding (AP)/complaint) should at least wake them up and get them to fix all the billing issues. They are still billing me for pre-conversion stuff that was included in the Chapter 7 (11 USC 548) and sending nasty collection letters.
So this will be the true test of whether
I'm not just doing this for potentially getting some damages awarded. I'm doing this on behalf of pro se debtors because I think the creditors and the court sometimes just overlook us as insignificant.
I didn't want to do an adversary proceeding (AP) because these things are complex and the procedures (Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, specifically) have so many traps for pro se plaintiffs, that it's not funny. I'm hoping to prevail on a motion for summary judgment, but I'm not holding my breath. I fully expect the creditor to respond. The question will be, what is their game plan on defending why they have continued to bill and demand pre-petition claims.
I have just filed an Adversary Proceeding for a Stay Violation and a Dischargeability Determination as well. If anything, this lawsuit (Adversary Proceeding (AP)/complaint) should at least wake them up and get them to fix all the billing issues. They are still billing me for pre-conversion stuff that was included in the Chapter 7 (11 USC 548) and sending nasty collection letters.
So this will be the true test of whether
- the Court would really protect a pro se debtor against a big creditor (corporation) that keeps billing him,
- whether continued collection letters and bills on pre-petition debt are really a violation,
- whether a creditor is subject to a stay violation after being notified of the bankruptcy 2 times by the BNC and 3 times by the debtor (via FAX and mail with certificate of service filed)
- whether a creditor can be found in violation of the stay and be subjected to actual damages
- whether actual damages can include compulsory damages, like a $1,000 award per incident
- whether damages can actually be awarded to a pro se debtor for actual costs, including travel time, postage, service costs, lost wages, costs to prosecute the complaint, etc.
- whether punitive damages are warranted in a case where the debtor is pro se and the creditor clearly violated the stay multiple times
- whether a 200% punitive award -- comparative to actual damages -- is sufficient to punish the creditor from doing this again
- a bunch of issues on the interaction of 11 USC 548, 11 USC 727, and 11 USC 523
I'm not just doing this for potentially getting some damages awarded. I'm doing this on behalf of pro se debtors because I think the creditors and the court sometimes just overlook us as insignificant.
I didn't want to do an adversary proceeding (AP) because these things are complex and the procedures (Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, specifically) have so many traps for pro se plaintiffs, that it's not funny. I'm hoping to prevail on a motion for summary judgment, but I'm not holding my breath. I fully expect the creditor to respond. The question will be, what is their game plan on defending why they have continued to bill and demand pre-petition claims.
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