Steve
Bradenton,#2Consumer Suggestion
Fri, April 14, 2006
Treda, Go to BudHibbs.com and read about the lawsuit already against them, and see if you can get in on it. Also, be aware that in TX wage garnishment is illegal except for Tax debt. If you have nothing, they can only get nothing. All you need to do is notify the court that the lawsuit was illegally filed due to the debt being legally uncollectable due to SOL. They will throw it out. They are already throwing out all cases from this law office/collection agency. Good luck.
Steve
Bradenton,#3Consumer Suggestion
Fri, April 14, 2006
Treda, Go to BudHibbs.com and read about the lawsuit already against them, and see if you can get in on it. Also, be aware that in TX wage garnishment is illegal except for Tax debt. If you have nothing, they can only get nothing. All you need to do is notify the court that the lawsuit was illegally filed due to the debt being legally uncollectable due to SOL. They will throw it out. They are already throwing out all cases from this law office/collection agency. Good luck.
Steve
Bradenton,#4Consumer Suggestion
Fri, April 14, 2006
Treda, Go to BudHibbs.com and read about the lawsuit already against them, and see if you can get in on it. Also, be aware that in TX wage garnishment is illegal except for Tax debt. If you have nothing, they can only get nothing. All you need to do is notify the court that the lawsuit was illegally filed due to the debt being legally uncollectable due to SOL. They will throw it out. They are already throwing out all cases from this law office/collection agency. Good luck.
Steve
Bradenton,#5Consumer Suggestion
Fri, April 14, 2006
Treda, Go to BudHibbs.com and read about the lawsuit already against them, and see if you can get in on it. Also, be aware that in TX wage garnishment is illegal except for Tax debt. If you have nothing, they can only get nothing. All you need to do is notify the court that the lawsuit was illegally filed due to the debt being legally uncollectable due to SOL. They will throw it out. They are already throwing out all cases from this law office/collection agency. Good luck.
Heather
Murphy,#6Consumer Suggestion
Thu, April 13, 2006
Treda: Provided you have lived in Texas since the debt went delinquent in 2001, the debt is outside of the Texas Statute of Limitations for bringing a lawsuit. The Statute of Limitations is 4 years from the date the cause of action accrues (meaning, the date you missed your first payment). As long as you never brought your account completely current after the initial default in 2001, then LVNV Funding is suing on an SOL debt. This is good and bad for you. Bad that you have to hire a NACA lawyer to put these thugs in their place, and good that you can get them to pay for your attorney for filing a frivilous lawsuit. Craig Jordan is a very good Dallas attorney - try contacting him through his site at CLICK here to see why Rip-off Report, as a matter of policy, deleted either a phone number, link or e-mail address from this Report.