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A collection agency for wells fargo card services has instituted an action in district court against me to recover just over $5,000. A court date is set for the end of this week, and I am being told that we can settle the action for around $3,600. If this is paid before this week's hearing, the case will be dismissed. If I need additional time (30-90 days), they are telling me that judgment will be entered, but it will be marked satisfied. What is the significance of this? Should I scramble to make the payment before the hearing this week? How do I get an agreement for the negative entry to be taken off my credit report? All help greatly appreciated!!
@Anonymous wrote:A collection agency for wells fargo card services has instituted an action in district court against me to recover just over $5,000. A court date is set for the end of this week, and I am being told that we can settle the action for around $3,600. If this is paid before this week's hearing, the case will be dismissed. If I need additional time (30-90 days), they are telling me that judgment will be entered, but it will be marked satisfied. What is the significance of this? Should I scramble to make the payment before the hearing this week? How do I get an agreement for the negative entry to be taken off my credit report? All help greatly appreciated!!
That's what you need to do is tell them that you will pay the $3600 on agreement that they delete the collection from your credit report.
Know that if they do acquire a judgment, they can then proceed to post judgment proceedings to garnish your paycheck or take any non-exempt property, etc...
with that said have you filed a responsive pleading to their initial complaint? If so did you enter any affirmative defenses is this even your debt?
@Anonymous by the way you should change the name of your title the credit card company is not suing you a collection agency is unless it's an in-house job?
@Anonymous wrote:@Anonymous by the way you should change the name of your title the credit card company is not suing you a collection agency is unless it's an in-house job?
The OP should go by the name of the company named as "Plaintiff". If the credit card company is named as the plaintiff, then that is the business that has filed suit.
You can contact a consumer protection attorney who can halt the process for negotiation.
@vntrsc wrote:
@Anonymous wrote:@Anonymous by the way you should change the name of your title the credit card company is not suing you a collection agency is unless it's an in-house job?
The OP should go by the name of the company named as "Plaintiff". If the credit card company is named as the plaintiff, then that is the business that has filed suit.
I would agree but the title says the credit card company is suing and the text of the thread says the collection agency is suing; they can't both be suing. Both can't own the debt.
Just to clarify. Wells Fargo Card Services is the Plaintiff, being represented by a law firm that does collections. I am a lawyer, but not this kind of lawyer, so I know just enough to be dangerous. I did file an Answer to avoid a default judgment. The hearing this week is an Arbitration hearing, which from my read of the law is non-binding, and one can request a trial de novo if not satisfied with the arbitrator's award.
Response from WF lawyer when asked for a pay for delete: "Wells Fargo will accurately report this to the credit bureaus, whether that means it gets removed or marked as paid in full is something my client will not guarantee."
How to proceed?
@Anonymous Well knowing what you said now Wells Fargo is not known to delete. At least not that I’ve ever read of.
So it appears it is a charge off and it has not actually made it to an outside collector and therefore you don’t have a separate collection on your credit report yet do you? Instead they’re just using a law firm to sue you and collect.
Well here’s the deal, unless the chargeoffs paid, it’s going to hurt your score for a long time, and even if it is paid it’s going to hurt your score for a long time; however it’s better to pay it now and reduce the balance to zero now than later for scoring purposes.
I recommend you settle and if you can ask them to delete and try to make that a term that’s great, but I wouldn’t bank on it. If it’s your debt and you have no SOL, defense or other affirmative defense or any other way to beat it, then the best thing may be to settle it.
At least you’ve got an offer for less than the amount, you may want to go ahead and settle that if you have no way to avoid the judgment. I don’t have to explain the consequences of a judgment to you, you already know.
and by the way welcome to the forum might I suggest that you read the Scoring Primer linked at the top of my siggy?