No credit card required
Browse credit cards from a variety of issuers to see if there's a better card for you.
Two days ago I received a collection letter from a company called ERS. The bill referred to an old electric bill from a while back. I know the account was closed was prior to 2004 - I'm thinking it was in 2002.
I looked up the statute of limitations for MS and found the following:
Oral Contract: 3 years
Written Contract: 3 years
Promissory Note: 3 years
Open-Ended Accounts: 3 years
So does this electric bill fall into these categories? I'm pretty sure I paid the bill already, but due to moving and a flooded storage building, I don't have the proof that I did.
How should I proceed with this? Should I ignore it? Or should I send them some sort of letter? I'm assuming since the original bill was over 7 years ago, that they are not allowed to report it to the credit bureaus. Please help.
If the DoFD is over 7 - 7.5 years, it cannot be reported to the CRAs.
Expired SOL does not mean you do not owe the debt, the CAs may continue to attempt to collect forever. If you are sure the debt is out of SOL then send the CA a C&D letter.
I'd request information from the electric company in question. May as well try to get proof in hand if you can.
I'd request information from the electric company in question. May as well try to get proof in hand if you can.
Why? What good would it do?
She lost the record (through no fault of her own)- if the electric company can provide her with documented proof of that date, she has more to work with. She's not 100% sure she's past the 7 - 7.5 years. My gut feeling is that at some point, she'll probably have to demonstrate that if she wants them to go away.
Actually, the OP does not need to prove anything. It would be the CA trying to collect.
If the account is beyond the SOL, I would leave it alone. Not even contact the OC. I don't see the point in it. If, by chance, it is within the 7 - 7.5 years then the OP could very well end up with a new TL on the CR.
I called about a $64 debt that was on my report. The CA couldn't find a record of the debt paid or unpaid neither could the OC. Come to find out the debt had been possibly paid by my wife awhile back. So with noone including myself sure about the reporting I disputed and it was remove from all 3 within a week.
@creditbroke wrote:I called about a $64 debt that was on my report. The CA couldn't find a record of the debt paid or unpaid neither could the OC. Come to find out the debt had been possibly paid by my wife awhile back. So with noone including myself sure about the reporting I disputed and it was remove from all 3 within a week.
Which is good. But you knew in advance the CA could not find the account. I would have disputed also.
This is a different scenario. There is nothing on the OP CR. The debt seems to be outside SOL and CRTP. But, if it is not and the OP starts asking questions, it could end up on the report.
Since you just received a dunning letter regarding a collection you are not aware of, send the CA a DV letter asking them to validate. If they can't validate you may never hear back depending on your state laws (Texas law requires CA to reply to DV's but not all states have this law) and thus the collection activity ceases ubtill they can. CA can't collect or transfer a debt if they can't validate.
If they can validate the debt you can find out if it's within SOL or not. and if it's a legitimate debt that you owe based of off the documents your provided. You can then proceed accordingly with PFD or whatever letters fits. If it were me I'd send a DV letter.
Old accounts get transferred around and the paperwork doesn't always follow. My wife had an old collection account that was transferred to a new CA, we received a dunning letter to which I DV'ed. We were pretty sure it was hers but not 100% and I wasn't going to pay something I wasn't sure was ours. NCO could not validate and so they sent a letter stating the file has been closed.
Don't DV within SOL unless you can PIF. Could save you a lawsuit down the road.