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  1. #1

    Default Statute of Limitations after Moving to a New State

    My question involves collection proceedings in the State of: Moved from New Mexico to Oregon

    Hello~

    Heard for the first time from an attorney/debt collector a few weeks ago.

    Had a free consult with a lawyer c/o recently received a summons from an attorney for a "debt." Never heard about this before. 30 days given to respond.

    @ The plantiff is LVNV. Looks like something they bought from Sears Nat'l Bank. Debt dated as being in or from 2003. Imagine that would have to be the last time whoever really has the debt was last active with the account.

    @ I had a Sears card many years ago (well over 10 years ago) but no longer have this card or any debt on/from it.

    @ Outline:

    @ I moved to Oregon, where I live now, in October last year (2007). From New Mexico. SOL for Oregon: 6 years. SOL for New Mexico: 4 years.

    @ Did not find a place to rent/an address until December, 2007. This is where I was recently handed papers by the process server.

    @ Papers served were apparently filed (?) in a county different from the county I actually live in. Their attorney is even further away by at least 5 hours.

    @ I am currently on SSDI (Social Security Disability Insurance). Hope/plan to not be on it forever but this is where the money for living expenses is coming from these days. Less than $1,000/mo.

    @ I do not own anything valuable. Co-own a car with a family member who does not live with me. The attorney I consulted looked it up...blue book is low enough to disqualify it from being taken away.

    @ My neighbor's dad is a consumer lawyer and told him I should not ignore this.

    The attorney I saw said:


    - they have no jurisdiction due to the different county issue. that I would have to have incurred the debt or defaulted on it in that other county.

    - cannot garnish my SSDI or take my car [see above].

    - he thinks it's possible they got my name & address from the DMV? (my first and last name were on the papers but not my middle initial, which I usually always include with bank information. I wonder if this could help?)

    - if I ignore it a judge could rule in favor of the plaintiff anyway, by default, after 30 days.

    - that I could file the legal papers needed to respond with the court down there or write a letter (Certified Return Receipt). But that if I do that then they would then actually have jurisdiction.

    - that I could also try and handle it out of court & send a letter to the plaintiff's attorney outlining that the debt is not mine, I have never lived in that county, am on a limited SSDI income, that I do not own anything.


    The lawyer I saw knows I am receiving SSDI & is willing to take my case (paperwork, phone calls, etc.) on a handshake (really?) for what might result in around $300 or so and would take monthly payments. Of course a trial would cost more. I do not want to go to trial or be indebted to an attorney but I will keep an open mind.

    I'm not new to posting on credit forums but it has been some years since I've been active on any of them. And I have never dealt with anything like this before at all. So I'm unclear about the exact approach I should take.

    My bottom line is I do not want any negative items placed on my credit file. I've ordered a 3-in-one report from the free annual service. I expect it should be here within the next 2 weeks.

    Best next steps to take?

    Also:

    Does a summons sometimes come from an attorney's office? Words like "summons" and "appear" as in 'appear in court' were all surrounded by quotations marks, like how I typed them above. Is that normal?

    When I spoke to legal aid before I saw the private attorney they said they could not help with a case like this. But they also said that the papers should have been in an envelope from the court. And that is would have the state of Oregon logo on the front page at the top. Would this be accurate? Can the attorney draw them up himself? The contact info on every page is not for the court but for the attorney's office. So who do I write a response to?

    At the end of the last page the notation says "this is from a debt collector." But then wouldn't the private lawyer I saw know if it was a legitimate document? He was young/relatively new but says he also deals with the consumer credit cases of other everyday people, like me.

    Also are they allowed to send this with stamped signatures?



    I know it's long so thanks for taking a look at this post~~

  2. #2
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    Default Re: Statute of Limitations after Moving to a New State

    The best step to take is to hire a lawyer. Let your lawyer figure out the venue issues, properly raise and argue the statute of limitations, etc.

    If there was something unusual about your summons, I expect your lawyer would have told you. If you don't think a case was actually filed, contact the court and ask - I expect they'll tell you that it is pending. For most documents requiring original signatures, the originals go to the court - they can use a photocopy or rubber stamp for your copy.

  3. #3

    Default Re: Statute of Limitations after Moving to a New State

    First place to start is to check witht he court to see if it has been filed. If not, send them a copy asking if it is legitimate. That way you have something in writing. If it has been filed, you can request a change of venue to your county.

  4. #4

    Default Re: Statute of Limitations after Moving to a New State

    Checked and learned it was filed. But going to see the consumer attorney who specializes in this. He's the relative of a friend and knows this kind of work well it seems. Gave me a great price so that makes it easy there, too.

    Thanks for the help (o:

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