Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:brother has a series of mental health issues and is unable to work. he lives in a small condo bought with money inherited from our parents, and receives SSI and Food Stamps. Owns an older car in pretty bad shape but works okay.
before going on disability, he had been working sporadically and thus had ok credit and such, and managed to amass about $8k in credit card debt. recently, he was served by the sheriff that the credit card company is suing him for the $8k in debt. it was spent frivolously, as a means to cope with his mental health issues.
how will this play out most likely? from what i read, they probably can't take the car or house, though a judge may put a lien on his property? can they force the sale of his condo to pay the debt? can he declare bankruptcy (but we are really confused as to how to pay a bankruptcy lawyer when you have no money to begin with....??)
he lives in maine, so i know that defines some of the excepted assets that can be protected in bankruptcy, I think his condo just exceeds that exception, by like $10k -- maybe. after realtor fees it would be wiped out.
if this gets really ugly, he may attempt suicide again, which is another worry.
Criteria for getting SSI is less than $2k in assets. He owns a house. Inheritance counts as an asset. Did he lie in his application or are you talking about some state disability benefit?
Op, don't listen to this poster. Policy is clear, but convoluted. There are asset exemptions and exceptions. There are grace periods during which lump sum income is not counted against you. I'm not even going to try to specifically state the policy here on dcum, and neither should this pp. Don't accuse someone you don't know of lying about something you know little about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:brother has a series of mental health issues and is unable to work. he lives in a small condo bought with money inherited from our parents, and receives SSI and Food Stamps. Owns an older car in pretty bad shape but works okay.
before going on disability, he had been working sporadically and thus had ok credit and such, and managed to amass about $8k in credit card debt. recently, he was served by the sheriff that the credit card company is suing him for the $8k in debt. it was spent frivolously, as a means to cope with his mental health issues.
how will this play out most likely? from what i read, they probably can't take the car or house, though a judge may put a lien on his property? can they force the sale of his condo to pay the debt? can he declare bankruptcy (but we are really confused as to how to pay a bankruptcy lawyer when you have no money to begin with....??)
he lives in maine, so i know that defines some of the excepted assets that can be protected in bankruptcy, I think his condo just exceeds that exception, by like $10k -- maybe. after realtor fees it would be wiped out.
if this gets really ugly, he may attempt suicide again, which is another worry.
Criteria for getting SSI is less than $2k in assets. He owns a house. Inheritance counts as an asset. Did he lie in his application or are you talking about some state disability benefit?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:brother has a series of mental health issues and is unable to work. he lives in a small condo bought with money inherited from our parents, and receives SSI and Food Stamps. Owns an older car in pretty bad shape but works okay.
before going on disability, he had been working sporadically and thus had ok credit and such, and managed to amass about $8k in credit card debt. recently, he was served by the sheriff that the credit card company is suing him for the $8k in debt. it was spent frivolously, as a means to cope with his mental health issues.
how will this play out most likely? from what i read, they probably can't take the car or house, though a judge may put a lien on his property? can they force the sale of his condo to pay the debt? can he declare bankruptcy (but we are really confused as to how to pay a bankruptcy lawyer when you have no money to begin with....??)
he lives in maine, so i know that defines some of the excepted assets that can be protected in bankruptcy, I think his condo just exceeds that exception, by like $10k -- maybe. after realtor fees it would be wiped out.
if this gets really ugly, he may attempt suicide again, which is another worry.
Yep. this happened to my mother-in-law at least 3 times by 3 different credit card companies. they garnished her paycheck until the debt was paid. it took several years. it wasn't an astronomical sum, but enough to hurt. my third (maybe even 4th) time, she filed for bankruptcy. all she had to do was answer their damn calls. ugh. that woman lives in my house now.
The only reason a credit card company sues you - is because you don't answer their calls.
Most of the time, if you work with the credit card company - you can end up settling the debt for pennies on the dollar. It doesn't look great on your credit - but that shouldn't matter - if the credit card company is coming after you, your credit is probably shot already. Tell him to call the credit card company - explain his situation - and let them know that he is open to a settlement - which usually comes out to 10% of the debt and closure of the account.
Anonymous wrote:Your brother should contact the legal aid organization in his jurisdiction. Even if he can't avoid the judgment, since he collects SSI, his income isn't garnishable. With respect to the condo, car and any other assets, state law may offer protections from his creditors. And if there are none, they may be able to help him file for bankruptcy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:brother has a series of mental health issues and is unable to work. he lives in a small condo bought with money inherited from our parents, and receives SSI and Food Stamps. Owns an older car in pretty bad shape but works okay.
before going on disability, he had been working sporadically and thus had ok credit and such, and managed to amass about $8k in credit card debt. recently, he was served by the sheriff that the credit card company is suing him for the $8k in debt. it was spent frivolously, as a means to cope with his mental health issues.
how will this play out most likely? from what i read, they probably can't take the car or house, though a judge may put a lien on his property? can they force the sale of his condo to pay the debt? can he declare bankruptcy (but we are really confused as to how to pay a bankruptcy lawyer when you have no money to begin with....??)
he lives in maine, so i know that defines some of the excepted assets that can be protected in bankruptcy, I think his condo just exceeds that exception, by like $10k -- maybe. after realtor fees it would be wiped out.
if this gets really ugly, he may attempt suicide again, which is another worry.
Criteria for getting SSI is less than $2k in assets. He owns a house. Inheritance counts as an asset. Did he lie in his application or are you talking about some state disability benefit?
Anonymous wrote:brother has a series of mental health issues and is unable to work. he lives in a small condo bought with money inherited from our parents, and receives SSI and Food Stamps. Owns an older car in pretty bad shape but works okay.
before going on disability, he had been working sporadically and thus had ok credit and such, and managed to amass about $8k in credit card debt. recently, he was served by the sheriff that the credit card company is suing him for the $8k in debt. it was spent frivolously, as a means to cope with his mental health issues.
how will this play out most likely? from what i read, they probably can't take the car or house, though a judge may put a lien on his property? can they force the sale of his condo to pay the debt? can he declare bankruptcy (but we are really confused as to how to pay a bankruptcy lawyer when you have no money to begin with....??)
he lives in maine, so i know that defines some of the excepted assets that can be protected in bankruptcy, I think his condo just exceeds that exception, by like $10k -- maybe. after realtor fees it would be wiped out.
if this gets really ugly, he may attempt suicide again, which is another worry.
Anonymous wrote:
how will this play out most likely? from what i read, they probably can't take the car or house, though a judge may put a lien on his property? can they force the sale of his condo to pay the debt? can he declare bankruptcy (but we are really confused as to how to pay a bankruptcy lawyer when you have no money to begin with....??)
Anonymous wrote:I seriously doubt a sheriff came to real him a credit card company is suing him. Thats not what sheriff's do. That is what collection agencies do to scare people into paying. Calm down and find out from your brother how old the debt is. It will fall off the credit report in seven years so if it's old, just let it fall off and tell them to stop calling. If it's recent make an offer to settle it. Get the offer in writing before handing over any payment. Under no circumstances should you give them a bad know account number. Send a money order and write payment in full on it. I used to work for a bank and property who gave collection agencies their account number always regretted it because the companies would take money willy nilly and cause all sorts of headaches.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:brother has a series of mental health issues and is unable to work. he lives in a small condo bought with money inherited from our parents, and receives SSI and Food Stamps. Owns an older car in pretty bad shape but works okay.
before going on disability, he had been working sporadically and thus had ok credit and such, and managed to amass about $8k in credit card debt. recently, he was served by the sheriff that the credit card company is suing him for the $8k in debt. it was spent frivolously, as a means to cope with his mental health issues.
how will this play out most likely? from what i read, they probably can't take the car or house, though a judge may put a lien on his property? can they force the sale of his condo to pay the debt? can he declare bankruptcy (but we are really confused as to how to pay a bankruptcy lawyer when you have no money to begin with....??)
he lives in maine, so i know that defines some of the excepted assets that can be protected in bankruptcy, I think his condo just exceeds that exception, by like $10k -- maybe. after realtor fees it would be wiped out.
if this gets really ugly, he may attempt suicide again, which is another worry.
The only reason a credit card company sues you - is because you don't answer their calls.
Most of the time, if you work with the credit card company - you can end up settling the debt for pennies on the dollar. It doesn't look great on your credit - but that shouldn't matter - if the credit card company is coming after you, your credit is probably shot already. Tell him to call the credit card company - explain his situation - and let them know that he is open to a settlement - which usually comes out to 10% of the debt and closure of the account.
Anonymous wrote:brother has a series of mental health issues and is unable to work. he lives in a small condo bought with money inherited from our parents, and receives SSI and Food Stamps. Owns an older car in pretty bad shape but works okay.
before going on disability, he had been working sporadically and thus had ok credit and such, and managed to amass about $8k in credit card debt. recently, he was served by the sheriff that the credit card company is suing him for the $8k in debt. it was spent frivolously, as a means to cope with his mental health issues.
how will this play out most likely? from what i read, they probably can't take the car or house, though a judge may put a lien on his property? can they force the sale of his condo to pay the debt? can he declare bankruptcy (but we are really confused as to how to pay a bankruptcy lawyer when you have no money to begin with....??)
he lives in maine, so i know that defines some of the excepted assets that can be protected in bankruptcy, I think his condo just exceeds that exception, by like $10k -- maybe. after realtor fees it would be wiped out.
if this gets really ugly, he may attempt suicide again, which is another worry.