Challenges for
Collecting Purchased Debt
James M. McNeile
Cohen McNeile Pappas & Shuttleworth
P.C., Leawood,
Kansas
All of us know it is more difficult to collect
purchased debt than originated debt by using the traditional legal collection
approach. The difficulties
from a lawyer's perspective lie mainly in problems of proof. A creditor
that originates debt has access to the documentation that courts require
attorneys to introduce as evidence in order to obtain a judgment. Many debt
purchasers either do not have access to the source documents or can only obtain
those documents at great cost. How then can debt purchasers utilize the court
system to collect debts that are legally due and valid? Ken Gelhaus
reports that in New York
the problems of collecting on purchased debt have increased greatly in the last
year. At one time in New York,
court clerks entered a default judgment on claims for "sums certain"
without running the papers past a judge for review and signature. In recent
months, however, clerks are refusing to do so and requiring that a judge's
order granting default judgment be obtained.
In one of his recent
cases, Ken reports that he applied for a default judgment using the affidavit
of an officer of the purchasing plaintiff. The affidavit, although able to
reference the date of the purchase of the debt and the balance purchased, was
deficient in that it did not include any actual business records of the
originating creditor. The court found that the affidavit of the debt purchaser
was insufficient and conclusory. The court
suggested the debt purchaser furnish a copy of the assignment or contract
assigning the claims, along with a copy of any statement or record clearly
demonstrating the calculation and the amount of the claim. If monthly statements
were furnished to the defendant, copies of the most recently sent statements
should be annexed. Reliable and factual information concerning the claim is
required.
Even if we as attorneys
include such items, they are business records of the originating creditor, not
the purchasing plaintiff. At least in New
York, these business records would have no probative
value, because no one at the purchasing plaintiff has "personal
knowledge" of the creation, maintenance, issuance, and tracking of the
statements. In the
eyes of the court, such affidavits are hearsay and therefore not admissible.
A purchasing plaintiff is unable to swear to the authenticity of the
originating or source documents of a credit transaction because they do not
have personal knowledge of the events which transpired at that period of time
in the life of the credit agreement. The original cardholder agreement, any correspondence, and monthly
statements issued by the original credit grantor are not admissible as the
purchasing plaintiff's business records, as the purchasing plaintiff has no
personal knowledge of how those records were created or maintained.
How then can the purchasing plaintiff's counsel obtain a judgment for their
client in the face of a court's refusal to grant judgment on a legitimate debt
purchased by a third-party? The obvious answer is to obtain the affidavit of
the originating creditor and annex the documents of the originating creditor to
their affidavit. The originating creditor would have actual and personal knowledge
of the events which led to the creation of the debt, as well as the events
which lead to the sale of the debt. A second alternative would be to attempt to
obtain a novation of the original credit agreement,
which might be accomplished by either obtaining a signed statement from the
debtor agreeing to pay the balance owed. Alternatively, if the debtor refuses
to sign such a statement, the purchaser could send monthly statements which, if
not objected to by the debtor, might be introduced by way of the purchasing
plaintiff's affidavit, indicating that no objection had been made to the
statements of account. Therefore, the debtors are estopped
from denying the existence of the balance.
Absent a willingness by debt sellers to sign a business records affidavit as to
the origination and sale of the account, or a novation
by the purchasing plaintiff of the original debt, lawyers will be increasingly
hard pressed to obtain judgments for legitimate debts purchased by debt buyers.
If purchasing plaintiffs wish to continue to be able to use the court system to
enforce their purchased debt, it is going to be increasingly necessary for
documentation to be readily available for their counsel and the courts.
Notice: The NARCA Newsletter is a publication of the Association of Retail
Collection Attorneys with headquarters at 1620 I Street, NW Ste 615, in Washington, D.C.
20006 -- Telephone
800-633-6069 or 202-861-0706. An appearance of an advertiser in this
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