Thursday, January 1, 2009

The what and when of Collection Agencies.

By JR Rooney

Debt collection agencies are hired on behalf of creditors to collect money when the creditors don't have the time or resources to effect collections on overdue debts for themselves. Collection agencies specialize in getting people to pay, they have staff that specializes in debt collection and skip-tracing, which covers a broad range of FDCPA legal and debt negotiating skills, and a streamlined process for going after accounts.

As a company that is owed money you can hire a collection agency. They get assigned the task of collecting the account. Most agencies, when successful will take a small portion of the collected amount. Be careful of firms that want money upfront.

Most collection agencies do not buy the debt outright. The debtor does not actually owe the agency the money. It still owes the debt to the original creditor. The collection agency will provide, if asked, proof (known as validation of debt) that they have been placed into collections on behalf of a creditor.

From time to time collection agencies buy old accounts hoping that the debtor is in a better position today to pay the bill.

Every US based collection agency is subject to the F.D.C.P.A and is not permitted to collect on fraud accounts. They will take every legal remedy available to enforce the collection of accounts that are outstanding. This includes going to court.

You need a debt collection company when -

the debtor gives you broken promises The debtor refuses to pay voluntarily they have not filed bankruptcy

A debt collection company will approach the situation through a multi-stage letter writing campaign which can be effective, if occasionally slow, but it may not lead to recovery when -

the debtor has or thinks he or she has a defense the amount owed is disputed there is an unrelated adverse claim the debtor's solvency is in doubt or there is the possibility of bankruptcy there is security to recover or a possible prejudgment remedy

If any of these circumstances occur, the creditor should for their own legal protection retain control of critical decisions such as if and when to litigate, what attorney to retain and any other decisions made prior to or during litigation. This is particularly important where the creditor has a long term interest in retaining the customer as his client. Not retaining control of critical decisions and proceeding without the advice of an attorney could leave the creditor open to adverse legal liability.

The option exists where this is not the case and the creditor is not interested in the outcome of a debt collection, beyond getting his money, to sell the debt to a debt buyer. - 15485

About the Author: