Ask Experts Questions for FREE Help !
Ask
    PatTor's Avatar
    PatTor Posts: 2, Reputation: 1
    New Member
     
    #1

    Jan 22, 2012, 05:16 AM
    I have been making small payments to a collection agency for a credit card that defau
    I have been making small payments to a collection agency for a credit card that defaulted. I started doing thing before I know about the Limitation act and the two years. I have paid off about half of the 1600 dollars I owed to the credit card people. I checked my credit score with equifax and the payments I have been making have not been shown. Also it says a different company owns my debt to this credit card. So my question:

    1) Is it the responsibility of the collection agency to update my payment history?
    2) when will the debt leave my credit report? Six years AFTER I paid it off? Or six years after it first showed up on the report?
    3) its possible they have been selling the debt back and forth between collection agencies, does that renew the 2 year limitation?

    Thanks!
    JudyKayTee's Avatar
    JudyKayTee Posts: 46,503, Reputation: 4600
    Uber Member
     
    #2

    Jan 22, 2012, 07:33 AM
    Quote Originally Posted by PatTor View Post
    I have been making small payments to a collection agency for a credit card that defaulted. I started doing thing before I know about the Limitation act and the two years. I have paid off about half of the 1600 dollars I owed to the credit card people. I checked my credit score with equifax and the payments I have been making have not been shown. Also it says a different company owns my debt to this credit card. So my question:

    1) Is it the responsibility of the collection agency to update my payment history?
    2) when will the debt leave my credit report? Six years AFTER I paid it off? Or six years after it first showed up on the report?
    3) its possible they have been selling the debt back and forth between collection agencies, does that renew the 2 year limitation?

    Thanks!

    YOU have the ability to write Equifax and correct your report - it's an opportunity to tell you side of things AND correct the payment history. If the payments have not been brought up to date it's possible that the debt was sold. Who are you paying? The name on the credit report or someone else?

    The Statute runs from the last activity on the account - a charge OR a payment. The Statute (and I don't know where you are so I don't know if it's two years - Canada?) runs from the last PAYMENT you made. If you made a payment last month it's two years from then.

    My experience in reading credit reports is that they stay until the account is paid for a number of years - ongoing accounts continue to appear BUT this is what a private legal site says: "The length of time a negative mark can stay on your credit report starts from the time you were late or the late payment went into collection, not from the last time you made a payment on the account. Some collection agencies update their reporting status on you to keep the account active with the bureaus to extend the time the account appears on your report. Very crafty and underhanded of them, because most often the account is updated and the period of time the account is active appears to be extended. This is illegal! Challenge this! If you do, bureaus will correctly remove it 7 years from origination. Period. In other words, paying a collection will not keep it on your credit report for a longer period of time." Credit Reports - How Long Do Negative Items Stay on My Credit Report?

    It quotes US (Federal) Law - and I don't know if you are in the US.
    AK lawyer's Avatar
    AK lawyer Posts: 12,592, Reputation: 977
    Expert
     
    #3

    Jan 22, 2012, 08:43 AM
    Quote Originally Posted by PatTor View Post
    ... 3) its possible they have been selling the debt back and forth between collection agencies, does that renew the 2 year limitation?
    ...
    No. A sale of the debt from one creditor to someone else would not, unlike a payment made by you, renew the SOL.

Not your question? Ask your question View similar questions

 

Question Tools Search this Question
Search this Question:

Advanced Search

Add your answer here.


Check out some similar questions!

Chase credit card collection agency [ 2 Answers ]

I have never owned a Chase credit card and in fact two years ago paid off my Master Card from National City. I recently have been receiving phone calls from a "Chase Collection Agency" asking to speak with someone else per my telephone number. I have tried to explain to the individual who I...

Credit Card debt in collection agency [ 1 Answers ]

I became unemployed in September of 2008. Prior to unemployment my credit history was excellent. With the job market as it is now I have been unable to gain unemployment. In January of 2009 I sent certified letters and made phone calls to several of my credit card companies to lower the rate and...

Does making payments to collection agency stop legal action [ 2 Answers ]

I have just been contacted by a collection agency on a past bill. I have informed them I am willing to make a payment arrangement but cannot meet what they want. They contacted me over thirty days ago but I just received a letter stating there what I was in collection for with them. I have...

I'm making payments, can collection agency still garnish wages? [ 1 Answers ]

We've had a medical bill go to collections. I can't afford the amount of payment the agency is requesting, but I am making what I guaranteed and a bit more when I can. Today we received a notice that if it wasn't paid in full in 10 days of the notice it would go to court for garnishment. Can they...

Making payments before Collection Agency [ 5 Answers ]

I'll try to make this brief since it's a friend & I don't have all the info exactly. Basically, there were 2 sisters & 1 brother. Brother lived with mother last few years of her life (I think) and had her change her will at a point in time when she was not all there. Changed the will to he got...


View more questions Search