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<title>North Carolina Judgment Enforcement and Collection Attorney Thomas Kerner</title>
<link>http://twkerner.typepad.com/north_carolina_judgment_e/</link>
<description>North Carolina attorney Thomas Kerner collects judgments throughout the state of North Carolina. This includes judgments rendered in North Carolina state and federal courts, as well as judgments from other states, and foreign countries, against debtors who have assets in North Carolina.   Call me  at 910.509.7241 to learn more about how I can help you enforce your judgments.  Or email me at tom.kerner@kernerlawfirm.com.  Want even more information?  Go to at my judgment enforcement website, www.kernerlawfirm.com</description>
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<lastBuildDate>Tue, 13 Sep 2011 13:31:32 -0400</lastBuildDate>
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<title>Post Judgment Veil Piercing in NC</title>
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<description>North Carolina corporations cannot be pierced in supplemental proceedings, the NC Court of Appeals recently held. Piercing the corporate veil in post judgment proceedings is prohibited in cases where the shareholder defendants were not named in pleadings or served individually with a Summons. In Travelers Indemnity v. Triple S Marketing Group (July, 2011), the Court of Appeals held that when a shareholder is not served with a summons or complaint, North Carolina's supplemental proceedings statutes are not broadly worded enough to confer subject matter jurisdiction over the issue of whether that shareholder can be found personally liable for the debts...</description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>North Carolina corporations cannot be pierced in supplemental proceedings, the NC Court of Appeals recently held.  Piercing the corporate veil in post judgment proceedings is prohibited in cases where the shareholder defendants were not named in pleadings or served individually with a Summons.</p>
<p>&#0160;In <em>Travelers Indemnity v. Triple S Marketing Group (July, 2011)</em>, the Court of Appeals held that when a shareholder is not served with a summons or complaint, North Carolina&#39;s supplemental proceedings statutes are not broadly worded enough to confer subject matter jurisdiction over the issue of whether that shareholder can be found personally liable for the debts of the corporation.</p>
<p>&#0160;In <em>Travelers</em>, the defendant corporation accepted a consent judgment against it.  When the plaintiff sought to execute on the judgment, it filed a motion in the supplemental proceedings phase, seeking to pierce the corporate veil. The plaintiff cited the court&#39;s broad equitable powers to enter orders affecting property of the judgment debtor.  However, because only the corporation is a judgment debtor within the meaning of those statutes, the court is without authority to issue orders as to the property of others, except of course those specifically identified in various post judgment statutes (e.g. - 3rd parties in possession of debtor&#39;s property). &#0160;&#0160;</p>
<p>&#0160;</p><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/NCJudgmentEnforcement/~4/yQbwKGCGn0c" height="1" width="1"/>]]></content:encoded>


<category>Judgment Enforcement - FAQs</category>
<category>Judgments and Personal Property</category>
<category>Post Judgment Procedures</category>
<category>Writs and Levies</category>

<dc:creator>Thomas Kerner</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Tue, 13 Sep 2011 13:31:32 -0400</pubDate>

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<title>NC Judgment and Debt Purchasers Beware: Attorneys' Fees Assessed Against Assignees Unaware that Debt Arose From Identity Theft</title>
<link>http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/NCJudgmentEnforcement/~3/MPeB1SUiwOg/nc-judgment-and-debt-purchasers-beware-attorneys-fees-assessed-against-assigness-unaware-that-debt-a.html</link>
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<description>The NC Court of Appeals recently upheld an award of attorney's fees against a debt buyer who purchased a default judgment, then sought to enforce the judgment, only to discover later that the debtor had been the victim of identity theft and didn't actually owe the debt. In Credigy Receivables, Inc. v. Whittington (COA 09-465, March 2, 2010) an identify thief had stolen the identity of Ms. Whittington, and opened a credit card account with Fleet Bank. That account went into default, and the debt was sold to First Select Corp. which then filed suit - in 1999 - and...</description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The NC Court of Appeals recently upheld an award of attorney&#39;s fees against a debt buyer who purchased a default judgment, then sought to enforce the judgment, only to discover later that the debtor had been the victim of identity theft and didn&#39;t actually owe the debt.</p><p>In <a href="http://www.aoc.state.nc.us/www/public/coa/opinions/2010/pdf/090465-1.pdf">Credigy Receivables, Inc. v. Whittington</a> (COA 09-465, March 2, 2010) an identify thief had stolen the identity of Ms. Whittington, and opened a credit card account with Fleet Bank.&#0160; That account went into default, and the debt was sold to First Select Corp. which then filed suit - in 1999 - and obtained a default judgment in 2001.&#0160; Of note:&#0160; First Select made six attempts at personal service using the Sheriff&#39;s office, and each time the summons and complaint were returned because the sheriff&#39;s office indicated it was unable to locate Ms. Whittington at the address on the account.&#0160; This in itself, is not unusual.&#0160; Unlike corporations, which are required by law to maintain an agent for service of process, individuals can be very difficult to locate and serve, especially ones who know they owe somebody money and don&#39;t want to pay them.&#0160; Some of them even lie to Sheriff&#39;s deputies and claim they are not the person being sought.&#0160; However, an attempt at service by Certified Mail was successful in July, 2001 ,&#0160; -- or so they thought, when the mail card was returned with a signature bearing the name Blanche Whittington -- a signature which, as it turns out, was a forgery.&#0160; </p><p>Based on this apparent service, default judgment was entered a month later. First Select then attempted to serve a Notice of Rights on Ms. Whittington in October, 2001, but again the Sheriff indicated that no one by that name could be found at the address given.&#0160; First Select then sold the judgment to Credigy, in March 2003, which tried to serve the Notice of Rights the following month.&#0160; When that was returned unserved (because the Sheriff again could find no one by that name at that address), Credigy ran a skip-trace using only the social security number from the credit application, and found &quot;the real&quot; Ms. Whittington at a different address (different from the one at which she was served with the original complaint, albeit many years earlier), and served her there, in 2008.&#0160; She then retained counsel, who quickly filed a motion to relieve Ms. Whittington from the judgment.&#0160; Two weeks after the motion was filed, in April 2008 in apparent agreement that the judgment had been entered against a victim of fraud, Credigy&#39;s counsel stipulated that the Rule 60 motion to set aside the judgment should be allowed.&#0160; However, Credigy disputed Ms. Whittington&#39;s claim for attorneys fees.</p><p>Credigy&#39;s counsel agreed at the initial hearing, also in April 2008, to suspend collection efforts until it could conduct its own research into Ms. Whittington&#39;s claim regarding identity theft and, but for reasons not discussed in the opinion, refused to withdraw the Notice of Rights.&#0160; Two months later, her attorneys filed a motion seeking attorneys&#39; fees under NCGS 6-21.5.&#0160; They claimed that Credigy had pursued a non-justificiable claim, since she had never actually been served, and was not the true Defendant.&#0160; By this point-- two months after the initial motion for relief from judgment was filed, her attorneys had managed to run up more than $26,000.00 in legal fees,
 and spent, according to their sworn affidavits, a total of 89.4 hours on her case. (Unfortunately, the opinion does not contain an itemized breakdown of how these fees were calculated.)</p><p>Credigy then argued, at the hearing on the attorneys&#39; fees claim, that it should not be liable for her attorneys&#39; fees since it had no notice of the identity theft claim until two weeks prior to her Rule 60 motion being filed, that it had stopped collection efforts once it became aware of the dispute, and that Ms. Whittington had refused to fill out a standard Fraud/Identity Theft Affidavit (the opinion does not state why she refused to do this).&#0160;&#0160;&#0160; Credigy also attempted to argue that it was a bona fide purchased for value, not subject to the defenses to which the original Plaintiff was subject.&#0160; They also argued that she knew or should have known that the judgment was on her credit report (it had been there for more than six years, before Credigy located her) and that through the exercise of even a tiny modicum of diligence, could have been discovered and the matter resolved without further litigation.&#0160; The Superior Court disagreed, and entered an award of attorney&#39;s fees in Ms. Whittington&#39;s favor.&#0160; Credigy appealed.</p><p>In upholding of the award of attorneys fees, the Court of Appeals cited NCGS 6-21.5, which can apply when &quot;the losing party persisted in litigating the case after a point where he should reasonably have become aware that the pleading he filed no longer contained a justiciable issue.&quot;&#0160; After a lengthy discussion of how assignees inherit the rights -and problems- of their assignors, the Court, despite initially stating that First Select had obtained a &quot;valid judgment&quot; against&#0160; the identity thief despite not naming her in the Complaint or identifying her on the summons or the order of judgment (she had been, of course, erroneously designated in the Complaint as Ms. Whittington), concluded that none of the Plaintiff/assignees ever held a valid claim against her, because she was never the actual account holder to begin with.&#0160; What the Court perhaps did not spend quite as much time on was detailing exactly how Credigy or its predecessors continued to litigate the case &quot;after a point&quot; where it &quot;should have known&quot; better.&#0160; </p><p>In explaining that portion of the ruling, the Court mentioned that Fleet Bank, the original creditor in all of this, &quot;should have been aware that it would have standing against no one other than the signing party&quot; to the credit account, and that it transferred its claim &quot;at the first signs of collection trouble.&quot;&#0160; And of course, Fleet Bank <em>does</em> know that, but so far as can be gleaned from the opinion, Fleet was under the impression that Ms. Whittington was the signing party.&#0160; Credigy inherited no other problems or defenses from Fleet Bank, other than the fact that the account was bogus, though at the time of the first assignment, it does not appear Fleet or First Select was aware of this..&#0160;&#0160;&#0160; </p><p>The Court then went on to assail the First Select complaint for not including Ms. Whittington&#39;s social security number and home address on the complaint -- a practice which I believe would now be outlawed by the NC Identity Theft Protection Act, NCGS 132-1.10(d) which prohibits any document being &quot;recorded with the courts&quot; from containing a social security number, as well as NCGS 75-62, which among other things prohibits any business from mailing documents to a person that contain that person&#39;s SSN (and of course, pleadings and motions have to be served, and are often mailed) unless it has been redacted.&#0160; But there would not have been any law against doing so at the time the First Select complaint was filed.</p><p>While Credigy argued at the hearing that it traced the social security number from the creation of the account all the way to the service of the notice of rights, the Court of Appeals remained unimpressed because the social security number &quot;was [n]ever made part of the pleadings or judgment.&quot;&#0160; In addition, Credigy &quot;should have been aware&quot; that the only person identified in the judgment, &quot;Blanche Whittington of [address redacted]&quot; was the party against whom the judgment could be enforced.&#0160; It should be noted that the real Blanche Whittington - in 2008 - lived at an address different from the one listed on the bogus credit application from 1999. </p><p>At the last, the court again states that &quot;[t]he circumstances that the judgment was fatally flawed by ...fraud does not make the judgment justificable... and does not change the context in which Credigy and its predecessors in interest <em><strong>should have known</strong></em> that no cause of action has ever existed against Ms. Whittington.&quot; (Emphasis added).&#0160; </p><p>This case certainly has implications for creditors, debt purchasers, and their attorneys.&#0160; While the law addressed in this decision is not new, the routine practices of skip-tracing, filing complaints, service, and using account verification affidavits to establish damages, are all called into question.&#0160; The court appears to be taking creditors and their attorneys to task for the sometimes-casual practices involved in debt-mill-style litigation, the results of which can be observed first hand on District Court calendars every month in every county in the state.&#0160; Debt buyers and judgment purchasers need to understand that if there are problems with the judgments they purchase, they will inherit those problems, and that being a &quot;bona fide&quot; purchaser is not a defense -- even in cases of identify fraud. And it certainly presents a quandary to any litigant worried about disclosing the defendant&#39;s personally identifiable information in a pleading, motion, affidavit or memorandum -- the Court appears to be requiring that creditors take greater efforts to properly and unambiguously identify defendants in pleadings and on judgment orders -- a laudable goal, to be sure, to prevent innocent persons from the threat of judgments being executed against their property. Moreover, better identification procedures will reduce the likelihood of abusive debt collection practices that can arise from collecting against anyone who happens to have a name similar to the person on the account.&#0160; How this can be balanced with the requirements of the Identity Fraud Act is less clear, and what a creditor can do to protect itself in cases of identity fraud is even less clear.</p><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/NCJudgmentEnforcement/~4/MPeB1SUiwOg" height="1" width="1"/>]]></content:encoded>


<category>Creditors Liabilities and Pitfalls</category>
<category>Rule 60 Motions to Set Aside Judgments</category>

<dc:creator>Thomas Kerner</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Tue, 23 Mar 2010 21:47:50 -0400</pubDate>

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<item>
<title>Judgment Enforcement Businesses: Legal in North Carolina?</title>
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<description>A lot of people starting judgment enforcement businesses ask me if they are legal in North Carolina. Unfortunately, I can't necessarily tell them that they are. On one hand, I have yet to find a statute or case that specifically prohibits it. But then again, I haven't researched the question in great depth. What I have found is that other states are quite clear in their opposition to judgment collection businesses. These businesses are often started as "home-based" businesses, and they sound like a great idea. The owner starts the business and gets people who hold court judgments to "assign"...</description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A lot of people starting judgment enforcement businesses ask me if they are legal in North Carolina.&#0160; Unfortunately, I can&#39;t necessarily tell them that they are.&#0160; On one hand, I have yet to find a statute or case that specifically prohibits it.&#0160; But then again, I haven&#39;t researched the question in great depth.</p><p>What I have found is that other states are quite clear in their opposition to judgment collection businesses.&#0160; These businesses are often started as &quot;home-based&quot; businesses, and they sound like a great idea.&#0160; The owner starts the business and gets people who hold court judgments to &quot;assign&quot; the judgment to them on a &quot;future pay&quot; basis -- that is, the collector becomes the legal holder of the judgment, then executes a side agreement with the original judgment holder to pay them a percentage of whatever they ultimately collect.&#0160; </p><p>Courts have found this practice to either be a disguised way of &quot;practicing law without a license&quot; or operating an unregistered debt collection business (typically a debt collection company needs a special license and must be bonded).&#0160; </p><p><title></title>
<p style="margin-bottom: 0in; background: none repeat scroll 0% 0% transparent;">For example, our neighbor to the south -- South Carolina
-– expressly forbids these arrangements. See <em>Roberts v Laconey</em> (2007). Iowa holds similarly.&#0160; In&#0160; <em>Iowa Supreme Court Comm’n on
</em><font color="#000000"><em><span style="font-weight: normal;"><span style="background: none repeat scroll 0% 0% transparent;">Unauthorized</span></span></em></font><font color="#000000"><em><span style="font-weight: normal;">
</span></em></font><font color="#000000"><em><span style="font-weight: normal;"><span style="background: none repeat scroll 0% 0% transparent;">Practice</span></span></em></font><font color="#ffffff"><em><strong><span style="background: none repeat scroll 0% 0% transparent;"></span></strong></em></font><em>
of Law v. A-1 Assocs, Ltd.</em>, 623 N.W.2d 803 (2001) the Supreme
Court of Iowa concluded that an instrument similar to the “Notice
of Assignment and Assignment of <font color="#000000"><span style="font-weight: normal;"><span style="background: none repeat scroll 0% 0% transparent;">Judgment</span></span></font>”
used by the Respondent (a judgment collection company) was not in fact an assignment of a <font color="#000000"><span style="font-weight: normal;"><span style="background: none repeat scroll 0% 0% transparent;">judgment</span></span></font>,
but was an agreement for collection services such as a lawyer would
perform.&#0160; The court noted that if the instrument truly had been
an assignment, then the assignee could have attempted to collect the<span style="background: none repeat scroll 0% 0% transparent;">
</span><font color="#000000"><span style="font-weight: normal;"><span style="background: none repeat scroll 0% 0% transparent;">judgment</span></span></font>
without engaging in the practice of law.&#0160; The court went on to
state “A-1’s claimed status as a bona fide assignee is defeated
under this record, however, because the assignment – though
absolute in form – is, in fact, a transfer intended primarily to
secure payment for services rendered.&#0160; (citation omitted).&#0160;
This is demonstrated by the fact that A-1 pays nothing for the
purported ‘assignment.’ . . .&#0160; Courts throughout the country
have condemned this practice as an attempt by collection agencies to
accomplish indirectly what the law otherwise prohibits.”&#0160;
(citation omitted).&#0160; 623 N.W.2d at 808.&#0160; The court
concluded that A-1 Associated, Ltd. had engaged in the unauthorized
practice of law.&#0160; “So long as A-1 is not representing its own
legal interests . . ., but the legal interests of others, it is
engaging – without license or other authorization – in the
practice of law.”&#0160; 623 N.W.2d at 808-09.</p>
<p>In <em>State ex rel. State Bar of Wisconsin v. Bonded Collections,
Inc.</em>, 36 Wis.2d 643, 154 N.W.2d 250 (1967), the Supreme Court of
Wisconsin considered the following issue: “Does a course of conduct
whereby a collection agency takes assignments of accounts for
collection, . . ., brings suit in its own name, and then pursuant to
a prior agreement deducts from the proceeds, costs, and a fixed
percentage as its fee and remits the balance to the creditor,
constitute the unauthorized practice of law?” 154 N.W.2d at 253-54.
 In concluding that it does, the court stated “[i]t is sheer
hypocrisy to conclude that the percentage retained by the collection
agency represents its equity or ownership share of the claim. It is
its fee or charge for professional services rendered.” 154 N.W.2d
at 256. The Wisconsin court also noted that “[t]he collection
agency by going into court representing itself as the client
perpetrates a fraud on the court.” <em>Id.</em></p>
<p>Another state where I found a case on this was New Mexico.&#0160; In <em>State ex rel. Norvell v. Credit Bureau of Albuquerque,
Inc.</em>, 85 N.M. 521, 514 P.2d 40, 49 (1973)&#0160; it was held that assignments procured
by a credit bureau were not truly taken to acquire title and ownership, but
to facilitate delivery of legal services for consideration constitute
unauthorized practice of law.&#0160; In West Virginia <em>State ex rel. Frieson v. Isner</em>,
168 W.Va.758, 285 S.E.2d 641, 651-52 (1981) cites numerous cases to
support the conclusion that an assignment taken solely to maintain suit on
a creditor’s claim is a &quot;sham&quot; perpetrated on the court to enable
the unauthorized practice of law.</p><p>So if you are tempted to start one of these businesses, wherever you are, please take heed of this information and consult with an attorney first to find out whether or not this practice is legal in your state.&#0160; For those in North Carolina who contact me on a regular basis, unfortunately I do not have an answer for you.&#0160; I suspect that North Carolina would probably go along with the other states, but you never know. Again, as far as I know, the Court of Appeals has not addressed the issue, but I must emphasize that my research on this question is far from complete.</p><p></p></p><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/NCJudgmentEnforcement/~4/dFXfOJY9NGE" height="1" width="1"/>]]></content:encoded>


<category>Creditors Liabilities and Pitfalls</category>
<category>Judgment Enforcement - FAQs</category>

<dc:creator>Thomas Kerner</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Wed, 17 Mar 2010 21:45:05 -0400</pubDate>

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<item>
<title>Collecting Judgments in North Carolina -- What Happens When There is An Appeal?</title>
<link>http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/NCJudgmentEnforcement/~3/CTtlPW1K9aU/collecting-judgments-in-north-carolina-what-happens-when-there-is-an-appeal.html</link>
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<description>Occasionally I run across a potential client (or even an attorney) who believes that merely filing an appeal will prevent a judgment creditor from being able to collect a judgment. However, in North Carolina, there is no automatic stay of judgment enforcement proceedings simply because an appeal has been filed. Rule 62(d) of the North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure makes this clear: the appealing party "may" seek a stay of execution on the judgment, but it is not automatically given. In order to obtain a stay against judgment enforcement, a defendant must file a bond with the court ensuring...</description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Occasionally I run across a potential client (or even an attorney) who believes that merely filing an appeal will prevent a judgment creditor from being able to collect a judgment.&#0160; However, in North Carolina, there is no automatic stay of judgment enforcement proceedings simply because an appeal has been filed.&#0160; Rule 62(d) of the North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure makes this clear:&#0160; the appealing party &quot;may&quot; seek a stay of execution on the judgment, but it is not automatically given.</p><p>In order to obtain a stay against judgment enforcement, a defendant must file a bond with the court ensuring payment of the judgment, pursuant to NC Gen Stat sec. 1-289.&#0160; </p><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/NCJudgmentEnforcement/~4/CTtlPW1K9aU" height="1" width="1"/>]]></content:encoded>


<category>Appeals Issues</category>
<category>Judgment Enforcement - FAQs</category>

<dc:creator>Thomas Kerner</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Fri, 27 Nov 2009 13:29:37 -0500</pubDate>

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<item>
<title>Judgments vs Maritime Liens: Can the Coast Guard Record a Judgment?</title>
<link>http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/NCJudgmentEnforcement/~3/O-ryNhYz6oA/judgments-vs-maritime-liens-can-the-coast-guard-record-a-judgment.html</link>
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<description>Today I ran across this article, which discusses whether a judgment creditor can record a judgment lien with the Coast Guard in order to proceed against the boat or other vessel of a judgment debtor. The short answer seems to be no. But that said, a boat may be seized and sold to satisfy a judgment, just as any other type of personal property can be.</description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Today I ran across <a href="http://www.thelog.com/askattorney/askAttorney.aspx?x=311" target="_blank">this article</a>, which discusses whether a judgment creditor can record a judgment lien with the Coast Guard in order to proceed against the boat or other vessel of a judgment debtor.&#0160; The short answer seems to be no.&#0160; But that said, a boat may be seized and sold to satisfy a judgment, just as any other type of personal property can be.&#0160; </p><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/NCJudgmentEnforcement/~4/O-ryNhYz6oA" height="1" width="1"/>]]></content:encoded>


<category>Judgments and Personal Property</category>
<category>Post Judgment Procedures</category>
<category>Writs and Levies</category>

<dc:creator>Thomas Kerner</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Fri, 21 Aug 2009 19:44:44 -0400</pubDate>

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<item>
<title>If I Try To Enforce A Judgment I Won Against A Consumer, Am I a "Debt Collector"?</title>
<link>http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/NCJudgmentEnforcement/~3/zGjuEo_rIy4/if-i-try-to-enforce-a-judgment-i-won-against-a-consumer-am-i-a-debt-collector.html</link>
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<description>One of the most frequent questions I am asked about judgment enforcement is whether or not the federal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA) applies to someone collecting a debt owed to them - without using an attorney or debt collector. And the answer to that question is "no." But a question that hardly anybody thinks to ask is: Does the North Carolina Debt Collection Act (NCDCA) apply to me if I am collecting a debt owed to me? And the answer to that is: yes it does. If the debt is "consumer debt" that is. In 2000, the North...</description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>One of the most frequent questions I am asked about judgment enforcement is whether or not the federal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA) applies to someone collecting a debt owed to them - without using an attorney or debt collector.&#0160; And the answer to that question is &quot;no.&quot;</p><p>But a question that hardly anybody thinks to ask is:&#0160; Does the North Carolina Debt Collection Act (NCDCA) apply to me if I am collecting a debt owed to me?&#0160; And the answer to that is:&#0160; yes it does.&#0160; If the debt is &quot;consumer debt&quot; that is.&#0160;&#0160; </p><p>In 2000, the North Carolina Court of Appeals decided <em>Davis Lake Community Ass&#39;n v. Feldmann,</em> 138 N.C. App. 292.&#0160; In that case, legal questions arose as to whether a homeowners association, in collecting HOA fees, was acting as a &quot;debt collector&quot; within the meanings of either (1) the FDCPA, or (2) the North Carolina Debt Collection Act.</p><p>The Court found that under the FDCPA, the HOA was not a debt collector, as the FDCPA requires that the alleged debt collector be primarily in the business of debt collection.&#0160; Naturally, this is not the primary business of an HOA, so the act did not apply. However, the Court found no such limitation under the NCDCA.&#0160; The NCDCA provides that &quot;any person&quot; collecting a debt from a consumer in North Carolina is subject to its provisions.&#0160; Because of the breadth of that language, the court concluded that the HOA, in its attempts to collect dues from a homeowner, was indeed a &quot;debt collector&quot; within the meaning of the North Carolina Debt Collection Act.</p><p>So if you are collecting a consumer debt in North Carolina, you must become familiar with the requirements of the NCDCA.&#0160; </p><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/NCJudgmentEnforcement/~4/zGjuEo_rIy4" height="1" width="1"/>]]></content:encoded>


<category>Federal FDCPA</category>
<category>Judgment Enforcement - FAQs</category>
<category>North Carolina Debt Collection Act</category>

<dc:creator>Thomas Kerner</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Tue, 11 Aug 2009 23:14:40 -0400</pubDate>

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<item>
<title>Collecting a Judgment in North Carolina?  Beware of Potential Liability</title>
<link>http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/NCJudgmentEnforcement/~3/T_EUypVMEGo/collecting-a-judgment-in-north-carolina-beware-of-potential-liability.html</link>
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<description>Did you know that under North Carolina law, even if you have already served a Writ of Execution and successfully collected part of a judgment, you could still be liable for damages to the judgment debtor if they later file a successful Rule 60 motion to set aside the judgment? N.C.G.S. § 1-108 provides that if a judgment is set aside pursuant to Rule 60(b) or (c) of the Rules of Civil Procedure and the judgment or any part thereof has been collected or otherwise enforced, restitution to the judgment debtor may be compelled. If property is sold following a...</description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="margin-bottom: 0in;"><a name="SearchTerm"></a><a name="SR;203"></a><a name="SR;202"></a>
Did you know that under North Carolina law, even if you have already served a Writ of Execution
and successfully collected part of a judgment, you could still be
liable for damages to the judgment debtor if they later file a
successful <a href="http://twkerner.typepad.com/north_carolina_judgment_e/rule-60-motions-to-set-aside-judgments/">Rule 60 motion to set aside the judgment</a>? N.C.G.S. <span style="font-family: Times New Roman,serif;">§</span>
1-108 provides that if a judgment is set aside pursuant to Rule 60(b)
or (c) of the Rules of Civil Procedure and the judgment or any part
thereof has been collected or otherwise enforced, restitution to the
judgment debtor may be compelled. 
</p>

<p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">If property is sold following a writ of
execution, title to the property is not affected, and the buyer of
the property (as, for example, at an auction) cannot be liable to the
judgment debtor. Instead, restitution may be ordered against the
judgment creditor and/or the creditor&#39;s personal representatives.&#0160; Something to keep in mind when setting out to collect on a judgment.</p><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/NCJudgmentEnforcement/~4/T_EUypVMEGo" height="1" width="1"/>]]></content:encoded>


<category>Creditors Liabilities and Pitfalls</category>
<category>Rule 60 Motions to Set Aside Judgments</category>

<dc:creator>Thomas Kerner</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Mon, 27 Jul 2009 09:00:00 -0400</pubDate>

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<item>
<title> Rule 60 Motions to Set Aside a Judgment in North Carolina</title>
<link>http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/NCJudgmentEnforcement/~3/rmv3PHgPYXg/rule-60-motions-to-set-aside-a-judgment-in-north-carolina.html</link>
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<description>Even after a judgment has been rendered by a court, then entered by the clerk of court, the judgment debtor still has options for getting it nullified. Most people are aware that an appeal can be taken directly to the Court of Appeals. This generally must be done within 30 days of entry of the judgment. What is less well-known, however, is that the debtor also has the option of filing a motion in the trial court to have the judgment set aside. This is done under Rule 60 of the North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure. (There are other...</description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">Even after a judgment has been rendered by a court, then entered by the clerk of court, the judgment debtor
still has options for getting it nullified. Most people are aware that an appeal can be taken
directly to the Court of Appeals.&#0160; This generally must be done within
30 days of entry of the judgment. </p><p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">What is less well-known, however, is that the debtor also has the option of
filing a motion in the trial court to have the judgment set aside. 
This is done under Rule 60 of the North Carolina Rules of Civil
Procedure.&#0160; (There are other post judgment motions under the Rules, but Rule 60 is the one most likely to come up during the execution phase).&#0160; </p>

<p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">The thing to watch out for is: unlike
an appeal,which has to be filed within 30 days or the right to appeal is lost, the right to file a Rule 60 motion lasts for “a
reasonable time.” </p><p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">The Rule goes on to provide, in part, that the &quot;reasonable time&quot; it refers to (depending on which subsection of Rule 60 the debtor is invoking) may
not exceed a full year. When collecting a judgment, therefore, the
first thing to do is determine whether the judgment debtor is still
eligible to file a Rule 60 motion. 
</p>
<p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">You might think that all that needs to
happen is to look at the date of the judgment (which is measured from
the date the clerk stamped or &quot;clocked in&quot; the order), but
that is not all there is to it. 
</p>

<p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">Despite the one year time limit under
Rule 60, there have been cases where Rule 60 motions have been held
to have been timely filed, even when they were filed well after one
year. For example, in the recently decided case of <em>Sharyn&#39;s
Jewelers, LLC v IPayment, Inc</em>., <em>et al</em>., 674 S.E. 2d 732 (April 2009), the
North Carolina Court of Appeals found &quot;extraordinary
circumstances&quot; to justify allowing one of the Defendants to have
its Rule 60 motion considered <em><strong>even though the motion had not been filed
until 17 months after the judgment had been entered</strong></em>. The
circumstances were that the appealing defendant (Vericomm) had not received
notice of the judgment against it for 17 months, and that the
judgment awarded relief to the Plaintiff that exceeded what was
sought in the Plaintiff&#39;s complaint. Specifically, the trial court had erroneously entered
judgments against Vericomm on causes of action that had been pled only
against the other defendants, but not Vericomm. As such, the
judgment was &quot;irregular&quot; and could therefore be vacated in
part, to the extent of the irregularities. 
</p><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/NCJudgmentEnforcement/~4/rmv3PHgPYXg" height="1" width="1"/>]]></content:encoded>


<category>Creditors Liabilities and Pitfalls</category>
<category>Rule 60 Motions to Set Aside Judgments</category>
<category>Small Claims Judgments</category>

<dc:creator>Thomas Kerner</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Fri, 24 Jul 2009 22:25:07 -0400</pubDate>

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<item>
<title>Renewing a Judgment in North Carolina</title>
<link>http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/NCJudgmentEnforcement/~3/YBfKJrNfV6g/renewing-a-judgment-in-north-carolina.html</link>
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<description>A judgment may be "renewed" so to speak, by filing a Complaint prior to the expiration of the 10 year effect of the original judgment. That Complaint must be filed and served on the Defendant(s)/judgment debtor(s) in the same manner as the original Complaint in the case. Technically, it does not "renew" the old judgment. Rather, it is a new judgment based upon the existing liability that extends from the original judgment. This procedure can only be done once. See N.C.G.S. s 1-47(1).</description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A judgment may be&#0160; &quot;renewed&quot; so to speak, by filing a Complaint prior
to the expiration of the 10 year effect of the original judgment.&#0160; That
Complaint must be filed and served on the Defendant(s)/judgment debtor(s) in the same manner as the original
Complaint in the case.&#0160; Technically, it does not &quot;renew&quot; the old
judgment.&#0160; Rather, it is a new judgment based upon the existing
liability that extends from the original judgment. This procedure can
only be done once.&#0160; <em>See</em> N.C.G.S. s 1-47(1).</p><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/NCJudgmentEnforcement/~4/YBfKJrNfV6g" height="1" width="1"/>]]></content:encoded>


<category>Judgment Enforcement - FAQs</category>

<dc:creator>Thomas Kerner</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Thu, 23 Jul 2009 18:03:27 -0400</pubDate>

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<item>
<title>Collecting a Judgment in North Carolina, The Basics:  Part I</title>
<link>http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/NCJudgmentEnforcement/~3/fMqK_zHuv3E/collecting-a-judgment-in-north-carolina-the-basics-part-i.html</link>
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<description>The primary ways to obtain a judgment in North Carolina are as follows: (1) a jury verdict, (2) a judge's order following a bench trial, (3) a default judgment (which is also entered by a judge's order), (4) a Confession of Judgment, or (5) a Consent Judgment. There are also motions to confirm arbitration awards (giving the same force and effect to an arbitration award as a judgment entered originally in a court). Once a judgment is entered by the Clerk of Court, the party owing the money is called the "Judgment Debtor." The winning party - the one to...</description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">The primary ways to obtain a judgment
in North Carolina are as follows: (1) a jury verdict, (2) a judge&#39;s
order following a bench trial, (3) a default judgment (which is also
entered by a judge&#39;s order), (4) a Confession of Judgment, or (5) a
Consent Judgment. There are also motions to confirm arbitration
awards (giving the same force and effect to an arbitration award as a
judgment entered originally in a court). </p>

<p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">Once a judgment is entered by the Clerk
of Court, the party owing the money is called the &quot;Judgment
Debtor.&quot; The winning party - the one to whom the money is owed,
is called the &quot;Judgment Creditor.&quot;&#0160; Once entered, a judgment creates a lien on the real property of the debtor in any county in which it is docketed, for a period of ten years.&#0160; Also, at any time during that ten year period, an execution may be issued by the clerk of court, ordering the seizure and sale of the judgment debtor&#39;s personal property.</p>

<p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">Judgment creditors are entitled to
initiate a variety of procedures in order to collect on their
judgments. The most basic of these is the Writ of Execution. The
Writ of Execution is issued by the Clerk of Court.
</p><p style="margin-bottom: 0in;"> If the Judgment Debtor is an
individual person, that person must first be served with a Notice of
Right to Have Exemptions Designated (form AOC-CV-406), and a Motion to Claim
Exemptions. There are two AOC forms for these (AOC-CV-407 and AOC-CV-415), and their use is
determined by the age of the judgment. 
</p>

<p style="margin-bottom: 0in;">For corporate defendants, no such
notice is required.</p><p style="margin-bottom: 0in;"></p><p>If the judgment is against an individual, and arises out of a &quot;personal, family or household&quot; debt, then the provisions of the federal Fair Debt Collection Practices will still apply, as well as those of the more restrictive North Carolina Debt Collection Ac.
</p><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/NCJudgmentEnforcement/~4/fMqK_zHuv3E" height="1" width="1"/>]]></content:encoded>


<category>Federal FDCPA</category>
<category>Judgment Enforcement - FAQs</category>
<category>North Carolina Debt Collection Act</category>

<dc:creator>Thomas Kerner</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Thu, 23 Jul 2009 17:10:04 -0400</pubDate>

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