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Satisfaction of Judgement- Case# 08-D-17202
Posted Tue April 17, 2012 4:18 pm, by Chanda C. written to Camden
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I have been trying to get your company to file a satisfaction of judgment with Cobb County State Court for nearly 2 years in reference to my eviction from Camden Shiloh in January of 2009. I have called and been dealing with Linda Willy. I can only guess she was frustrated with my repeated calls since she did not resolve the problem, as she has passed me along to someone named Tracy Storengen who is probably more unqualified to resolve this problem since she had no idea what a satisfaction of judgment was. I have called and left messages for the legal department and no one has returned my call. I paid my debt on Christmas Eve 2010 to Hunter Warfield, and per my state law, you all have 60 days to update it or face legal action. We are clearly outside of the 60 day window.
At a minimum, I would like the satisfaction of judgment filed so that I can proceed with a home loan I am trying to qualify for in the next 30 days. I broke my lease and I paid what I owed, so the least than can be done is to uphold your side of the legal arrangement. If all you can do is file the satisfaction, I will follow up with the law suit because there needs to be some kind of compensation for your company for the gross mishandling of my account. As an alternative, rather than suing for damages I would rather your company just file a dismissal of the judgment as compensation for the severe mishandling of my account. I believe I have been more than patient and paid my debt several times over as punishment for breaking my lease when I consider the time and effort I have put in to get this resolved.
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by PepperElf Posted Fri April 20, 2012 @ 9:30 AM
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try contacting the credit reporting companies yourself - all three.
dispute the marks, asking them to be marked as "paid" - you may need to include your proof of payment.
however understand that this won't take the marks off your account. it will just change them to paid (if it works) and then they will remain for 7 years.
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And why, should they "want" to do that? It was a valid debt that was owed and paid. Should they update it to reflect current information, absolutely, however, just as they can update it "if they want" they can also not update it, "if they want."
Just because a debt is paid, doesn't mean it magically vanishes from your report. It merely means that it finally closes and remains as a mark on your credit for however many years remain (depending on when it was handled and your state's laws.)
So again, they can update it to reflect that you paid it off or made an arrangement or they wrote it off - whatever the case here may be. But that won't necessarily get the blemish removed completely.
As to the attorney fees and damages and whatnot, I don't know what your state laws are, so I don't know if they would back you or not. I know my state, they don't care. You don't pay or you screw up and they side with the creditor. You're waiting it out until that falls off no matter how you beg, plead or gravel.
But I would imagine there aren't many judges who will make the creditor pay out for not immediately filing to have the debt marked as paid - if they do, I can imagine the possible "damages" to be awarded aren't going to be too much. That's just what I have seen and heard. Again, your state may be different.
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