Will that girl ever go away?Tessian wrote:Has anyone here ever been involved in a small claims suit or know anything about them? I won't bother going into details unless someone does, but I need to find out if I have a case in regards to my issue.
Will that girl ever go away?Tessian wrote:Has anyone here ever been involved in a small claims suit or know anything about them? I won't bother going into details unless someone does, but I need to find out if I have a case in regards to my issue.
Deceptive fucker aren't ya? That's the problem though... she went away without working out repayment of the now $2000 she owes me. Tried calling a few times and never getting a reply, so I'm hoping the threat of getting sued will get her attention and if not I'll be prepared to actually do it.Imakeholesinu wrote: Will that girl ever go away?
I appreciate the help Sine, but it's obvious from what you've said here you don't know how small claims court works. It is a whole different beast than a normal court. Everything's more lenient-- no need for lawyers, verbal contracts are acceptable and there's less of a burden of proof, etc. I know that if this were a normal court I'd be screwed because I have no documentation (also I don't have her current address or even place of business) but I don't need it for small claimsSineSwiper wrote:Lawyers are always willing to talk to you for free, believe it or not. They feel that if they have a potential case (worth money), they won't mind passing out free advice.
Also, don't try "calling" or "talking". That's not a written record. If you are thinking of legal matters, type up a letter and send it to her in certified mail. Then get the receipt of the delivery. If she refuses to sign for it (you have the option), then keep that receipt of denial and put the letter in front of her door.
Legal matters are NOTHING without a written record! I cannot state this loudly enough!
So what you're saying is we should expect to see you on Judge Judy?Tessian wrote:I appreciate the help Sine, but it's obvious from what you've said here you don't know how small claims court works. It is a whole different beast than a normal court. Everything's more lenient-- no need for lawyers, verbal contracts are acceptable and there's less of a burden of proof, etc. I know that if this were a normal court I'd be screwed because I have no documentation (also I don't have her current address or even place of business) but I don't need it for small claimsSineSwiper wrote:Lawyers are always willing to talk to you for free, believe it or not. They feel that if they have a potential case (worth money), they won't mind passing out free advice.
Also, don't try "calling" or "talking". That's not a written record. If you are thinking of legal matters, type up a letter and send it to her in certified mail. Then get the receipt of the delivery. If she refuses to sign for it (you have the option), then keep that receipt of denial and put the letter in front of her door.
Legal matters are NOTHING without a written record! I cannot state this loudly enough!
I'm doing it to recoup my finances. She originally owed me $1200 in back rent/utilities which I almost let slide even though she had promised to get together and work out a payment schedule once she got settled in her new place, but then because of her dog I lost my deposits on the apartment and almost got charged $800 for them to replace the carpet and treat the concrete underneath. I really don't want to actually sue, I just want to use it to scare her into actually doing what she promised and start paying me back. If we work it out she can pay a little a month, if it goes to court she'll be forced to pay it all back in 30 days and I don't even think she MAKES $2000 in a month.Zeus wrote:If you're doing it out of spite or to teach her a lesson, then hey, go ahead. But if you're expecting anything out of it, I'd say don't bother. It's a crapshoot
From what I read... I believe after 30 days you can have the Sheriff seize items to be sold at auction in which the proceeds would go to paying your judgement. I wish they would garnish wages instead cause she really doesn't have much of value (her car, xbox, and laptop would probably not even cover it all) but I didn't notice that as an option when researching. I'm surprised VA doesn't provide ANY means of forcing repayment; at least auctioning off their assets is better than nothing... even though I doubt at sheriff auction's stuff gets sold for what it's worth.Kupek wrote:I think it varies state-by-state, but my parent's took a delinquent tenant to small-claims court in Virginia. What they got was a judgment of "Yup, she owes you money." Virginia won't garnish wages on your behalf, so there's really no way to enforce it. They never got the money.
Sounds like you already read up on it for your state. Do they have any way of enforcing the 30 day thing?
True, there's no need for lawyers (I was only asking for you to get some of their advice), but there is a need for written proof. You obviously haven't seen enough Judge Judy episodes. (Of course, the show is fake, anyway.)Tessian wrote:I appreciate the help Sine, but it's obvious from what you've said here you don't know how small claims court works. It is a whole different beast than a normal court. Everything's more lenient-- no need for lawyers, verbal contracts are acceptable and there's less of a burden of proof, etc. I know that if this were a normal court I'd be screwed because I have no documentation (also I don't have her current address or even place of business) but I don't need it for small claims
I'm pretty sure PA will only seize assets for auction in the event of non-payment, couldn't find anything about wage garnishing... but that too is a problem, because if it came to that I doubt they'd find enough TO seize to pay for everything she owes. I really just hope it wakes her up, but of course I don't have her current address and only maybe her email (not responding to voicemails). I may try sending her an email and seeing what happens.Black Lotus wrote:A former roomate owed me 1500 for signing a lease but never moving in.
I took him to small claims court and won.
He didn't pay.
I spoke to somebody at the office and they said to get what is called an "execution order" (fun name) from the Sherrif's Office, and they'd collect it for me.
I paid 75 to file the initial claim, 80 to be ABLE to go file an execution order, and another 75 for the EO itself.
In the end, the Sherrif's Office notified me that he didn't earn enough to even warrant garnishing his pay to pay me back.
System failed me! Hope you have better luck. This was in Nova Scotia, and procedures are almost certainly different in your hood.
We both moved out when the lease ended in May, fuck it should have been a lot sooner than that. I moved down the street into a single in another section of the complex and she moved about 20 minutes away; all I know is the town she's in/around. So yeah, all I got is an email and phone #.SineSwiper wrote:No current address? Did she move out? That really sucks. But you still have a phone # and email address?
That's fucked? Have you tried hired goons?Black Lotus wrote:A former roomate owed me 1500 for signing a lease but never moving in.
I took him to small claims court and won.
He didn't pay.
I spoke to somebody at the office and they said to get what is called an "execution order" (fun name) from the Sherrif's Office, and they'd collect it for me.
I paid 75 to file the initial claim, 80 to be ABLE to go file an execution order, and another 75 for the EO itself.
In the end, the Sherrif's Office notified me that he didn't earn enough to even warrant garnishing his pay to pay me back.
System failed me! Hope you have better luck. This was in Nova Scotia, and procedures are almost certainly different in your hood.