No. They are breaking the law if they're telling you they can. A judge issues warrants, not a payday lender. Payday loans are civil matters, not criminal. At most, they could sue you in court civilly for defaulting on a loan. Some states have made payday lending illegal. Check with your attorney generals office or financial regulator for more state specific info. Payday lenders love trying to scare the unknowing into paying them. The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA) is a federal law that governs collections. You can find it online.
If a Payday Loan company hires a collection agency to collect on your account they can send your account to an attorney to collect the amount of the loan and any NSF fees that you have accumulated. However, it is stated at the bottom of your contract that if you close your checking account that the loan is made from, that you can be charged with fraud.
yes
my layer said that it is like a credit card so it is not a bad checkCan they send me to jail if I do not pay back a payday loanAnswer:No, you cannot be sent to jail on not paying your payday loan. One thing that you must remember that"Payday loan is a civil debt. It is not a case of Check Fraud"So the Debt Collector cannot take criminal charges against you. You must be aware of your right before taking any action.A reference is there that brief you most about your payday loan rights.
yes you can if u are wanted in anouther country they can arest you and deport you back to where you are wanted Austin
If you gave a post-dated check and there is enough money in your account when the lender attempts to cash the check, you will effectively be paying back the loan. If your account does not have enough money at the time the payday lender attempts to cash your check, you will likely be hit (by your bank) with a Non-Sufficient funds fee, which you will HAVE to pay, regardless of whether or not you pay the payday loan back. In general, most payday lenders will attempt to collect the debt and will not sue you for the balance, however, providing ANY check in Texas and intentionally not having funds in the account is considered fraud. The payday lender, in this case, may "whisper in someone's ear" that you gave a bad check, which could result in fraud charges by the state. On the bright side, if convicted of fraud, the payday lender will likely leave you alone since you will have little recourse to pay.
Since payday lenders require that you leave a check, they turn in the check and if you don't have sufficient funds they can start legal action. Your wages may be attached, you may be charged with check fraud and you will certainly be required to pay for legal expenses.
You cannot be arrested anywhere in the United States for failing to pay a debt (other than taxes or legal fines, perhaps). If you have committed some other crime in conjunction with accruing that debt, then you could be charged for that. For example, fraud or intent to commit fraud by taking out a payday loan under a false name or writing a bad check to pay back the loan.
no, no payday lenders can prosecute you for bad checks, they knew that you did not have the funds available when you got the loan, because it is a postdated check, I just ate up a bunch of these sharks in bankruptcy cour when they got discharged, and ther was nothing that they could do about it
Any lender has the right to sue regardless of the reason if you choose not to pay them back. Leaving a state where you took a payday loan is not a reason for a payday lender to sue you - not paying them back is.
If you can not pay back a payday loan the account can go into collections until repaid. The payday loan company may also file a claim in court. Failure to pay back a payday loan will not result in jail time.
NOAnother View: If the person who committed the fraud is a foreign citizen and a permanent resident of a their foreign country and the check was written by them while out of the US, the above answer would be true. But if the person who committed the fraud is a US resident and just happens to be travelling abroad, there is no bar to issuing a warrant for their arrest, which can be served on them when they return back to the US.
To "rescind" something mean to "take it back".So the warrant was issued by a court - then the court took the warrant back meaning that that warrant is no longer in force.