Yes, but only if the creditor has not been informed that the debtor does not want to be contacted at the place of their employment. Once the creditor has been made aware of such they can no longer legally make contact at the debtor's place of business. The debtor can render the notice verbally but it is strongly suggested that said debtor send a 'cease and desist' notice via registered mail to the creditor(s). The letter should state all the places and/or methods that the creditor(s) cannot contact the debtor, (i.e, place of employment, educational facility, home, family members home and/or cell phone, landline, internet, etc.).
credit the debtor and debit the creditor
No. It is a direct violation of the fair debt collection law for the creditor to contact the place of business of a non-debtor in regards to debt owed by a relative. A creditor can only discuss the debt with the debtor, although he can contact family members once to obtain information such as the debtor's current address. Please be advised, if the family member is a cosigner in relation to the debt, he or she is a co-debtor and the creditor can contact the co-debtor at his or her place of employment until they are informed by the employee that they cannot.
A debtor is someone who owes you money. A creditor is the person that lent the money.
The creditor will execute the judgment against the debtor's non exempt assets or property not the debtor's legal counsel. On the debtor.
A debtor owes someone else money. A creditor is owed money from someone else. So, a debtor owes a creditor. Or, a creditor is owed by a debtor.
A creditor is someone YOU OWE money to. A debtor is someone who OWES YOU money.
It's basically an agreement between the debtor and creditor on how the debtor is to pay the creditor that arises when debtor has filed bankruptcy.
Creditor is the opposite of a debtor
It is used by a judgment creditor to freeze the assets of the debtor and to find out what assets the debtor has.
creditor
Yes, but after the initial contact the debtor can request not to be contacted at his or her place of business. If the creditor/collector continues to contact the debtor at their place of employment they are breaking FDPA laws and should be reported.