I’d like to know if there is a legal course I can take if a creditor is not providing me with written records or the records are incorrect. Let’s say the NC dept. of revenue is drawing money from my bank account “under the table”, meaning I receive no warning or notice and once it is paid there is no bank record of the transaction. It’s an intimidation technique that is not “officially” a collection. The NCDOR representative told me I had been notified in advance while I was holding their most recent letter dated 2 days ago with “30 days to comply”. It’s an ordinary billing statement. When I asked how would I know from reading this what a “bank garnishment” is, she said my bank was named in the letter as if this was an answer. My bank received a legal indenture which apparently the customer never sees, and charged me a $100 legal fee. I was shown a general purpose agreement which says in one sentence “We charge a $100 legal fee”, but does not tell the customer that bank garnishments exist; strictly speaking it ISN’T a garnishment policy. I was forced to resolve this without knowing what my own rights are, and a bank representative told me there was nothing in my file to show a transaction had taken place. I was sent a copy of the legal indenture they received by mail; it is only the same billing statement addressed to me. I don’t know how the bank knows from reading this what they are instructed to do.
I work at a tax office myself and no one there even knew what “bank garnishment” is called, and I perceive a lot of ignorance and fear. I’m not informed enough to challenge it as one would in any normal dispute. My question is very simple: If I am even considering going to court I have the right to demand a notice that has the date and amount of the transactions on it, and if they cannot provide this or cite a greater policy or exemption that is in writing they are in contempt. Am I right?
I work at a tax office myself and no one there even knew what “bank garnishment” is called, and I perceive a lot of ignorance and fear. I’m not informed enough to challenge it as one would in any normal dispute. My question is very simple: If I am even considering going to court I have the right to demand a notice that has the date and amount of the transactions on it, and if they cannot provide this or cite a greater policy or exemption that is in writing they are in contempt. Am I right?