Richard 545
Member
To LdiJ. Your link didn't do much directly. But a link IN your link, "Deceased Member Issues" certainly did. So here is my summary and is what will be pressed.
At the time of my brothers death, 12 Dec 2017, no accounts were in default. All debts were covered by auto pay through the CU to include the debt on the CU credit card. I submitted an illegal PR letter to the CU to freeze all accounts. That letter was dated 20 Dec 2017. At that time all accounts were not in default. On 5 Jan 2018 I turned his vehicle (personal property) into the CU without authorization. They accepted the vehicle and sold it and paid themselves on the auto loan without any accountability for any monies in excess of the note amount. They honored the illegal freeze letter to stop payments to all creditors including themselves, thus putting the credit card balance inito default without legal authority. At this point, there was no indication that the balance would not continue to be paid, except by their own actions because the auto pay was still in effect. Someone @ the CU decided to pay an outstanding bill. On my discovery, they decided to put the money back into the account it was drawn from. Again, I had no legal authority. Perhaps a trial balloon? Once they could establish default, they moved on the set off. If a set off upon death existed, they would not have required the default to take place and could have acted immediately. My plea is that they decided to accept an illegal letter as cover for actions they could not otherwise take, (stop all withdrawls from the account) thereby protecting the amount available to them upon initiating the set off provisions. They also sold the vehicle that was not in default, again using the cover of an illegal freeze letter, to pay themselves off for the auto note. I had no legal authority to sign off in lieu of the registered owner, and they had no legal authority as the legal owner to sell a vehicle that was collateral on a consumer loan that was not in default. It is my contention that they put the credit card account into default illegally by using an illegal freeze letter that they knew was illegal, (but the other creditors did not except by the CU refusing payment based on a letter only the CU knew was illegal) in order to garner maximum return for themselves on the initiation of the set off that they had planned all along. The only way they could get around Sect 169 Reg Z TILA was to create a situation where the account was in default without notification except to be made aware of the default proper notification had to be made to show the penalty charges. Without this, the only provision that takes exception to the absolute right of set off (Credit Cards) would have applied. They put into default based on an illegal letter from me, gave no indication that the note was in default, and when enough time without payment that they controlled based on an illegal letter came to pass, they pulled the trigger on the set off. We'll see what happens.
At the time of my brothers death, 12 Dec 2017, no accounts were in default. All debts were covered by auto pay through the CU to include the debt on the CU credit card. I submitted an illegal PR letter to the CU to freeze all accounts. That letter was dated 20 Dec 2017. At that time all accounts were not in default. On 5 Jan 2018 I turned his vehicle (personal property) into the CU without authorization. They accepted the vehicle and sold it and paid themselves on the auto loan without any accountability for any monies in excess of the note amount. They honored the illegal freeze letter to stop payments to all creditors including themselves, thus putting the credit card balance inito default without legal authority. At this point, there was no indication that the balance would not continue to be paid, except by their own actions because the auto pay was still in effect. Someone @ the CU decided to pay an outstanding bill. On my discovery, they decided to put the money back into the account it was drawn from. Again, I had no legal authority. Perhaps a trial balloon? Once they could establish default, they moved on the set off. If a set off upon death existed, they would not have required the default to take place and could have acted immediately. My plea is that they decided to accept an illegal letter as cover for actions they could not otherwise take, (stop all withdrawls from the account) thereby protecting the amount available to them upon initiating the set off provisions. They also sold the vehicle that was not in default, again using the cover of an illegal freeze letter, to pay themselves off for the auto note. I had no legal authority to sign off in lieu of the registered owner, and they had no legal authority as the legal owner to sell a vehicle that was collateral on a consumer loan that was not in default. It is my contention that they put the credit card account into default illegally by using an illegal freeze letter that they knew was illegal, (but the other creditors did not except by the CU refusing payment based on a letter only the CU knew was illegal) in order to garner maximum return for themselves on the initiation of the set off that they had planned all along. The only way they could get around Sect 169 Reg Z TILA was to create a situation where the account was in default without notification except to be made aware of the default proper notification had to be made to show the penalty charges. Without this, the only provision that takes exception to the absolute right of set off (Credit Cards) would have applied. They put into default based on an illegal letter from me, gave no indication that the note was in default, and when enough time without payment that they controlled based on an illegal letter came to pass, they pulled the trigger on the set off. We'll see what happens.
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