State tuition fees 9 years old, time barred?
Date: Sat, 09/14/2019 - 23:11
State tuition fees 9 years old, time barred?
We log into the government student loan website and the loan name and date show up there but just has zeros for everything, everything marked as cancelled with $0 owed.
Now, 9 years later, we have received a letter from collection agency EOS CCA stating that they have collected the debt of $5888 and we should pay. However, it also says
"This is a time barred debt and no legal action may be filed."
What I think has happened is this, my wife got government loans but the government loans were retracted a couple of months later, therefore never really existing. But the school itself now has a tuition balance of $5888 against her. I think we do not have any government loan debt.
However,
The more I read the more confused I get.
The CA letter clearly says the debt is time barred.
I read this lady's posts here named "SoapLady" and I believe she says state tuition fees have no SOL and cannot be time barred.
I don't know what to think.
It's been nine+ years. Can this go on her credit in any way?
Can they garnish her wages?
Can they garnish her tax refunds? This one I actually wouldn't mind. So long as her credit and wages aren't hit.
Sorry this is so confusing, if anyone could adivse we'd be grateful.
Thank you.
Based on the information on
Based on the information on the credit report and the government website, the debt is settled. So, right now, both of you shouldn't do anything. If the government website has marked it cancelled. then the question of wage garnishment or tax refund interception doesn't arise.
Thanks for the reply!
Thanks for the reply!
Well, the student loan part is settled, but the tuition part to the university is still outstanding.
The collection letter is for a 9 year old tuition fee to a state University.
So that's where I don't know if it's better to leave it be or address it.
Okay. Now I got it. Listen,
Okay. Now I got it. Listen, first do one thing. Ask the collection agency to validate the debt first, and that too in writing. Don't think of settling the debt before the debt is validated by the collection agency. If the debt is valid, then you can think of settling it. Don't acknowledge the debt right now.
Do you ask to validate your
Do you ask to validate your debt? If no then do it. If they validate, then take steps for your debt. If they don't validate the debt, then relax
Don't except the debt as
Don't except the debt as yours. First of all validate the debt. Go for negotiation is the debt is yours.