That is not true. I never EVER had an intention of not paying a loan back. I had ongoing loans over the years with Abbey, I had my mortgage with them at one point as well.NYGman wrote:Tuco, face it, you entered into a Loan agreament with Abby with no intention of paying it back. You stop paying at some point on this, and you credit card, and then use fanciful legal theories to remove the debt? This is what you did, and from what I can gather, what you believe. What is clear is:
1) You had a debt with Abby
2) Abby Wrote off the debt
You are presuming it is because of your "Air tight legal argument" but you have no direct evidence of this, just speculation. you position does not agree with the law, as us legal folks understand it to be, you knowledge of the DPA how it works, along with you understanding of banking and contract law is completely incorrect.
The fact is, it is just as likely the bank wrote of the debt because the sun rose that morning, it rained that afternoon, or someone at abby drew lots to decide which to go after. You were not a part of their decision making process, do not know why thye chose to give up, all you do is speculate that your woo, and legal acumin did the trick. Here you are very much mistaken.
I just wanted a voice, I wanted to be heard. I withheld payments in order to be heard. I had recently just paid off my mortgage and had also built a house. I felt that my hard work placed me in a position whereby I could be a little more aggressive in my dealings with these people, whereby in the past, I felt that I had to concede to them.
I never once said my legal argument was "air tight". Indeed, at the time, I was still seeking help and advice from internet forums. regards my knowledge, I believe I know far more than you. Furthermore, I consider it highly unlikely indeed that you are legally qualified.
The bank didn't write the debt off btw-They sold it (or at least the DCA claimed to have bought it)