Requests for Admissions or Request to Admit facts to a Junk Debt Buyer is where you ask them to admit that they don’t have documents, or to admit that they screwed up here or there.
These are important and must be thought through carefully. I sent off 21 Requests to Admit Facts to LVNV Funding and got my case dismissed:
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When sending Interrogatories off to a Junk Debt Buyer you want to come up with as many as you can so that they have to work HARD and it costs them money not to mention the fact that it ticks them off that you’ve come this far.
You must include all Instructions and Definitions pertaining to your Interrogatories before listing your Interrogatories, so that the Plaintiff is aware of what you mean when they are asked each question.
Interrogatories are by far the hardest part of Discovery, because they must be done right, the questions must be good enough to get your case thrown out, and you must label Instructions and Definitions out before sending them.
You cannot simply throw some questions together and send them off. You must have Instructions and Definitions beforehand. Otherwise, the Plaintiff can easily not answer any of them and say they lack information, didn’t understand what you meant by “you” or “them” , so many reasons.
Make sure you do these right, if done wrong, the Plaintiff can get away with not answering any of them by putting that they didn’t understand them. Which means they’ll get send back with “lack of information” or “didn’t understand definition” and you’ll have to do them all over again!!
During my lawsuit with a Junk Debt Buyer I used 23 Interrogatories, and before listing these 23 Interrogatories I had instructions and definitions. Therefore, I did these right and they were forced to answer them.
These helped my lawsuit get dismissed. To see the Interrogatories I used against LVNV Funding CLICK HERE
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