- Joined
- May 29, 2021
I asked before but never got an answer.
Is anyone able to explain to me how Vikki is in as much trouble as people seem to claim she is.
If she was never served (as she claims, and the flaws in service appear to corroborate) how exactly is she in any trouble at all for an oversized judgement? How can collections start against Vikki if she was never actually served. How exactly do you start collections against someone in North Carolina when you never once sent any paperwork there?
1) She doesn't appear to have an attorney or any sort of legal representation.
2) She has a default judgment against her. To get rid of that default judgment would require her to (a) hire an attorney to make an argument about the flaws in process service or (b) make her own argument to the court as to the flaws she claims exist in her process service. Her choice seems to be neither option.
3) She is not acting in a way that suggests she is taking the case seriously.
4) A default judgment against a person is a court finding in favor of the other party. The court in this case is a federal court. The federal default judgment gives them the power to go after her (collections) in whatever state she resides in. The default judgment means that the court has found (for now) that her process service was correctly done.
She is in trouble because she has a default judgment against her and does not appear to be taking any action to address the situation. She is still acting as if she can deal with the case by simply ignoring it. With a default judgment against her, she cannot just continue to ignore the case because a default judgment is losing the case. If she ignores the default judgment, her paths out of the "box" she is in get smaller and smaller.
IF she were to hire an attorney NOW AND IF that attorney were able to get the default judgment overturned and IF she were then to have an attorney respond to the complaint, she MIGHT at that point be in a better position than Dean. But that is alot of "IFs" and every day the window for her to escape the trap she has placed herself in gets smaller.