by Brantson » Tue May 27, 2014 7:53 am
In July of 2008, I was served with a summons for past due credit card debt. I did not recognize the lender and sent a letter requesting verification. I mentioned that this debt might belong to my ex-husband. They responded with the name of the original creditor and asked me to call their office for verification. I did not respond. and last week(October 2009) I received a certified letter with a request for responses to Plaintiff's Requests for Admissions and Interrogatories and Requests for Production of Documents from the same attorney. I contacted an attorney with Legal Aid in Oklahoma. Since I did not know the creditor listed as the plaintiff, he instructed me to deny all admissions, respond to interrogatories with "Plaintiff is a stranger to the Defendant", and no documents exist to the Request for Documents. If this is a credit card that dated back to my divorce and the charges are valid, my question is regarding the statute of limitations on credit card debt in Oklahoma. The last activity on the card would have been in 2004. The attorney I consulted stated the SOL is five years. Does the filing of the summons restart the statute of limitations? There seems to be some dispute in the courts as to whether credit card debt is a written contract or an open account. I am concerned that if I respond as the legal aid attorney instructed, I could be creating a larger problem. Since I am currently unemployed, I am not in a position to pay if this case were to go to court and a judgement was issued against me.