Debt Collection
To succeed, businesses must be paid promptly and in full. With the help of
their lawyers, business owners and managers can collect promptly and protect
their rights regarding credit and collections.
Adopting Policies and Procedures to Improve Collections
Carefully written credit and collection policies improve
collections. Your policies should cover procedures for using credit
applications, handling billing, sending collection letters and making
collection phone calls. Your lawyer can help your company write credit and
collection policies that will expedite payment of receivables and comply with
debtor protection laws.
Using Credit Applications to Help Collections
Start with well thought-out credit applications. The application
should contain crucial customer information: the name, address and phone
number of the customer, the owners of corporate clients and credit references.
Complete names and addresses will ease collecting delinquent accounts.
Customers are willing to supply this information up front to avoid having to
pay cash.
You can word the application so that your company has the right to collect
interest when accounts are paid late and attorney fees if incurred. A credit
application can also ask for personal guarantees of the individuals behind
corporate customers or the guarantees of the customer's partners or spouse.
This enables you to collect the debt from these other individuals if the
customer does not pay it.
Writing Effective Collection Letters
When payment of a bill is late, companies ordinarily send a letter
asking for prompt payment and requesting an explanation of why the bill has not
been paid. If the customer does not respond to the collection letter, a
follow-up telephone call to the customer usually follows. Your lawyer can help
you write collection letters that get customers to pay without unduly offending
them. A script prepared by your lawyer for collection phone calls can encourage
payment without violating the law.
A Lawyer Can Help You Collect Without a Lawsuit
When your company cannot collect business debts from a customer,
your lawyer can send a letter to the customer on law firm stationery demanding
payment and warning of legal action if the debt is not paid. Such a letter lets
customers know that you intend to pursue your legal rights to collect the debt
and is often enough to cause the customer to pay in full.
In some instances, the customer may respond to the letter by explaining why the
debt remains unpaid. The customer may have a justifiable claim for a bill
reduction due to a product defect or late delivery. Or the customer may want to
pay, but lacks the money. Initiating communication at the earliest possible
time may uncover information about something you are doing wrong and help you
with other customers. Your lawyer can help you to resolve matters without a
lawsuit by settling any disputes and arranging payment schedules. Your lawyer
may also suggest that delinquent customers sign promissory notes, furnish
collateral, and provide personal guarantees of payment.
When a Lawsuit Is Unavoidable
Sometimes a lawsuit is the only way to collect a debt. Your lawyer
may recommend a lawsuit after attempting to collect with a demand letter and
investigating your customer's ability to pay. For example, you may have to sue
a solvent customer who refuses to pay without justification or who fails to
respond to your lawyer's letter and follow-up phone call. If the customer is
out-of-state and is not subject to jurisdiction of your state's courts, your
lawyer may recommend referring the matter to a lawyer in that state. Be sure
your credit and collection policy names the employee responsible for working
with your lawyer so that critical time is not lost.
Commencing suit may cause the customer to pay. In other cases, the customer may
ignore the lawsuit, or hire a lawyer to defend it. If the customer fails to pay
after commencement of the lawsuit, your lawyer will take the necessary action
to continue it, such as motions, discovery of information and, if necessary,
trial. If the customer does not have a valid defense, the action should result
in a court judgment in your favor.
Collecting Your judgment
The judgment may not be the end of the procedure. After obtaining a
judgment, your lawyer will help you collect it. The first step may be the
filing of a copy of the judgment with the county clerk to obtain a "lien"
against any real estate owned by the customer. If the debtor still doesn't pay,
your lawyer may find other assets of the customer which the sheriff can sell to
pay your judgment.
In appropriate cases, your lawyer can help you to "pierce the corporate veil"
and collect assets from a corporation's shareholders. If the customer has
transferred assets to others to avoid paying the judgment, your lawyer may help
you cancel these transfers, sell the assets and collect your judgment.
Recovering Your Merchandise
You may have a legal right to reclaim merchandise when a customer
fails to pay immediately after it is delivered. Particularly, when a customer
declares bankruptcy, your lawyer can help you act promptly since you can lose
your right to reclaim the goods if you fail to demand recovery within ten days
or if the goods are sold by the customer.
Before selling to a customer whose financial condition is doubtful, ask your
lawyer to help you take action to protect your right to collect. Your lawyer
may suggest precautionary measures, such as taking a security interest, or
utilizing collateral, or keeping legal title to the merchandise until you have
been paid in full.
Handling Full Payment Checks
Sometimes a customer pays an account with a check for less than the
amount due on the account and writes "payment in full'' on the back of the
check. Your company's credit and collection policies should instruct employees
to contact your lawyer before depositing such ''payment in full" checks. In
some cases, your legal rights can be preserved by endorsing the with the words
"without prejudice''. In other situations, your right to pursue the unpaid
balance of a customer's debt will be lost if you deposit the check, regardless
of how you endorse it. Your lawyer can analyze the facts, advise whether you
should return the check or cash it, and recommend steps to collect the unpaid
balance.
Legal Fees In Collection Matters
Your lawyer can help you find a mutually agreeable basis for legal
fees for services in collection matters. For some cases, it may be appropriate
to pay a contingent fee based on a percentage of the amount collected. In other
cases, a flat rate or hourly fee might be best. Sometimes your lawyer may
suggest a combination fee arrangements, like a contingent fee combined with a
"lump sum" suit fee if it becomes necessary to file a lawsuit. Once you agree
on a fee arrangement, your lawyer may follow-up with a letter to confirm it.
Conclusion
Your lawyer can help you collect more quickly and avoid "writing
off" uncollectible bills. Your lawyer will help you implement legally effective
credit and collection policies, keep you out of lawsuits with out-of-court
settlements, and act as your advocate when lawsuits are unavoidable.
Collection Checklist
-
Credit procedures
A. Credit applications
B. Credit reports
C. Credit approval
-
Credit Terms
A. Interest
B. Attorney fees
C. Remedies for default
-
Contract forms
A. Sales confirmation
B. Sales agreements
C. Service agreement
D. Master agreements
-
Installment sales
A. Payment schedule
B. Retention of title
C. Chattel mortgage
D. Insurance
|
-
Collection procedures
A. Billing
B. Monthly statements
C. Follow-up letters
D. Follow-up phone calls
E. Referral to collection lawyer
-
Accounting and Recordkeeping
A. Review of receivables
B. Adjustment of reserves for bad debts
C. Review of disputed accounts
D. Review of litigated accounts
-
Special problems
A. Full payment checks
B. Reclaiming goods from insolvent customers
C. Filling proof of a claim for bankrupt customers
|
Sign up for our
free monthly newsletter.
Please
schedule a free initial
consultation
to discuss your needs.