Civil Litigation on a car loan

Deone

New Member
Jurisdiction
Nebraska
Hello, I am a US citizen living with my wife and two children. I am on a spouse visa. I have been living here in Japan for 2 years now. On the 8th of this month a law firm had sent a notice in the mail to my mailing address in the US (Nebraska) stating that they plan on collecting on a debt I had from 2019 which was for a car loan. The balance is around $17,000. They are planning to sue me over this. Will this affect my ability to renew my spouse visa? I've already contacted the law firm and told them about my situation. Should I higher an attorney since I won't be able to represent myself in court or should I just do nothing and wait it out? What will happen?
 
Why didn't you fulfill your contractual obligation?

There's no way that we can tell you whether or not you should hire an attorney, or just bury your head in the sand, although burying one's head in the sand rarely ends well. None of us can see the future either.
 
Hiring a lawyer isn't going to change anything if you owe the money. You'll still end up with a judgment against you. You'll have spent thousands on the lawyer. Your loan contract probably says you pay the plaintiff's lawyer fees when you lose.

By the time it's all over instead of owing $17,000 you might owe $25,000. Worse, leaving the country stopped the Statute of Limitations from running, giving the creditor many more years to sue you while the debt is accruing interest..

See if you can get a payment plan by offering a large cash down and avoid the lawsuit and its consequences.
 
If I lose the trial, will they come for my assets here in Japan? And will I be harrassed if I were to visit the US?
 
If I lose the trial, will they come for my assets here in Japan?

Maybe, maybe not.

Only the debt collector can say with any certainty.

Common sense reveals, debt collectors use every means at their disposal to extract money from their targets.

will I be harrassed if I were to visit the US?

Maybe, maybe not.

No one can say positively what any other entity might or might not do.
 
I am a US citizen living with my wife and two children. I am on a spouse visa. I have been living here in Japan for 2 years now. . . . Will this affect my ability to renew my spouse visa?

Maybe I'm not correctly understanding the situation or your question, but it appears you are asking a question about Japanese immigration law. You are a U.S. citizen living in Japan on "a spouse visa" (which presumably was issued by the Japanese government) and you want to know if a civil lawsuit filed against you in the U.S. will have an impact on that "spouse visa." Correct?

If so, no one here will have the slightest idea.

Should I [hire] an attorney since I won't be able to represent myself in court or should I just do nothing and wait it out? What will happen?

The first thing I'd do if I were you is consult an immigration attorney in Japan to determine the answer to your first question. If the answer is no, then your decision to hire a lawyer in Nebraska will depend on a number of factors including the likelihood that you will move back to the U.S. and whether or not you own assets or have a source of income in the U.S.

If I lose the trial, will they come for my assets here in Japan? And will I be harrassed if I were to visit the US?

We can't intelligently predict what some unknown entity will do under a hypothetical set of circumstances. That being said, a judgment issued by a court in Nebraska is ONLY enforceable within the borders of the State of Nebraska. In order to enforce the judgment in another country, the creditor would have to take some pretty complicated and expensive steps. In simplest terms, the creditor would have to have the judgment translated into Japanese and have that translation certified as accurate by the Nebraska court and multiple U.S. governmental agencies. The creditor would then have to ask an appropriate agency/court in Japan to have the judgment entered in Japan. My GUESS is that this would cost a minimum of $25k, and I have no idea if that $25k could be added to the judgment that would eventually get entered. It also would take probably a couple years (in addition to the time for the lawsuit in Nebraska). I will leave it to you to think about how likely this would be.

Harassed if you visit the U.S.? I suppose that depends on whether the lender you have stiffed is a legit business or the kind of business/person who doesn't appreciate people who welch on their debts.
 
And that legal "harassment" can involve (depending on what state you are in) attaching your bank accounts and garnishing your wages. In fact, if you're being paid by a US company they may be able to do so even if you're living abroad.
 
And that legal "harassment" can involve (depending on what state you are in) attaching your bank accounts and garnishing your wages. In fact, if you're being paid by a US company they may be able to do so even if you're living abroad.

but can they legally garnish government funds?
 
Medicaid, Medicare, disability checks, government social security checks are non garnishment eligible wages.

None of those things are "wages." While is true that these things cannot be garnished/levied in connection with the enforcement of a civil money judgment, that doesn't appear in any way relevant to "flyingron's" comment to which you replied (or to this thread in general).
 
the OP is upset that they could come after him over a car loan default. If they do and if they try to attach wages then they can not attach them to what I mentioned. Also the OP could declare bankruptcy and see what they can collect then as it is discharged out of the court.

The other part could be my Lewy bodies acting up, then again the old people medicine I take.
 
the OP is upset that they could come after him over a car loan default. If they do and if they try to attach wages then they can not attach them to what I mentioned. Also the OP could declare bankruptcy and see what they can collect then as it is discharged out of the court.

The other part could be my Lewy bodies acting up, then again the old people medicine I take.
To which I would reply, I don't know how to file bankruptcy abroad...
 
the OP is upset that they could come after him over a car loan default. If they do and if they try to attach wages then they can not attach them to what I mentioned.

I don't sense that the OP is "upset" about anything. The OP merely asked questions. But I agree that a wage garnishment isn't applicable to things that aren't wages.

Questions for the OP:

1. Do you intend to remain in Japan permanently, or do you intend to move back to the U.S. at some point? If the latter, when do you intend to return?

2. You mentioned having a mailing address in the U.S. Why do you have one?

3. Do you have assets or a source of income in Nebraska (or elsewhere in the U.S.)?

4. Why have you failed to pay the loan as agreed?

5. What became of the car for which the loan was made?
 
What about the OP's situation has given rise to a belief that bankruptcy might be a viable alternative?
 
A single, relatively small judgment is probably not worth starting a chapter 7 over, and a chapter 11 isn't likely to do anything for him in this situation anyhow.
 
I don't sense that the OP is "upset" about anything. The OP merely asked questions. But I agree that a wage garnishment isn't applicable to things that aren't wages.

Questions for the OP:

1. Do you intend to remain in Japan permanently, or do you intend to move back to the U.S. at some point? If the latter, when do you intend to return?

Yes, I do. In fact I plan on raising my children here.

2. You mentioned having a mailing address in the U.S. Why do you have one?

My sister has the has house that house that passed onto her back in 2019. The house was originally my mother's.

3. Do you have assets or a source of income in Nebraska (or elsewhere in the U.S.)?

I have 2 banks that have around $4,600. That's about it. As for property, I don't have assets in the US besides my money.

4. Why have you failed to pay the loan as agreed?

It became too expensive over time. My wife was due in January of 2020, and I needed to be there for my daughter's birth.

5. What became of the car for which the loan was made?

So I chose to give the car that I was still making payments on and gave it back to the credit union that I was loaning it out from.
 
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