View Full Version : Refuse the letter?
FPooch
July 24th, 2002, 12:48 PM
I have never recieved a registered letter in my life. What if one simply refuses to accept it? Or asks who the sender is before accepting?
Evildss
July 24th, 2002, 02:30 PM
Not gonna help rather you refuse it or take it, if refused it will go back to them refused, but they will know u are there, plus most of the time one comes through regular mail also, that is proof enough that they atempted to contact you! Only way not getting it helps is if you have moved, then it will return with wrong address and they will have to find your new one, if they feel its worth their time!
That is also if your mail is not forwarded.
Good Luck!;)
To The Real King!!
July 24th, 2002, 08:33 PM
Hi Guys,
This kind of trickery is liable to result in a default judgement against you if you still live at the same address.
This is not the time to be an ostrich and poke you head in the sand.
Deal with it. Get a lawyer and he will tell you the right thing to do and most likely he will do it for you based on the information you give him.
And if you have PURCHASED from a DSS site and did not get the letter yet, EXPECT IT. DO whatever you can to be in a position to refute it and if you can have a DISH NETWORK system you will be in much better position since even if you have a FULL EVERYTHING DTV sub they will use that against you. They will say you were getting free PPV events and movies. And they will have the complete record of your purchases too, from their customer records. They have unmitigated Gaul and they will proceed if you don't block them.
Having a Dish Network system is circumstantial proof (just like their lousy invoice is for them) that you COULD NOT steal DirecTV® 's signal. DISHNETWORK cannot receive the DirecTV® signal so its impossible.
In addition you do not have $3,000.00 added to DirecTV® valuation which would happen if you have any DTV sub. That's how these companies are valued and I don't imagine you will want to encourage the company who wants to do you HARM. And if you get DISH then its a double whammy for themhttp://www.legal-rights.org/images/ttrk.gif
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Thanks & Good Luck,
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To The REAL King!!
Freedom has nothing to fear from the truth!
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Lager
July 25th, 2002, 12:40 AM
You can look at the registered letter and decide what to do. You can accept and sign for it, refuse to sign for it (it gets sent back with that note on it) or you can mark moved, no forwarding address. I would certainly do the last if it were me. In order to obatin a judgement against you, you have to be served a summons to appear in court. If they don't know where you live they cannot serve you. There are ways around this such as serving by public notice. This entails taking out ad's in 3 papers in the city they think you live in with the public notice of service. This is very very very rarely done. I think in our 12 years of serving people we have used that method once. We only deal in what are known as 'hard to serves'. If nobody else could get the court papers served we would do it. It is very costly when it comes to using someone such as our company. Bottom line is that you need to be served before a judgement can be obtained. Default judgements occur when an affidavidt of service has been filed with the court and you don't show up.
Lager
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