Yes, you are still behind in your payments. Don't let this happen. Contact the lender and work something out.
Based on 365 days per year, [365/7 (days per week) = 52.14 weeks per year] so 52 weeks per year, based on a bi-weekly period = 52/2 = 26 payments per year/12 (Months) = 2.17; therefore, take your monthly payment and divde that by 2.17. (Eg. a $400 monthly payment could be calculated as 400/2.17 = $184.11 bi-weekly.) With this in mind, understand that bi-weekly payments only give you the false impression that you are saving money. In an annual period it will still be the same cost.
That depends on your teacher's or schools practice. If they "grade on a curve" then all the tests taken will be distributed on a Gaussian bell probability curve. So if you are the only one who missed 4 questions and everybody else missed more you will get the highest grade; but of you are the only one who missed 4 questions and everybody else mised fewer, then you will get the lowest grade. In my school only a few teachers graded on a curve; most would have given a B for missing 4 out of 26 equally important questions. UH UH!If you missed 4 out of 26, you would still get a A-.I aked my teacher and she said yes.
100 - 69 = 31, and it's percent, so it's .31 .31*30 = 9.3, but you must round down or up (down to get more than 69%), so you can miss 9 questions and still fail.
If you take out a Mortgage and decided not to make payments, It is the interest that they should have collected during the time it took for them to foreclose and dispose of the property. It is truly a cost to the bank. Say the bank pays somebody 5% on a Certificate of deposit. They turn around and loan the money to you at 6%. When you don't pay they still have to pay the interest on the CD.
Prior to the church settling on BC-AD dates, dates were typically tabulated by the year of the rule of a given king or emperor. When he died and a new ruler took over the year reset to 1 again. The church decided that as Christ was king of kings and still lives, all calendars should be reset to 1 on the year of his birth... they missed by about 4 years.
If you signed over the title to him as collateral, and you defaulted on the payment plan, he can take it. If YOU still have the title, it is comsidered an open account and he committed felony vehicle theft if he took it.
WHY not? Have you asked them? Were they demanding the balance in full?? Have you beeen repoed before? Have you beeen repeatedly in default? Are you STILL in default? Do you have ins. coverage as required by the contract? Contact the lender ASAP.
AnswerProbably, but if payments are kept current it would be unlikely that a creditor would take such action. When a scheduled payment is missed the account is in default even if the payment is "made up" and the creditor can exercisewhatever options might apply under the original agreement, including repossession of the item.
A volunteer can pay your child support payments for you but you should make certain you still have proof of payment.A volunteer can pay your child support payments for you but you should make certain you still have proof of payment.A volunteer can pay your child support payments for you but you should make certain you still have proof of payment.A volunteer can pay your child support payments for you but you should make certain you still have proof of payment.
Well, a vehicle can be repossessed with no notification, so there's not much you can do about that. If the payments were taken over by family members, it's assumed the first family member was aware someone else would be paying for the truck and so is still responsible to see that the payments are made.
If they are accepting your payments, they probably won't take your car.
Yes, if you change your credit card number, you will need to update your payment information with the relevant parties to ensure that payments can still be processed successfully.
If you cancel your debit card, payments cannot be taken directly from your account using that card. However, if you have set up automatic payments with the card details, those payments may still be processed unless you inform the merchants to update your payment information.
Yes. Obviously!
Yes.
Once a loan of any kind has defaulted, there is no changing it. If you mean that you missed one payment, this is not necessarily a defaulted account. Once the lender sells your debt or passes it to an agency to recover the amount owned, then things are different. In the UK a missed payment or late payment will show on a credit search for six years. This can be removed if the total amount of the loan has been paid and you write to the credit agency to ask them to remove the information. Do not pay someone to do this, it costs nothing!
If he accepts the rent he cannot evict you for non payment, but could ask you to leave based on constant tardiness of payment. If he doesn't accept the payments this means he is evicting you.