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Credit
Damage: Getting Compensated for Your Loss
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by:
Georg
Finder |
Until
recently lawyers for victims of credit damage
had little possibility to collect for damages
beyond medical treatment, lost wages and
property loss. Insurance companies threw
up their hands in sympathy, claiming victims
can only be compensated for what can be
measured - tangible goods and services.
But, what happens when the victim has lost
considerable time from work, the family
bank is broke and monthly payments on mortgages,
car loans and credit cards payments are
missed? Regardless of the haggling between
lawyers and insurance companies, it's the
credit victim who ends up having to live
with a bad credit rating.
Today, there are legally accepted means
for measuring loss of credit through the
procedure of Credit Damage Measurement (CDM).
CDM is fast becoming a potent tool for recoverable
credit damage awards when the damage is
not self-inflicted. Previously, both judge
and jury, and especially the insurance companies,
refused to acknowledge CDM claiming it was
speculative because they could not define
it as tangible damage. However, in case
after case, victims of credit damage who
use the CDM method are getting compensation
for credit loss. Many factors are changing
the old mindset including credit bureau
technology improvements, the application
of the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA),
risk scoring sophistication, and the development
of CDM as an objective, repeatable method
that measures out-of-pocket damage reliably.
Credit Ratings and Recovery
The impact of a bad credit rating is much
more significant than most people think.
Consider what poorly rated consumers face
when they want to lease or buy vehicles,
obtain credit cards, buy or lease or refinance
their residence. In most cases, it's an
easy decision for the creditor: the credit
application is simply turned down or the
borrower is charged a much higher down payment
- maybe thousands of dollars more with monthly
payments that are typically several hundred
dollars more.
"A person with bad credit is viewed with
suspicion and is charged significantly more
for future extension of credit because the
lender feels the need to protect against
a greater risk or default," says Tom Key,
a civil litigator practicing in Tustin,
CA.
"Over the years I have heard reports of
financial damages from clients who have
been wrongfully terminated, defrauded, injured
in an accident or suffered losses from breach
of contract," Key says. "These victims were
especially distraught over the fact that
their prime credit reputation, carefully
nurtured for years, is destroyed overnight.
It seemed to me that there must be a way
to compensate victims for that type of loss."
Key has witnessed the reactions of many
jurors who failed to award a victim of credit
damage their rightful compensation simply
because they could not quantify the damages.
"Jurors want a specific loss that they can
count, hold and see," says Key. "Their reasoning
is that they need to know that it is genuine.
They have a tough time awarding damages
based on sympathy. In order for them to
confirm authenticity of a claim, they want
to see its quantification."
Measuring Loss of Creditworthiness
Assuring authenticity has been a sticky
situation when it concerns measuring out-of-pocket
loss for victims of credit damage - until
now. Attorneys who represent victims of
credit damage are now utilizing the Credit
Damage Measurement method to recover out-of-pocket
losses for their clients. "CDM measures
the actual out-of-pocket dollars reasonably
expected from loss of creditworthiness,
which includes higher down payments, higher
points and costs on loans, higher interest
rates, higher monthly payments, or outright
denial of credit," says Key. "In addition,
the CDM method also calculates the rates,
costs and other terms applicable to the
resulting credit rating by lenders and projects
the results over the relevant number of
years for the types of loans the client
is likely to seek."
Key continues, "For example, if a client's
credit was near perfect before a triggering
event, and is subsequently damaged by the
event, the CDM procedure can illustrate
before and after analyses, calculating the
cost of the same loans with the two different
credit reports, Pre- injury credit compared
to Post-injury credit." In many cases, CDM
clients have already realized significant
compensation. In one such case CDM was instrumental
in recovering $56,000 for damaged credit
reputation. "That calculation is the difference
between what refinancing a $140,000 loan
would have cost my client with their prior
rating, and what it will cost them out-of-pocket
with their damaged credit rating -measured
over a seven-year period."
Isolated Compensation vs. Repeatable Compensation
The CDM method of measuring intangible credit
loss is increasingly becoming the basis
of recovery for victims of credit damage.
It's changing the way judges and juries
measure recoverable out-of-pocket loss,
and then can compensate for loss of credit
expectancy. Certainly there are still some
skeptics, mostly defendants. Technically,
credit damage measurement is intangible.
However, CDM has proven an objective and
practical procedure to calculate out-of-pocket
damage for companies or families to compensate
for their credit damage.
"To have this kind of measurement is an
exciting complexity in our society," says
Key. "CDM is very understandable and a rather
simple way to come to a conclusion of loss
for the victim. If you understand the math
and are an expert at reading credit reports,
the calculations and recovery are undeniable.
It's a method of turning isolated compensation
into repeatable compensation. It's changing
the way jurors rule on these damaging cases.
Because of this method, victims of credit
damage can be more fairly and more completely
compensated for out-of-pocket damage."
About the author:
Georg Finder, president of CM Financial
Services of Fullerton, California, wrote
and presents the first State Bar accepted
continuing legal education seminar on credit
reports and credit damage. He can be reached
at gfinder@creditdamage.com (714) 441-0900
or at www.creditdamage.com
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