Contractural Dangers of Working With Factoring Companies
Entering into contract with a Factoring Company to sell some or all of your future payments from your structured settlement could be one of the biggest mistakes you make in your lifetime without a skilled attorney in this arena of law. The fine print alone could obligate you into doing business with a scam.
As with any industry, there are good and bad Factoring companies. The good ones abide by the law, and have your best interest at heart. The bad ones have no problem breaking the law and ripping you off. Maybe you have hired a lawyer, but how do you know the lawyer didn’t come from the Insurance Company that funds the factoring company? Take for instance this situation:
You’re working with what you believe to be a reputable Factoring company. They walk you through a detailed contract and they point out how they are protecting you and how they are abiding by California State Law; but are they showing you everything? Do you really understand the legal terminology? “Obligor, payee, protected party, third party beneficiary, tort claim, contravene…” are you ready to do business with a company that you don’t even know is providing the correct and legal information in the contract? Just because they say they are with coffee and smiles and nice chairs and an overall feeling of warmth and care, doesn’t mean you’re protected.
They are drafting the contract. Not you. There is a contract template provided by the state of California that they are supposed to follow, but are they including the correct wording? The contract looks legal… If your selling an unqualified funding asset, you have even more to be concerned about. They could throw in wording in the contract — in the midst of what is legal and sound — a statement like, “Buyer’s first right of refusal”. You skim over it, saw it, but put it in the category of, “Well, not sure what that means, but they’d explain it to me if it was important, just like with everything else…they like me, they wouldn’t hurt me.” That kind of thinking will get you in hot water, they’ve got to support their Rolls Royce and the three vacation homes in the Caribbean some how.
Those 5 little words obligate you to do business with the same company if you wanted to sell more of your future payments down the road — whether or not they’re offering fair market value. It means you can’t shop around to get the best deal. It means if you had $100,000 left to sell, you might end up with only $25,000 and there’s nothing you can do about it. Do you really have the time and money to do battle with an arsenal of lawyers from the Company? Even if you did have a lawyer, how do you know he/she could handle the barrage of paperwork and legal briefs from the opposing large money making machine of a company?
Don’t be scared to be creative with your future payments. Finding a trustworthy lawyer to protect you and to participate in the drafting of the contract on your behalf should be your first move.
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