Debtor and creditor in contract law refers to the two parties concerned with the borrowing and lending of funds including bank loans, bond sales, notes payable and credit extended. The party that extends credit or lends money to another party is called the creditor while the receiving party is the debtor.
Debtors and creditors may be legal entities such as private and public corporations, registered and chartered organizations, registered companies of all kinds, governments, and individuals. Any of the above can legally lend and borrow funds. In business, a creditor-debtor relationship is defined by a debt agreement (or contract) which explicitly states the legal obligations, responsibilities and binding rights of both parties.
These contracts contain the legal remedies that are available to all parties in the event that either one fails to fulfill their obligations or expectations. The contract can contain provisions which compel the debtor to furnish the creditor with goods, money or services.
Although a creditor-debtor relationship can arise due to the debtor's failure to pay stipulated fine(s) to the community or compensation or damages to an injured party, such a relationship generally implies that one party (the debtor) has received something from the other party (the creditor) which must be repaid at a later date by the debtor.
Once the deadline elapses and the debtor hasn't repaid the debt in full, other routine means of debt collection can be utilized. If all else fails, an attorney may be called upon to commence a formal process of debt collection. In some cases, the bank account, wages, and properties of the debtor may be accessed as a way to force payments.
It is possible to secure liens against the property of the debtor, which will permit law enforcement officers or local officials to seize such properties, sell them at a public auction and use the resulting proceeds to discharge the owner's debt. Although it was routine in the past, imprisoning debtors is no longer the norm. Exemption laws may impede the debt collection process; these laws provide that some of the debtor's property (such as landed property, life insurance, and sums of money) may not be sold or seized in order to discharge the debt.
Creditor-debtor law governs all situations where debtors are unable to pay the monetary debt (or other forms of debt) owed. There are three kinds of creditors
Primarily, non-bankruptcy creditor-debtor law arises from common and state statutory law. State courts use defamation as well as statutes to limit private methods of collecting debt. Also, the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act was enacted by Congress to regulate the activities and debt collection methods of creditors.
Some of the judicial and statutory measures creditors use to collect debts include:
Creditors usually create liens on the properties of debtors using the judicial process called lien creation. Once created, state statutory law governs the execution of a lien against the properties of debtors as well as the sales of properties under such liens. The Federal Consumer Credit Protection Act as well as state and federal statute limit the kinds of properties that can be used for debt satisfaction.
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