- Nov 3, 2002
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So I recently moved out of my college apartment, and I get a bill in the mail a few weeks later for a $338 carpet replacement in the common area (my roommates received the same bill). The carpet was fine when we moved out, certainly nothing to warrant a replacement. I talked on the phone with them and they said they would find the invoice/some kind of evidence of the carpet replacement.
A week later, they have found nothing... my roommate said he talked to them and they have no evidence. So I don't really see how they can charge us.
I'm going to have them try to drop the charge completely, and if they do that's great, but if not... how can I prevent this from showing up on my credit report? My biggest fear is that this is going to go to collections and wreck my credit score (currently about 770). I work in the mortgage industry and I know how expensive collections can be in the long run. Can I take them to small claims court even though I don't really have a claim against them (rather, I am just trying to prevent one against me)? What do I do?
Thanks
A week later, they have found nothing... my roommate said he talked to them and they have no evidence. So I don't really see how they can charge us.
I'm going to have them try to drop the charge completely, and if they do that's great, but if not... how can I prevent this from showing up on my credit report? My biggest fear is that this is going to go to collections and wreck my credit score (currently about 770). I work in the mortgage industry and I know how expensive collections can be in the long run. Can I take them to small claims court even though I don't really have a claim against them (rather, I am just trying to prevent one against me)? What do I do?
Thanks
