(Replying to PARENT post)
I've never once had the need to write a demand letter, so if I ever need to, I'd expect to be a one time thing. I definitely won't need a monthly service.
How does that work in this case? Does it mean I'd pay $19 and then cancel the monthly service?
(Replying to PARENT post)
>they are now obligated to show up to court or otherwise risk a default judgement against them that cannot be reversed later.
Is definitely untrue. You can appeal a default judgement and win. Ask me how I know.
(Edit: attempt to fix formatting)
(Replying to PARENT post)
> I wrote a letter twice, and sent in the mail via postage, with tracking, which was delivered, to cancel my Ad services and provide a refund. No response however.
(Replying to PARENT post)
(Replying to PARENT post)
Thatβs a cool business.
(Replying to PARENT post)
I have $4000+ in collections because insurance didn't pay for what they were supposed to, and the hospital decided to send it to collections. Should I send the demand letter to the collector, hospital, or insurance?
(Replying to PARENT post)
First, I strongly recommend sending them a demand letter. You can generate one for free on getdispute.com/products/demand-letter and/or pay us a few bucks to mail it.
Second, physically mail the letter to their legal address. The mail goes to someone in legal tasked with reading the mail.
90% of our cases end here. A correctly written demand letter, sent by physical mail usually gets noticed and resolved very quickly.
If nothing happens after a few weeks (give it 3-4 wks) then you could file a case in court. This will require you to file the case, pay the filing fee, and then serve the defendant via a 3rd party process server. Could all be done in 1 day if you know what you're doing. If you serve the defendant (FB) correctly, they are now obligated to show up to court or otherwise risk a default judgement against them that cannot be reversed later.
Another 50-75% of cases end here as most defendants prefer to settle out of court.
If they don't respond, you will need to go to your court date and explain the case to the judge. Usually, without a defendant appearing, the court will grant a default judgement in your favor, assuming the judge decides they do in fact have jurisdiction. To be safe on jurisdiction, file in the county FB does business, or otherwise has a legal entity registered.
All of this said... it's probably not worth the time/money to do more than send a demand letter. It is probably worth your time to send a physical demand letter.
Good luck. 2.7m small claims court cases are filed each year in the US, approx 50% by individuals. So you're in good company.