RE: [OT] Re: Seeking Legal help

2001-11-23 Thread David Harris


Sorry for continuing the OT thread. I just thought this might be useful...

Gunther Birznieks [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] wrote:
 By the way, if you are really working for a bank and cashflow is an issue
 for you in 60 days you can also ask the bank what business banking
services
 they offer. One popular service with small businesses who have large
 companies working for them is invoice factoring which allows you to sell
 your invoice (if your company passes a credit check) to the bank for
 something like 80% of the face value of the account and then when the bank
 collects the invoice you get the rest minus interest and commissions.

Factoring invoices can be a wonderful thing. May I recommend this company:

http://www.facteon.com/

You need: (a) to pass a UCC search clean, (b) a credit worthy customer, (c)
a contract with your customer, (d) and your customer to agree that the
invoice is valid. Then you can get a good chunk of the money up front and
more on payment of the invoice by the customer. Your fee depends on how long
it takes your customer to pay. If they never pay, you keep the up-front
payment and they book it as a loss.

 It's unlikely that they would grant the same credit with a 1-man company
 though. And I think they don't like dealing with service businesses. It's
 usually more for dealing with suppliers with real inventory where the main
 thing that can go wrong with an invoice is a pricing dispute over a line
 item of widgets I suspect.

From what I know, Factelon works with one man companies and service
industries. It's more important that your customer be creditworthy than you,
since your customer must agree that the invoice is valid for it to be
factored.

David





Re: [OT] Re: Seeking Legal help

2001-11-22 Thread Rodent of Unusual Size

* On 2001-11-22 at 10:37,
  Dave Rolsky [EMAIL PROTECTED] excited the electrons to say:
 
 On Wed, 21 Nov 2001, Matt Sergeant wrote:
 
  Maybe they weighlayed your invoice. Or don't have the money just yet but
  ^^^???
 
 You folks may have invented the language but its still spelled waylayed!

Um, no, it's spelt waylaid. :-)
-- 
#kenP-)}

Ken Coar, Sanagendamgagwedweinini  http://Golux.Com/coar/
Author, developer, opinionist  http://Apache-Server.Com/

All right everyone!  Step away from the glowing hamburger!



Re: [OT] Re: Seeking Legal help

2001-11-22 Thread Dave Rolsky

On Thu, 22 Nov 2001, Rodent of Unusual Size wrote:

 Um, no, it's spelt waylaid. :-)

As you and everybody else has pointed out (mostly in private email).

I was so eager and excited to give Matt some shit that I somehow
incorporated part of his mistake.  Oh well, that's what I get for teasing.


-dave

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We await the New Sun
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Re: [OT] Re: Seeking Legal help

2001-11-22 Thread Mark Maunder

Matt Sergeant wrote:

 Step three: Once you've given them 90 days after date of invoice, get a
 solicitor (not a barrister) to draft a threatening letter. It'll cost you
 about $100. I'm afraid you'll have to give them another 30 days at this
 point.

 Step four: Get a lawyer. Sue. $25,000 is not to be sniffed at.

What many small companies and one man operations dont realise is that debt
collecting is an art. Also, some large companies (large banks in particular)
have a policy of 'If you want to do business with us, we take 60 days to pay.
It's all about keeping the cashflow on their side.

I did some work for a certain Linux distributor in the UK recently and they
took 100 days to pay after much harrasment. If you're small you have to be
tough - put the geek aside and become that vicious old lady that is usually
hired to badger late payers.

Since you're also UK based, a good line you might want to try is I've already
paid the VAT on this invoice. I'd like to know is whether I should write you
off as a bad debt so I can claim the VAT back. - assuming you're VAT
registered that is.

~mark




Re: [OT] Re: Seeking Legal help

2001-11-22 Thread Gunther Birznieks

At 01:34 AM 11/23/2001, Mark Maunder wrote:
Matt Sergeant wrote:

  Step three: Once you've given them 90 days after date of invoice, get a
  solicitor (not a barrister) to draft a threatening letter. It'll cost you
  about $100. I'm afraid you'll have to give them another 30 days at this
  point.
 
  Step four: Get a lawyer. Sue. $25,000 is not to be sniffed at.

What many small companies and one man operations dont realise is that debt
collecting is an art. Also, some large companies (large banks in particular)
have a policy of 'If you want to do business with us, we take 60 days to pay.
It's all about keeping the cashflow on their side.

It depends on the company, I think most take a long time to pay the first 
time because it's the first time you are being entered into their computer 
systems, contracts get signed off completely etc..

Of the large companies (banks included) we work with this is normally the 
case (a 60-100 day to get paid the first time), but subsequent times are 
usually quite easy for us as most of our large customers repeat back to us 
and we are already in their system for getting paid by their accounts 
payable department.

Of course, there are exceptions to the rules, but I don't see large 
companies just arbitrarily trying to pull a longer cycle. At the least, 
they do usually have to wait for the accounts payable cycle and cutting an 
out of cycle check is a pain in the ass, but that comes sooner than 60 
days.  I think 60 days etc is reasonable if you are on a 1M-2M contract, 
but if your contract is a few hundred K over a year, it hardly will make 
that much of a collective cash flow dent to warrant it being worth their 
policy.

By the way, if you are really working for a bank and cashflow is an issue 
for you in 60 days you can also ask the bank what business banking services 
they offer. One popular service with small businesses who have large 
companies working for them is invoice factoring which allows you to sell 
your invoice (if your company passes a credit check) to the bank for 
something like 80% of the face value of the account and then when the bank 
collects the invoice you get the rest minus interest and commissions.

It's unlikely that they would grant the same credit with a 1-man company 
though. And I think they don't like dealing with service businesses. It's 
usually more for dealing with suppliers with real inventory where the main 
thing that can go wrong with an invoice is a pricing dispute over a line 
item of widgets I suspect.

The other thing is that if you do a contract, build in billing cycles. 
20-30% up front on a fixed fee contract is not unreasonable. Of course, you 
may need to commence work anyway before getting it if they are a large 
company that is having trouble getting you in their system, but that is the 
risk. But in any case, you can soon usually figure out whether they are 
going ot be paying your schedule or not.

If you are just a normal hours-based contractor, then it's a bit more like 
getting a salary and so I think it is much harder to argue to be paid up front.

I did some work for a certain Linux distributor in the UK recently and they
took 100 days to pay after much harrasment. If you're small you have to be
tough - put the geek aside and become that vicious old lady that is usually
hired to badger late payers.

The same all over the world. ;)

Later,
Gunther





[OT] Re: Seeking Legal help

2001-11-22 Thread Bill Moseley

At 03:21 PM 11/21/01 -0800, Medi Montaseri wrote:
I did some work (about $25000 worth) for a customer and I'm having
problem collecting. 

This has been beaten to death on the list, but... (and I'm not a lawyer,
but I drink beer with one),

If you think they are going Chapter 11, then you may want to try to bargain
down to some amount to get something, so you are not on their list of
creditors.  

When they do file, if that's the case, they have to notify the court of
their creditors and then the court is suppose to notify you.  You must then
file a proof of claim, and get in line with everyone else.  If you think
they might fail to list you as a creditor when they file, contact the court
every few weeks and check if they have already filed, and file your proof
of claim.  Then at least you might get a penny on the dollar...

$25K is a bad number, in that it's too big for small claims court, and it's
too little to get much help from lawyers in a law suit, I'd guess.  Ask
them if they want to pay partially in hardware and you might get a good
idea of their direction ;).

Good luck,



Bill Moseley
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]



[OT] Re: Seeking Legal help

2001-11-21 Thread Matt Sergeant

On Wed, 21 Nov 2001, Medi Montaseri wrote:


 HiI know this is not the lawyers hang-out, but it is seasoned
 contractor's hangout and as such I need some legal advice...May I?

 I did some work (about $25000 worth) for a customer and I'm having
 problem collecting.

 One big problem is that I don't have a formal signed hardcopy contract
 binding my customer to the work and cost. I however do have verbal,
 email communications, FTP logs, Web Access logs, hardcopy business
 projections, Witnesses and such showing that I'm not making this up.

 After months of promissing sweet equity, partnership, this and that,
 finally customer has asked me to invoice them and charge interest for the
 unpaid balance. At the same time customer is using the application
 I wrote for them. I however have a feeling that they are simply buying
 time and differing the problem. And they might even file chapter 11 as
 their marketing projection was not so correct. But I did my part.

 What can I do?

 Should I see a lawyer, and put out yet some more money towards something
 that could never materialize?

Well I'm from the UK, but I imagine most things apply.

Firstly, I think you have enough to confirm a contract, assuming you have
something stating that a contract will be forthcoming. However laws on
this can vary greatly.

Step one: Invoice. Now. If you haven't invoiced and you're arguing they
haven't paid up yet, you have no leg to stand on.

Step two: talk to these people! That's the most important thing to do.
Maybe they weighlayed your invoice. Or don't have the money just yet but
expect it soon.

Step three: Once you've given them 90 days after date of invoice, get a
solicitor (not a barrister) to draft a threatening letter. It'll cost you
about $100. I'm afraid you'll have to give them another 30 days at this
point.

Step four: Get a lawyer. Sue. $25,000 is not to be sniffed at.

-- 
Matt/

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Re: [OT] Re: Seeking Legal help

2001-11-21 Thread Dave Rolsky

On Wed, 21 Nov 2001, Matt Sergeant wrote:

 Maybe they weighlayed your invoice. Or don't have the money just yet but
 ^^^???

You folks may have invented the language but its still spelled waylayed!

 Step three: Once you've given them 90 days after date of invoice, get a
 solicitor (not a barrister) to draft a threatening letter. It'll cost you
 about $100. I'm afraid you'll have to give them another 30 days at this
 point.

We just have lawyers.  There's no distinction between solicitors and
barristers.


Actually, I'd start by seeing a lawyer since you want this as expedited as
possible.  A lawyer might tell you that you only have to wait 30 days
after the invoice (or something like that).  You never know.  It won't
cost all that much to simply make an appointment and talk to a lawyer for
an hour or so (probably $100-200) and it'll be probably be worth it to
talk to something with contract law experience in your state.


-dave

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www.urth.org
We await the New Sun
==*/