ny-consumer-debt

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Subject-matter bundle for New York consumer-debt defense. Triggers include 'defending a debt-collection lawsuit in New York', 'NYC Civil Court debt case', 'sued for credit card debt in NY', 'CPLR 213(a) 3-year SOL', 'Consumer Credit Fairness Act', 'CCFA 2022 New York', 'GBL § 349 deceptive practices', 'NY GBL § 600 collection agency', 'debt buyer', 'chain of title', 'sewer service', 'FDCPA in New York'. Covers **FDCPA + Regulation F**, **2022 Consumer Credit Fairness Act** (3-year SOL at CPLR 213(a), CPLR 3015(e) heightened pleading, 22 NYCRR § 202.27-a heightened default-judgment evidence, CPLR 308(six) additional mailing), **NY GBL § 600** collection-agency licensing, **GBL § 349** deceptive acts, **CPLR 4544** small-print contracts, **chain of title** under NY UCC Article 9, fact-pattern triage, and RFP/RFA banks.

codearranger By codearranger schedule Updated 6/12/2026

name: ny-consumer-debt description: > Subject-matter bundle for New York consumer-debt defense. Triggers include 'defending a debt-collection lawsuit in New York', 'NYC Civil Court debt case', 'sued for credit card debt in NY', 'CPLR 213(a) 3-year SOL', 'Consumer Credit Fairness Act', 'CCFA 2022 New York', 'GBL § 349 deceptive practices', 'NY GBL § 600 collection agency', 'debt buyer', 'chain of title', 'sewer service', 'FDCPA in New York'. Covers FDCPA + Regulation F, 2022 Consumer Credit Fairness Act (3-year SOL at CPLR 213(a), CPLR 3015(e) heightened pleading, 22 NYCRR § 202.27-a heightened default-judgment evidence, CPLR 308(six) additional mailing), NY GBL § 600 collection-agency licensing, GBL § 349 deceptive acts, CPLR 4544 small-print contracts, chain of title under NY UCC Article 9, fact-pattern triage, and RFP/RFA banks. version: 0.1.2

New York Consumer-Debt Defense

NOT LEGAL ADVICE. Consumer-debt defense is a specialty with high stakes; this bundle is a drafting aid for pro se defendants. Verify every statute and rule before filing.

The New York consumer-debt landscape

Three filing forums:

  1. Civil Court of the City of New York — under $50,000; the largest consumer-debt forum in the state by case count. Covered by ny-county-courts.
  2. Supreme Court — over $50,000 (rare for pure consumer debt; common for mixed claims or judgment-revival). The five flagship counties.
  3. Nassau / Suffolk District Court + upstate City Courts — long-tail jurisdictions for smaller debts.

The 2022 Consumer Credit Fairness Act (CCFA)

L 2021, ch 593, effective April 7, 2022. The most significant consumer-debt reform in NY in decades. Four key provisions:

CCFA § 1 — CPLR 213(a) — 3-year SOL on consumer credit

Before: 6 years (CPLR 213(2) general contract SOL) After: 3 years (new CPLR 213(a)) on any "action arising out of a consumer credit transaction where a purchaser, borrower or debtor is a defendant"

The SOL runs from the default date — the first missed payment that triggered acceleration (case law: Costa v. Deutsche Bank, 22 NY3d 159 (2013); Lubonty v. U.S. Bank, 34 NY3d 250 (2019)). Once the SOL runs, revival is limited to written acknowledgment under N.Y. GOL § 17-101; partial payment does NOT revive (Lew Morris Demolition Co. v. Bd. of Educ., 40 NY2d 516 (1976)).

Practice point: For any complaint filed on/after April 7, 2022 on a debt that defaulted 3+ years earlier, file a CPLR 3211(a)(5) motion to dismiss on SOL grounds.

CCFA § 2 — CPLR 3015(e) — heightened pleading

The complaint in any consumer-credit action must allege:

  • (a) The complete chain of title from the original creditor to the plaintiff
  • (b) The date and substance of any account agreement
  • (c) The account number (last 4 digits OK)
  • (d) The date of default and the amount due as of charge- off
  • (e) An itemization of fees/charges/interest added since charge-off
  • (f) A statement of the date of the last payment received if any

Missing any of these is grounds for CPLR 3211(a)(7) motion to dismiss.

CCFA § 3 — 22 NYCRR § 202.27-a — heightened default-judgment

In any consumer-credit case (as defined at CPLR 105(f)):

  • The plaintiff must submit specific evidence with the default application — not just an affidavit of merit
  • Required documents:
    • The chain-of-title documents
    • The original creditor's records
    • The bill of sale and assignment
  • Required affidavits:
    • The affidavit of merit from a person with personal knowledge — not a robo-signer
    • The CPLR 3215(g)(3) additional-notice mailing affidavit

Default judgments entered without compliance are routinely vacated under CPLR 5015(a)(4) (lack of jurisdiction over the person — defective service or process) or under (a)(1) (excusable default + meritorious defense — easy to show when § 202.27-a was not satisfied).

CCFA § 4 — CPLR 308(six) — additional notice mailing

In consumer-credit actions, the plaintiff must mail an additional notice to the defendant under CPLR 308(six) (the provision was renumbered; originally CPLR 308(5)). The notice must be in plain language and identify the original creditor + the assignor chain.

Substantive defenses checklist

Defense Authority
Statute of limitations CPLR 213(a) (3 yrs); CPLR 3211(a)(5)
Failure to state a cause of action (no CCFA pleading) CPLR 3015(e); CPLR 3211(a)(7)
Lack of standing / chain of title N.Y. UCC § 9-203; case law
Sewer service CPLR 308; CPLR 3211(a)(8); CPLR 5015(a)(4)
Lack of capacity to sue N.Y. GBL § 601-a (NYC license); CPLR 3211(a)(3)
Account stated — no agreement to account CPLR 3018(b)
Payment / accord and satisfaction CPLR 3018(b)
Small-print contract CPLR 4544 (8-pt type)
Usury Penal Law § 190.40 (criminal); GOL § 5-501 (civil 16%)
TILA violation (in original transaction) 15 USC § 1640
FDCPA violation by collector 15 USC § 1692 — see references
Reg F violation by collector 12 CFR § 1006 — see references

Counterclaims checklist

Counterclaim Authority
FDCPA (federal — $1,000 cap + actual + atty fees) 15 USC § 1692k
GBL § 349 (NY deceptive acts — $50 min; $1,000 cap on willful) N.Y. GBL §§ 349, 350
GBL § 600 et seq. (collection-agency licensing) N.Y. GBL §§ 600-606
Common-law abuse of process NY common law
Common-law malicious prosecution (post-dismissal) NY common law
Defamation (if reported to credit bureau falsely after dispute) CPLR 215(3) — 1-year SOL

Fact-pattern triage

The table below describes recurring fact patterns in New York consumer-debt practice and the procedural mechanisms the CPLR makes available for each. It is not a recommendation that any particular litigant pursue any particular motion — the choice of pleading, motion, or response belongs to the litigant (and any counsel the litigant retains). Use the table as a map of options, not as a prescription.

# Pattern Procedural mechanisms commonly considered
1 Stale credit-card debt (charge-off > 3 yrs before filing) CPLR 3211(a)(5) motion to dismiss on SOL grounds
2 Debt buyer plaintiff missing chain-of-title docs CPLR 3211(a)(7) motion (non-compliance with CPLR 3015(e))
3 Default judgment entered, never served (or sewer service) CPLR 5015(a)(4) motion to vacate
4 Default judgment entered post-CCFA without § 202.27-a evidence CPLR 5015(a)(1) motion to vacate (excusable default + meritorious defense)
5 Active case, debt-collector calls violate Reg F Verified answer; FDCPA / GBL § 349 counterclaim

Reference files

  • references/fdcpa.md — NY-specific framing for the FDCPA (verbatim text in ny-law-references/references/federal-debt-laws/FDCPA.md symlinked to the shared plugin)
  • references/reg-f.md — NY-specific framing for Reg F
  • references/ccfa.md — Consumer Credit Fairness Act 2022 text + commentary
  • references/cplr-213a.md — 3-year SOL deep dive
  • references/cplr-3015e.md — heightened pleading deep dive
  • references/202-27-a.md — heightened default-judgment rule deep dive
  • references/gbl-349.md — NY deceptive-acts statute
  • references/gbl-600.md — collection-agency licensing
  • references/cplr-4544.md — small-print contracts
  • references/chain-of-title.md — N.Y. UCC Article 9 + bill-of-sale-and-assignment foundation
  • references/evidence-debt-buyer.md — CPLR 4518 business- records foundation under People v. Kennedy, 68 NY2d 569 (1986) and Bank of NY Mellon v. Gordon, 171 AD3d 197 (2d Dept 2019)
  • references/ny-sols.md — NY SOLs by claim type
  • references/key-cases.md — controlling precedents
  • references/recent-decisions.md — post-2022 CCFA case law
  • references/fees-consumer-debt.md — fee shifting in NY consumer-debt (FDCPA mandatory + GBL § 349 discretionary)
  • references/rfp-debt-buyer.md — RFP bank targeting chain of title
  • references/rfa-debt-buyer.md — Notice to Admit bank
  • references/interrogatories-debt-buyer.md — 25-interrogatory bank targeting chain of title (CPLR 3130 / 3133(b))
  • references/meet-and-confer-debt-buyer.md — 22 NYCRR § 202.20-f conferral templates
  • references/ucc-article-9.md — N.Y. UCC Article 9
  • references/online-sources-consumer-debt.md — canonical URLs

Composition with other ny- skills

  • ny-statewide-format — format baseline
  • ny-first-30-days — answer triage on a consumer-debt complaint
  • ny-discovery — RFP/RFA/Interrogatory drafting
  • ny-post-judgment — CPLR 5015 vacate + Article 52 defense
  • ny-deadlines — CPLR 213(a) 3-year SOL clock
  • ny-county-courts — NYC Civil Court is the primary forum
  • ny-kings / ny-bronx / ny-queens — high-volume Supreme Court consumer-debt counties (especially mortgage- foreclosure cases)
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