Credit Card Defense Attorney
MERCHANT
CASH ADVANCE ATTORNEY FLORIDA
MERCHANT CASH ADVANCE ATTORNEY –
FLORIDA
MERCHANT
CASH ADVANCE ATTORNEY -FLORIDA
·
Do the majority of your
Florida business revenues go towards daily ACH payments?
·
Did you personally
guarantee your Florida Merchant Cash Advance loan?
·
Did your funder make you
sign a COJ / Confession of Judgment or an Agreed Judgment?
·
Is there a UCC filed
against your Florida business?
·
Are you paying a fixed
amount on your MCA loan despite a decrease in revenues?
·
Are funders, their
attorneys or collection agencies calling, texting and harassing you?
·
Does your Florida based
Credit Card Terminal have a lock box?
·
Do you need to change
your MCA repayment schedule to monthly payments from daily?
·
Are your Florida business
or individual bank accounts frozen, attached or levied?
·
Have your clients or
vendors been contacted by your Merchant Cash Advance funder?
·
Did you attempt to
restructure payments to your Merchant Cash Advance funder due to a fluctuation
in sales and revenues? Was it granted?
·
Were you asked to put up
any personal collateral like your residential home?
If you answered yes to
any of these questions, contact Grant Phillips Law, PLLC helping Florida
Merchants. A law firm focusing on settling Merchant Cash Advance loans for
clients across all 50 States. Florida MCA Attorneys. Grant Phillips
Law, your Merchant Cash Advance Attorneys in Florida. Let us review your
Merchant Cash Advance Contract for illegalities. Settle your Florida Merchant
Cash Advance loan with your Florida Merchant Cash Advance Funder.
Florida Merchant Cash Advance Law
In Florida, Merchant Cash
Advance law governs both Merchant Cash Advance Funders and
Merchant Cash Advance Merchants.
Under Florida Merchant
Cash Advance law, one of the most important factors in distinguishing a
traditional loan (Usury applies) from a Merchant Cash Advance in Florida is
whether the Florida Merchant must repay his Merchant Cash Advance loan
unconditionally (i.e. No matter what happens). When Merchant repayment is
unconditional and absolute, no matter circumstance, the Florida Merchant Cash Advance
Funder is committing criminal usury because the Courts will likely rule such
facts to be a loan and not an MCA.
Remember under Florida
Merchant Cash Advance law a merchant is selling its future receivables but only
if receivables are in fact generated by the business. If the business does not
generate sufficient receipts due to adverse business conditions, beyond the
control of the merchant, the the losses and changes to receivables must be
borne by the Funder, i.e. the FUNDER must carry the loss if revenues
decrease.
A Florida merchant’s
legal duty is to deliver future account receivables to the MCA Funder, but only
if the business is a going concern and actually generating receivables.
In other words; Unconditional re-payment
of a Merchant Cash Advance, is illegal in Florida.
One of the most essential
components of a bona fide Florida Merchant Cash Advance rather than a
traditional loan, is that the Merchant does not have to unconditionally repay
the loan(s).
A Merchant is selling its
future receivables, but only to the extent that receivables are generated by
the business.
Legally in Florida, if
the Florida Merchant does not generate sufficient receipts due to adverse
business conditions, natural disasters or other incidences beyond the control of
the Merchant, the Merchant Cash Advance Funder must suffer
the loss.
In turn, the Merchant,
agrees not to engage in fraud or other practices that intentionally denies the
Merchant Cash Advance Funder its purchased receivables. In other words, at loan
inception, the Florida business owner Merchant guarantees that its business
will not breach any clause in the Merchant Cash Advance contract.
If the Merchant’s
obligation to deliver the Funder future receivables is conditioned strictly
upon the continuance of the merchant’s business and in turn the generating of
actual receivables, the cash advance transaction will not be considered a loan
and not subject to commercial usury laws or state licensing laws that apply to
traditional loan transactions.
If one reviews the Common
Law, one will find that for a Florida “Merchant Cash Advance” to be found to be
a Loan, and subject to a state usury laws as well as licensing requirements,
the advance must be repayable by a Merchant to the Funder no matter what
happens and without exception.
On the other hand, Florida MCA Law holds that if the obligation
to repay is conditional with exceptions to repayment, the transaction generally
will not be a Florida loan. This Common Law rule applies to Florida as well as
all 50 States.
COURTS VIEW ON A LOAN VERSUS A MERCHANT CASH ADVANCE IN FLORIDA
The archetypal
description of whether a transaction is a sale of future receivables or a loan,
the U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals described the
distinction as follows:
“A sale is the transfer of property in a thing for a price in money.
The transfer of the property in a thing sold from a buyer to a seller for a
price is the essence of the transaction. And the transfer is a transfer of the
general or absolute property as distinguished from a special property.
A loan of money is a contract
by which one delivers a sum of money to another and
the latter agrees to return at a future time a sum equivalent to that which he
borrows. In order to constitute a loan there must be a contract whereby, in
substance one party transfers to the other a sum of money which that other
agrees to repay absolutely, together with such additional
sums as may be agreed upon for its use. If such be the intent of the parties,
the transaction will be considered a loan without regard to its form.
In re Grand Union Co., 219 F 353, 356 (2d Cir. 1914) (internal citations
omitted) (cited as the “classic definition of a loan” by Cazenovia College v.
Renshaw, 222 F.3d 82 (2d Cir. 2000)). Therefore, provided the Merchant Cash Advance
transaction does not require the Merchant to
“repay the MCA loan absolutely,’ such a transaction should not be considered a
loan. If a merchant cash advance transaction is deemed to be an unconditional
promise to repay, a court may re-characterize it as a loan.”
SOLUTIONS
The answer to dealing
with a delinquent Florida MCA loan or one that is eating away at all your hard
earned revenues is to face the Florida Merchant Cash Advance funder on equal
footing, by retaining an attorney with more than 17 years of Debtors Rights
experience and 10 years of Merchant Cash Advance law for borrowers. With the
help and expertise of a Florida Merchant Cash Advance Attorney, your contract
will be reviewed for legality, your story and facts will be listened to and acted
upon if there are any illegalities. A qualified law firm will to prove the
transaction to be illegal, flawed or fraudulent as well as have it ruled to be
a loan and thus sue for usury and attorney’s fees if applicable. Your Florida
Merchant Cash Advance Attorney will amongst many other legal tools argue some
of the following (if applicable):
Prove the entire Florida
MCA deal to be a loan and subject to Florida usury law. Florida Merchant Cash
Advance funders claim their businesses to be legal. However, if your Florida
Merchant Cash Advance Attorneys discover any illegalities in the Florida
Merchant Cash Advance Contract or facts that create a loan rather than a
Merchant Cash Advance, they will use this to force a settlement in your favor
or to sue the Florida MCA funder for fraud.
These rights can be invoked and protected immediately upon
retaining a Florida MCA attorney. Select a Florida Merchant Cash Advance
Attorney to analyze your MCA transaction, facts and Contract for flaws and
illegalities and have them take action on your behalf, to the fullest extent of
the law.
https://grantphillipslaw.com/merchant-cash-advance-attorney-florida/
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