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Defend523 a defendant's resource

Resources

This site is a starting point, not the finish line. These organizations can provide more help than a website can.

Free Legal Aid in Michigan

Michigan Legal Help

The most comprehensive free self-help legal resource in Michigan. Offers automated document preparation tools that walk you through creating court filings — including Answers to debt collection lawsuits. Maintained by Michigan's legal aid community. This should be one of your first stops.

michiganlegalhelp.org →

Lakeshore Legal Aid

Serves the Metro Detroit area including Oakland County. Provides free legal assistance to low-income residents. May be able to advise or represent you.

Phone: (888) 783-8190

Legal Aid and Defender Association (LADA)

Serves Wayne, Oakland, and Macomb counties. Free civil legal services to eligible individuals.

Phone: (877) 964-4700

Oakland County Bar Association — Lawyer Referral Service

Can connect you with attorneys who handle debt cases. Initial consultations may be free or low-cost.

Phone: (248) 338-2100

Official Court Resources

52-3 District Court — Oakland County Courts

The official source for court calendars, forms, contact information, fee schedules, and local rules. Always verify procedural information with this source.

Oakland County Courts →

Michigan Courts Self-Help Center

Statewide resource for self-represented litigants. Form libraries, procedural guides, and general legal information.

courts.michigan.gov/self-help →

Federal Consumer Protection

Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB)

File complaints against debt collectors. Learn about your rights under federal consumer protection law. Access sample dispute letters.

consumerfinance.gov →

Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA)

Federal law (15 U.S.C. § 1692) prohibiting abusive, unfair, or deceptive debt collection practices by third-party collectors.

Federal Trade Commission

Additional consumer protection resources and complaint filing.

consumer.ftc.gov →

Glossary of Common Terms

Answer
A written response to a lawsuit filed with the court.
Affirmative Defense
A legal argument that the plaintiff should not win even if some of their facts are correct.
Complaint
The document the plaintiff files to start the lawsuit.
Default Judgment
A ruling against the defendant that occurs when no response is filed.
Discovery
The process where both sides exchange documents and information.
Garnishment
Involuntary deduction from wages or bank accounts to satisfy a judgment.
Interrogatories
Written questions one party sends to the other, answered under oath.
Judgment
The court's final decision in a case.
Motion
A formal request asking the judge to make a specific ruling.
Plaintiff
The person or company that filed the lawsuit.
Defendant
The person being sued.
Pro Se
Representing yourself without an attorney. Pronounced "pro say."
Statute of Limitations
The time limit for filing a lawsuit. Generally 6 years for credit card debt in Michigan.
Stipulation
A written agreement between both parties, typically filed with the court.
Summons
The document notifying you that a lawsuit has been filed and telling you how to respond.