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Sued by Bank of America in Montana? Here's What to Do Next

Montana RESPONSE DEADLINE

21 Days

from the date you were served

STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS

5 Years

for typical Bank of America debts in MT

WAGE GARNISHMENT

Allowed — up to 25%

What Montana consumers say about Bank of America

In the last 24 months, 24 Montana residents filed CFPB complaints naming Bank of America . 69% of these complaints involve credit card; 17% involve checking or savings account.

Most common complaint categories:

  • 7 Problem with a purchase shown on your statement
  • 3 Fees or interest
  • 3 Other features, terms, or problems

Source: CFPB Consumer Complaint Database , 24-month rolling window through May 2026.

About Bank of America

Bank of America is one of the largest financial institutions in the United States. They pursue collection on unpaid credit card accounts, personal loans, and other consumer debts through internal teams and outside collection law firms. Bank of America also sells some defaulted accounts to debt buyers. When they sue directly, their documentation tends to be more complete than debt buyers, but consumers still have viable defenses.

Type: Original Creditor. Parent company: Bank of America Corporation. Common debt types: credit card, personal loan, home equity.

CFPB Enforcement History

Bank of America has been the subject of multiple CFPB enforcement actions affecting consumer credit and collection practices. A 2014 consent order required $727M in consumer relief for deceptive marketing of credit card add-on products, and a 2022 consent order specifically targeted unfair garnishment practices, including processing out-of-state garnishments in violation of state law and failing to apply state exemptions to consumer deposit accounts.

2014 · consent order

$772M total ($727M consumer relief to ~2.9M consumers + $20M CFPB penalty + $25M OCC penalty)

CFPB consent order finding Bank of America deceptively marketed credit card payment-protection and identity-protection add-on products ("Credit Protection Plus," "Credit Protection Deluxe," "Privacy Guard," "Privacy Source," "Privacy Assist") and illegally charged approximately 1.9M consumer accounts for credit monitoring services they were not receiving.

CFPB source

2022 · consent order

$100M consumer relief + $10M CFPB civil money penalty (garnishment portion)

CFPB consent order finding Bank of America engaged in unfair garnishment practices, including responding to and processing garnishment notices against out-of-state deposit accounts in violation of state law and failing to apply state exemptions to consumers' deposit accounts after receiving garnishment notices.

CFPB source

Montana-Specific Defenses Against Bank of America

Statute of Limitations Defense

In Montana, the statute of limitations for credit card debt is 5 years. If your last payment was more than 5 years ago, the debt is time-barred. Verify when your last payment or account activity occurred and raise the SOL defense in your Answer if applicable.

Challenge the Amount

Demand a complete accounting from the original creditor's last statement through the current claimed balance. Any unauthorized fees, post-charge-off interest, or collection costs not in the original agreement should be disputed line by line.

Montana Wage Garnishment Exemptions

Federal limits apply.

Montana Consumer Protection Act

In addition to the federal FDCPA, Montana's Montana Consumer Protection Act may provide additional protections and remedies against Bank of America's collection practices.

Montana Court System

Small claims limit $7,000. Justice courts handle smaller civil cases. District court for larger amounts. Filing fees in Montana typically range $30-$250.

Common FDCPA Violations by Bank of America

  • Hired collection agencies making harassing phone calls exceeding reasonable frequency
  • Filing suit on accounts with disputed billing errors that were never properly resolved
  • Collection attorneys adding improper attorney fees and costs to the claimed amount
  • Misrepresenting the consequences of not paying the debt
  • Reporting debt to credit bureaus without noting it is disputed

Statute of Limitations in Montana

Debt Type SOL (Years)
Credit Card 5
Medical 5
Auto 5
Personal Loan 5
Written Contract 8
Oral Contract 5

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Bank of America sue for credit card debt?

Yes. Bank of America files lawsuits for unpaid credit card balances through its network of collection attorneys across the country.

What if I already paid Bank of America?

If you have proof of payment, this is a complete defense. Gather all payment records, settlement letters, and confirmation numbers to present in your Answer.

Can Bank of America freeze my bank account?

Only after obtaining a court judgment. If you bank at Bank of America and they obtain a judgment, they may have enhanced ability to levy your account through the right of offset.

Should I close my Bank of America account if they sue me?

Consider moving funds to a different bank to protect against potential right-of-offset if Bank of America obtains a judgment. Consult with an attorney about asset protection strategies.

How long to respond in Montana?

21 days from service.

What is the SOL?

5 years for credit cards and open accounts. 8 years for written contracts.

Can wages be garnished?

Yes. Federal limits apply.

Where are cases filed?

Small claims up to $7,000. District court for larger amounts.

Is the collection agency suing me actually licensed in Montana?

Most third-party collectors and debt buyers operating in Montana are required to hold a collection agency license issued by the Montana Department of Administration under MCA Title 32, Chapter 4, Part 3. You can verify a license by searching the Department's online licensee lookup or calling the licensing bureau. If the company suing you is not currently licensed, that is a complete defense to the collection action under Montana law, because an unlicensed collector lacks legal standing to collect or sue on the debt. Courts have dismissed cases on this ground, and consumers have also pursued affirmative claims under the Montana Consumer Protection Act when an unlicensed entity attempted collection. Before you spend energy fighting the underlying balance, verify the license. If the license lapsed at the time the suit was filed or at the time demand letters were sent, raise it in your answer as both an affirmative defense and a potential counterclaim, and request that the case be dismissed.

How long do creditors and debt buyers have to sue me in Montana?

Montana's statute of limitations on a written contract, including most credit-card agreements, is eight years under MCA 27-2-202, which is one of the longest in the country. Oral contracts have a five-year limit. The clock generally starts running from the date of last payment or the date of default, depending on the contract terms. Once the statute has run, the debt becomes time-barred and you have a complete defense to a lawsuit, but the burden is on you to raise it as an affirmative defense in your answer. A time-barred debt does not disappear and a collector can still ask you to pay voluntarily, but they cannot lawfully sue, threaten to sue, or imply that legal action is available. If you are unsure of the date of last payment, request itemized account records under FDCPA validation rules and review your credit report to find the charge-off date.

What can a collector take from my paycheck or bank account in Montana?

Montana follows the federal Consumer Credit Protection Act cap on wage garnishment: a creditor with a judgment can take the lesser of 25 percent of your disposable earnings or the amount by which your weekly disposable earnings exceed 30 times the federal minimum wage. Disposable earnings means what is left after legally required deductions such as taxes and Social Security. Certain income is fully exempt from garnishment, including Social Security, SSI, VA benefits, most retirement and pension payments, unemployment, and workers' compensation. If a collector levies your bank account and exempt federal benefits are deposited there, the bank is required under federal rule 31 CFR 212 to protect two months of those deposits automatically. You can also file an exemption claim with the court to release frozen funds. Montana's homestead exemption protects up to $400,000 of equity in your primary residence from most judgment liens.

Can I be arrested for not paying a debt in Montana?

No. Montana does not have debtors' prisons and you cannot be jailed for failing to pay a consumer debt. Any collector who threatens arrest, criminal charges, or jail time is violating both the federal FDCPA (15 U.S.C. § 1692e) and the Montana Consumer Protection Act. That said, there is a real risk people confuse: if a court orders you to appear for a debtor's exam or post-judgment discovery and you ignore the order, the judge can issue a civil bench warrant for failing to appear, not for owing the debt. The fix is simple: open your mail, respond to court papers, and show up to any scheduled hearing or exam. If you get a threatening call mentioning warrants or criminal charges before any lawsuit has been filed, document the call, save voicemails, and report it to the Montana Office of Consumer Protection and to the CFPB. Those threats are textbook FDCPA violations and they often signal a scam.

What does the Montana Consumer Protection Act add on top of the federal FDCPA?

The federal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act covers third-party collectors and debt buyers but does not directly reach the original creditor. The Montana Consumer Protection Act, MCA 30-14-101 et seq., is broader: it prohibits unfair, deceptive, or unconscionable acts in trade or commerce and applies to original creditors as well as collectors. Remedies under the MCPA include actual damages, attorney fees, and treble damages for willful violations. The Office of Consumer Protection within the Department of Justice enforces the Act and accepts complaints. Practical use looks like this: if a national bank or a hospital billing department engages in misleading collection conduct, you may not have an FDCPA claim because they are the original creditor, but you may have an MCPA claim. The combination of FDCPA against the collector and MCPA against the original creditor or debt buyer creates real settlement leverage.

Sued by Bank of America in Another State?

Bank of America files cases nationwide. Select your state for the response deadline, statute of limitations, and state-specific defenses.

This page summarizes public information from the CFPB Consumer Complaint Database, CFPB enforcement records, and Montana state law. It is not legal advice. Statutes and court rules change — consult a licensed attorney in Montana for guidance on your specific case.

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