Sued by Cavalry SPV / Cavalry Portfolio Services in Missouri? Here's What to Do Next
Missouri RESPONSE DEADLINE
30 Days
from the date you were served
STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS
5 Years
for typical Cavalry SPV / Cavalry Portfolio Services debts in MO
WAGE GARNISHMENT
Allowed — up to 25%
What Missouri consumers say about Cavalry SPV / Cavalry Portfolio Services
In the last 24 months, 15 Missouri residents filed CFPB complaints naming Cavalry SPV / Cavalry Portfolio Services . 60% of these complaints involve debt collection; 40% involve credit reporting or other personal consumer reports.
Most common complaint categories:
- 3 Attempts to collect debt not owed
- 3 Incorrect information on your report
- 2 Problem with a company's investigation into an existing problem
Source: CFPB Consumer Complaint Database , 24-month rolling window through May 2026.
About Cavalry SPV / Cavalry Portfolio Services
Cavalry SPV I LLC and Cavalry Portfolio Services are debt buying entities that purchase and collect on defaulted consumer debts. Cavalry has been involved in numerous consumer complaints and lawsuits alleging violations of the FDCPA. They are known for purchasing large portfolios of credit card debt and aggressively pursuing collection, including filing lawsuits in bulk across multiple states. Cavalry has faced regulatory scrutiny for their documentation practices and collection tactics.
Type: Debt Buyer. Common debt types: credit card, personal loan, retail credit.
CFPB Enforcement History
Cavalry SPV and Cavalry Portfolio Services have not been the subject of a major CFPB enforcement action. Cavalry is a smaller debt buyer than LVNV or Midland and its overall complaint volume is correspondingly lower. The same legal framework — the FDCPA, the FCRA, and state collection laws — still applies, and consumers retain the right to demand proof of ownership, dispute the amount, and raise the statute of limitations as a defense.
Missouri-Specific Defenses Against Cavalry SPV / Cavalry Portfolio Services
Statute of Limitations Defense
In Missouri, 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. Cavalry SPV / Cavalry Portfolio Services has been the subject of CFPB findings related to suing on time-barred debts — check your dates carefully and raise the SOL defense in your Answer.
Lack of Standing / Chain of Title
As a debt buyer, Cavalry SPV / Cavalry Portfolio Services must prove they actually purchased your specific account. Demand the complete chain of title — the purchase agreement, bill of sale, and assignment documents. In Missouri courts, failing to produce this documentation can result in dismissal.
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.
Missouri Wage Garnishment Exemptions
Greater of 75% of disposable earnings or 30x federal minimum wage exempt. Head of household may get 90% exemption.
Missouri Merchandising Practices Act
In addition to the federal FDCPA, Missouri's Missouri Merchandising Practices Act may provide additional protections and remedies against Cavalry SPV / Cavalry Portfolio Services's collection practices.
Missouri Court System
Small claims limit $5,000. Circuit court handles larger civil cases. Filing fees in Missouri typically range $40-$250.
Common FDCPA Violations by Cavalry SPV / Cavalry Portfolio Services
- Filing lawsuits without proper documentation or chain of title
- Suing on debts past the statute of limitations
- Using robo-signed affidavits from employees without personal knowledge of account details
- Misrepresenting the amount owed by adding unauthorized fees
- Failing to respond to debt validation requests within statutory timeframes
Statute of Limitations in Missouri
| Debt Type | SOL (Years) |
|---|---|
| Credit Card | 5 |
| Medical | 5 |
| Auto | 5 |
| Personal Loan | 5 |
| Written Contract | 10 |
| Oral Contract | 5 |
Frequently Asked Questions
Who is Cavalry SPV?
Cavalry SPV I LLC is a debt buying company that purchases defaulted consumer debts. Cavalry Portfolio Services is its affiliated collection entity. They buy debts from banks and credit card issuers and attempt to collect the full balance.
Is Cavalry SPV a legitimate company?
Cavalry SPV is a real company, but being legitimate does not mean they always follow the law. They have faced numerous FDCPA lawsuits and complaints for improper collection practices, including suing without proper documentation.
How do I fight a Cavalry SPV lawsuit?
File your Answer before the deadline, deny allegations you dispute, demand proof they own the debt, and raise any applicable defenses such as statute of limitations. Many Cavalry lawsuits can be defeated by challenging their documentation.
What if Cavalry SPV has the wrong amount?
Cavalry frequently inflates debt amounts with unauthorized fees and interest. In your Answer, dispute the amount owed and demand an accounting showing every charge from the original creditor through the current balance.
How long to respond in Missouri?
30 days from service.
What is the SOL in Missouri?
5 years for credit cards. 10 years for written contracts.
Can wages be garnished?
Yes, but head of household may qualify for 90% exemption.
Where are cases filed?
Small claims up to $5,000. Circuit court for most debt lawsuits.
What is the statute of limitations on credit-card debt in Missouri?
Missouri's SOL depends on how courts classify the underlying obligation. For open accounts and contracts not in writing, the SOL is 5 years under RSMo § 516.120. For written contracts, it is 10 years under RSMo § 516.110 - one of the longer SOLs in the country. Courts have generally treated credit-card debt as a written contract subject to the 10-year SOL when the cardholder agreement is in writing, which is most cases. Federal student loans have no SOL. Once the relevant period has passed (5 or 10 years from breach), the SOL is a complete defense if pleaded in your answer. Partial payments and written acknowledgments can restart the clock. Because Missouri's SOL is long, you may face suits on debts other states would consider stale - so confirm the dates carefully. If a collector sues on a debt past the SOL, plead it as an affirmative defense. Suing on time-barred debt is also a federal FDCPA violation, giving you a possible counterclaim.
What is Missouri's head-of-household wage-garnishment exemption?
Missouri has one of the strongest wage-garnishment protections in the country for heads of household. Under RSMo § 525.030, a head of household supporting one or more dependents can claim a 90% exemption from wage garnishment - meaning only 10% of disposable income (after taxes) can be garnished, instead of the federal 25%. Single individuals and non-heads of household are subject to the regular 25% federal cap or 30-times-minimum-wage floor, whichever is less. To claim the head-of-household exemption, you typically file a Claim of Exemption with the court that issued the garnishment, including proof of head-of-household status (tax returns, dependents, etc.). Many Missouri garnishments proceed without the consumer knowing about this exemption - they end up paying 25% when they could be paying 10% or nothing. If you are facing a Missouri garnishment, file the head-of-household claim as soon as possible. Missouri legal aid organizations and consumer attorneys handle these claims regularly, and federal FDCPA fee-shifting can fund representation if there are also collection-violation issues.
What is the Missouri Merchandising Practices Act and how does it help with collection?
The Missouri Merchandising Practices Act (RSMo Chapter 407) is one of the country's broader UDAP statutes. Section 407.020 prohibits "any deception, fraud, false pretense, false promise, misrepresentation, unfair practice or the concealment, suppression, or omission of any material fact" in connection with the sale of merchandise. Missouri courts have applied the MMPA to debt-collection misconduct - false statements about amounts owed, threats of suit on stale debt, misrepresentation of legal status, harassment, etc. Section 407.025 allows private suits for actual damages, punitive damages, and attorney's fees. Recent amendments have added some procedural requirements but the statute remains a strong tool. Many Missouri consumer attorneys plead MMPA claims alongside federal FDCPA claims, multiplying the available remedies. The combined statutes can result in statutory damages, punitive damages, and full attorney-fee recovery. Document every violation carefully and keep records (calls, letters, account statements, court filings) to build the strongest possible case.
How do I respond to a Missouri Associate Circuit Court collection suit?
You generally have 30 days from service to file a written Answer with the court. Never ignore it - that leads to default judgment, which is enforceable for 10 years under RSMo § 516.350 (renewable). In your answer, raise every available affirmative defense: statute of limitations (5 or 10 years depending on debt type), lack of standing by debt buyer (demand chain-of-title proof), failure to validate under federal FDCPA § 1692g, improper service, head-of-household exemption (if garnishment is possible), and any specific factual disputes about the amount or existence of the debt. Missouri Associate Circuit Court is generally less formal than full Circuit Court, but the rules of evidence and procedure still apply. Many debt-buyer cases fail at trial because the buyer cannot produce the original cardholder agreement and full chain of assignments. Consider filing a counterclaim for federal FDCPA and Missouri MMPA violations if the collector engaged in any abusive conduct. Missouri Legal Services and private consumer attorneys take these cases on fee-shifting bases - representation often costs nothing if you have valid defenses.
Can a Missouri collector seize my bank account?
Yes, but only after suing and obtaining a judgment, and even then subject to important exemptions. After a Missouri judgment is entered, the creditor can serve a writ of garnishment on your bank under RSMo Chapter 525 to freeze and seize funds. However, many categories of income are exempt: Social Security, SSI, VA benefits, unemployment, workers' compensation, child support received, and most public assistance. Federal regulation (31 CFR Part 212) requires banks to automatically protect two months of federal-benefit deposits in your account. Missouri also exempts certain wages already deposited under the head-of-household rule. If your account is frozen, file a Claim of Exemption with the court that issued the garnishment immediately - typically within 20 days under Missouri rules. Bring proof of the source of the funds (Social Security award letter, pay stub, VA letter, etc.). A Missouri consumer attorney can usually get exempt funds released quickly, and federal FDCPA fee-shifting often pays for representation. If the underlying judgment is challengeable (improper service, SOL, debt buyer with no proof), the entire judgment may be set aside.
Sued by Cavalry SPV / Cavalry Portfolio Services in Another State?
Cavalry SPV / Cavalry Portfolio Services files cases nationwide. Select your state for the response deadline, statute of limitations, and state-specific defenses.
Sued by a Different Collector in Missouri?
The 30-day Missouri response deadline applies no matter who sued you. Pick the creditor on your summons for creditor-specific defenses.
This page summarizes public information from the CFPB Consumer Complaint Database, CFPB enforcement records, and Missouri state law. It is not legal advice. Statutes and court rules change — consult a licensed attorney in Missouri for guidance on your specific case.
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