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Sued by Midland Credit Management in Mississippi? Here's What to Do Next

Mississippi RESPONSE DEADLINE

30 Days

from the date you were served

STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS

3 Years

for typical Midland Credit Management debts in MS

WAGE GARNISHMENT

Allowed — up to 25%

What Mississippi consumers say about Midland Credit Management

In the last 24 months, 494 Mississippi residents filed CFPB complaints naming Midland Credit Management . 85% of these complaints involve debt collection; 14% involve credit reporting or other personal consumer reports.

Most common complaint categories:

  • 250 Attempts to collect debt not owed
  • 59 False statements or representation
  • 47 Written notification about debt

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

About Midland Credit Management

Midland Credit Management (MCM) is the collection arm of Encore Capital Group and one of the most aggressive debt collectors in the country. MCM purchases defaulted consumer debts and pursues collection through phone calls, letters, credit reporting, and lawsuits. They are one of the most-sued debt collectors under the FDCPA, with a long history of CFPB complaints related to inaccurate debt amounts, improper credit reporting, and pursuing debts consumers do not owe.

Type: Debt Buyer. Parent company: Encore Capital Group. Common debt types: credit card, medical, telecom, personal loan.

CFPB Enforcement History

Encore Capital Group — the parent company of Midland Credit Management and Midland Funding — has been the subject of two separate major CFPB enforcement actions. The 2020 action specifically found that Encore violated the 2015 consent order, making them a documented repeat offender.

2015 · consent order

$42M in consumer refunds + $10M civil penalty; ceased collection on $125M in debt

CFPB found that Encore, Midland Funding, and Midland Credit Management violated the FDCPA, CFPA, and Fair Credit Reporting Act by collecting on debts they could not substantiate, filing misleading affidavits in court, and pursuing debts past the statute of limitations.

CFPB source

2020 · lawsuit settled

$15M civil penalty + consumer redress

CFPB sued Encore and its subsidiaries for violating the 2015 consent order — including continuing to collect on time-barred debt without required disclosures. The settlement extended the conduct provisions of the 2015 order for five additional years.

CFPB source

Mississippi-Specific Defenses Against Midland Credit Management

Statute of Limitations Defense

In Mississippi, the statute of limitations for credit card debt is 3 years. If your last payment was more than 3 years ago, the debt is time-barred. Midland Credit Management 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, Midland Credit Management must prove they actually purchased your specific account. Demand the complete chain of title — the purchase agreement, bill of sale, and assignment documents. In Mississippi 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.

Mississippi Wage Garnishment Exemptions

75% of disposable earnings or 30x minimum wage exempt.

Mississippi Consumer Protection Act

In addition to the federal FDCPA, Mississippi's Mississippi Consumer Protection Act may provide additional protections and remedies against Midland Credit Management's collection practices.

Mississippi Court System

Justice court handles cases up to $3,500. County and circuit courts for larger amounts. Filing fees in Mississippi typically range $40-$250.

Common FDCPA Violations by Midland Credit Management

  • Reporting inaccurate information to credit bureaus and failing to correct errors after dispute
  • Attempting to collect debts that have been discharged in bankruptcy
  • Using misleading affidavits from employees who lack personal knowledge of the debt
  • Suing on debts past the statute of limitations
  • Failing to provide proper validation notices within five days of initial communication

Statute of Limitations in Mississippi

Debt Type SOL (Years)
Credit Card 3
Medical 3
Auto 3
Personal Loan 3
Written Contract 3
Oral Contract 3

Frequently Asked Questions

Who is Midland Credit Management?

Midland Credit Management (MCM) is a debt collection company and subsidiary of Encore Capital Group. They purchase defaulted debts from banks and other creditors, then aggressively pursue collection including filing lawsuits.

How do I respond to a Midland Credit Management lawsuit?

You must file a written Answer with the court before your state's response deadline. In your Answer, you should deny the allegations you dispute, raise affirmative defenses like statute of limitations or lack of standing, and demand they prove they own the debt.

Can Midland Credit Management garnish my wages?

Only after they obtain a court judgment against you. If you do not respond to the lawsuit, they will get a default judgment. Some states like Texas, Pennsylvania, and North Carolina do not allow wage garnishment for consumer debts.

What if Midland Credit Management is reporting wrong information?

If MCM is reporting inaccurate debt information to credit bureaus, this may violate the FDCPA and the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA). You can dispute the information with the credit bureaus and file complaints with the CFPB.

Is Midland Credit Management the same as Midland Funding?

Midland Funding LLC is the entity that purchases the debts, while Midland Credit Management is the collection arm that contacts consumers. Both are subsidiaries of Encore Capital Group and often appear together in lawsuits.

How long to respond in Mississippi?

30 days from service.

What is the SOL in Mississippi?

3 years for all contract types. This is one of the shortest in the country.

Can wages be garnished?

Yes. Federal limits apply.

Where are cases filed?

Justice court up to $3,500. County or circuit court for larger claims.

Can a debt collector garnish my wages in Mississippi?

Mississippi has unusually strong limits on wage garnishment for consumer debt. The state generally restricts wage garnishment to a 30-day period at a time, requires the creditor to follow strict statutory procedures under Miss. Code § 11-35-1 et seq., and exempts the first 30 days of wages from any single garnishment. After that, the federal cap of 25% of disposable earnings applies, and Mississippi follows the federal floor. Several categories of income are fully exempt: Social Security, SSI, VA, unemployment, workers' compensation, and most public assistance. The practical effect is that Mississippi consumer-debt wage garnishment is less common and more cumbersome than in many states. Collectors more often pursue bank-account seizure or property liens. If you are facing garnishment, file a claim of exemption with the court that issued the order, and consider whether the underlying judgment can be challenged - particularly for lack of service or expired SOL. Mississippi Center for Justice and several legal aid offices help low-income consumers with collection defense.

What is the statute of limitations on credit-card debt in Mississippi?

Mississippi's SOL on credit-card and open-account debt is generally 3 years under Miss. Code Ann. § 15-1-29 ("actions on open account or stated account"). Some courts apply the 3-year limit, others apply the 6-year SOL for written contracts under § 15-1-49, depending on whether the underlying cardholder agreement is treated as a written contract. The conservative read is 3 years for credit-card open-account debt - that is the position taken by the Fifth Circuit and many Mississippi courts. The clock runs from the date of last payment or last activity. Mississippi follows the rule that partial payment can restart the SOL, so do not pay anything on an old debt without first confirming the dates. If a collector sues on a time-barred debt, plead the SOL as an affirmative defense in your answer - failure to plead it can waive the defense. Suing on a time-barred debt is also a federal FDCPA violation, so a stale suit can give rise to a counterclaim for statutory damages and attorney's fees.

How do I file a complaint against a Mississippi collector?

Start with the Mississippi Attorney General's Consumer Protection Division at (601) 359-3680 or consumer@ago.ms.gov. The AG's office mediates between consumers and businesses and can pursue enforcement against patterns of misconduct. Under Miss. Code § 75-24-15, you must give the AG's office an opportunity to mediate before filing a private suit under the Mississippi Consumer Protection Act. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (consumerfinance.gov/complaint) also accepts complaints against debt collectors and forwards them to the collector for response. For federal FDCPA violations, you can sue without an exhaustion requirement - just file in federal or state court within one year of the violation (15 U.S.C. § 1692k(d)). Document every contact: keep voicemails, save letters and texts, write down dates and times of calls. That documentation supports both the AG complaint and any private suit. Many Mississippi consumer attorneys take FDCPA cases on a fee-shifting basis - if you win, the collector pays your lawyer.

Do collection agencies need a Mississippi license?

Mississippi does not have a general state license requirement for collection agencies the way many other states (Maryland, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, etc.) do. The Mississippi Secretary of State requires registration of business entities operating in the state, and certain specific debt types (like mortgage servicers) have separate regulation, but there is no Mississippi "collection agency license" that controls who can collect consumer debt. The practical consequence: out-of-state collectors freely operate in Mississippi, and licensing-based defenses available in other states are not available here. Mississippi consumers rely primarily on federal FDCPA, federal CFPB Regulation F (12 CFR Part 1006), and the Mississippi Consumer Protection Act to challenge abusive collection. The lack of state licensing makes it more important to document violations carefully and pursue them aggressively. If you are dealing with an out-of-state collector, focus on FDCPA violations - false statements, harassment, contact-frequency abuse, validation failures, suit on time-barred debt - which apply nationwide regardless of state licensing.

What happens if a Mississippi hospital sends my bill to collections?

Medical debt is a leading source of collection action in Mississippi. Once a hospital sends the bill to a third-party collection agency, the federal FDCPA applies in full - validation rights, contact limits, prohibition on harassment, false statements, etc. As of recent CFPB rules and major credit-bureau policy changes, medical collections under $500 cannot be reported, paid medical collections must come off your credit report, and unpaid medical collections are delayed for one year before they can appear. The federal No Surprises Act (in effect since 2022) protects against certain surprise out-of-network bills, especially in emergency situations. Many Mississippi hospitals are nonprofit and subject to federal 501(r) financial-assistance rules, meaning they are required to offer charity-care policies; if you were not told about that policy or denied assistance, the bill may be challengeable. Before paying any medical collection, demand written validation, check for insurance errors, ask whether you were screened for financial assistance, and verify the dates against the 3-year SOL (or 6 years for written contracts under § 15-1-49).

Sued by Midland Credit Management in Another State?

Midland Credit Management files cases nationwide. Select your state for the response deadline, statute of limitations, and state-specific defenses.

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

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