Sued by Absolute Resolutions in Florida? What to Do Next
Sued by Absolute Resolutions in Florida? Here’s What to Do
A lawsuit from Absolute Resolutions usually lands the same way for the Floridians who call us: a stack of court papers over an old credit card or charged-off account, often from a company you don’t recognize. Take a breath. Being sued is not the same as losing — and in Florida the outcome often turns on what you do in the first 20 days. I’m Michael Ziegler; our firm has defended Florida consumers in collection lawsuits for more than a decade, and debt-buyer cases like these have a few patterns worth knowing before you decide anything.
Who Is Absolute Resolutions?
The plaintiff on these lawsuits is typically Absolute Resolutions Investments, LLC (you may also see it referenced as “Absolute Resolutions Corporation”). It is a debt buyer — it does not lend money or issue credit cards. Instead, it purchases charged-off consumer accounts from original creditors and then files collection lawsuits in its own name to try to collect them.
That business model matters to your case. Because Absolute Resolutions did not originate your account, it must prove that it actually owns your specific debt — a documented chain of assignment from the original creditor to Absolute Resolutions. That chain is often incomplete, and it is frequently where these cases get weak. If a company you never did business with is now suing you, start with our guide on what happens when your debt has been sold.
Our review of 2025 Pinellas County court records confirms Absolute Resolutions does file debt-collection lawsuits in the area, though at a lower volume than the largest filers. If your name is on one of its cases, the deadline still applies to you the same way — and the debt-buyer burden of proof still applies to it.
The Florida Deadlines That Decide These Cases
Florida courts split money cases by size: small claims (up to $8,000), county court (up to $50,000), and circuit court above that. In small claims you must show up to an early pretrial conference; in county and circuit court you generally have 20 days from service to file a written response. Do nothing and the likely result is a default judgment — after which wage garnishment and bank levies become real possibilities. Most of the worst outcomes we see in these cases weren’t lost in court; they were lost by silence.
Common Defenses in an Absolute Resolutions Lawsuit
Every case is different, and none of these is a guarantee — but these are the defenses we evaluate first in a debt-buyer case:
- Ownership and standing. Because Absolute Resolutions bought the debt, it must connect the paper trail from the original creditor to itself, account by account. Gaps in that assignment history are common.
- Statute of limitations. Florida generally allows five years to sue on a debt based on a written agreement. Old, resold accounts are the usual suspects. More in our guide to Florida credit card lawsuit time limits.
- Proof of the amount. Interest, late fees, and charges added after charge-off must be supportable. The balance on the complaint isn’t automatically the balance you owe.
- Identity and account errors. Mixed files, identity theft, and authorized-user confusion appear more often than you’d think.
Your Rights Under Federal and Florida Collection Laws
As a debt buyer collecting accounts it did not originate, Absolute Resolutions is generally subject to the federal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA). Florida’s Consumer Collection Practices Act (FCCPA) also applies to anyone collecting a consumer debt in Florida. Harassing calls, misrepresenting a debt, or threatening action that can’t legally be taken can violate these laws, and each statute allows a consumer to recover up to $1,000 in statutory damages plus attorney’s fees and court costs for violations. If the collection conduct crossed the line, that conduct can become leverage in your case — but the first priority is defending the lawsuit itself.
Your Options — Beyond Just Fighting
Defending the lawsuit is one tool. Depending on your full financial picture, the better play may be negotiating a documented settlement, or — when one lawsuit is really the first of several coming — resolving everything at once through a coordinated debt-defense strategy. Our firm handles collection lawsuits, bankruptcy, credit reporting errors, and collection harassment under one roof, which means the advice you get isn’t limited to one tool.
FAQ: Absolute Resolutions Lawsuits in Florida
Is Absolute Resolutions a real company that can sue me?
Yes. Absolute Resolutions Investments, LLC is a debt-buying company that files collection lawsuits in Florida courts in its own name, typically through Florida collection counsel. A summons with its name on it should be treated as real and time-sensitive.
Why is a company I’ve never heard of suing me over my credit card?
Because Absolute Resolutions buys charged-off accounts from original creditors and then sues to collect. The debt may have started with a bank you recognize, but the account was sold. See our page on being sued by a credit card company.
Can I settle with Absolute Resolutions after being sued?
Often, yes. Cases can settle at many points before trial. The strength of your defenses, the age of the debt, and the documentation all affect the number — which is why we review the case before talking settlement, not after.
What if I ignore the lawsuit?
Florida courts can enter a default judgment, which may lead to wage garnishment or frozen bank accounts. Responding on time is what keeps your options open.
Do you defend against other debt buyers too?
Yes. We regularly defend Floridians sued by other debt buyers, including Portfolio Recovery Associates, LVNV Funding, and Midland Credit Management. There’s a fuller list on our Florida debt collection companies page.
Served With Absolute Resolutions Court Papers? Move Before the Deadline Does
For over a decade, Ziegler Diamond Law has helped Floridians answer collection lawsuits, protect their wages and accounts, and choose the path — defense, settlement, or bankruptcy — that actually fits. We also defend Floridians sued by other debt buyers, including Cavalry SPV. Bring us the summons; we’ll tell you what it means and what your options are.
Call (727) 538-4188 for a Free Debt Freedom Strategy Session, or schedule online.
This page is general information, not legal advice. For Florida residents, contact Ziegler Diamond Law for a Free Debt Freedom Strategy Session.