Consumer Credit in the World of COVID-19
This webinar is presented free of charge.
0
Days & Times
10 a.m. Hawaii / 11 a.m. Alaska / 12 p.m. Pacific / 1 p.m. Mountain / 2 p.m. Central / 3 p.m. Eastern
Duration: 75 minutes
Course Location
Online
Course Fees
This webinar is presented free of charge.
$0
The course will examine whether Covid-19 by itself creates a defense for debtors to assert in consumer credit litigation, the applicability of force majeure to these contracts, and a discussion of some typical situations the courts will encounter when the pandemic ends.
This webinar is presented free of charge. $0
During this course, you will learn to:
- To examine existing legal concepts to determine if the Covid-19 pandemic creates a valid legal defense to a debtor’s obligation to make payments due under the terms of a consumer credit contract.
- To review a court’s role in enforcing arbitration awards made pursuant to the credit card agreement.
- To analyze some particular consumer credit transactions to determine if other defenses exist beyond those arising because of the pandemic.
This webcast may be eligible for Continuing Legal and Judicial Education (CLE/CJE) credits under most state boards/bars/commissions.
The course will examine whether Covid-19 by itself creates a defense for debtors to assert in consumer credit litigation, the applicability of force majeure to these contracts, and a discussion of some typical situations the courts will encounter when the pandemic ends.