WVBaker
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You brought it up, so I thought you might have an answer.
Here's some more gleanings:
Orange Lake begins attempting to collect delinquent loans once the payment is seven days past due via telephone and 10 days past due via mail. At 30 days past due, Orange Lake will initiate the default process, and at 60 days past due, Orange Lake sends a demand letter requesting all delinquent amounts due be paid. Thirty days after the demand letter is sent to the obligor, if the obligor is 90 days delinquent on the scheduled payment on his or her timeshare loan, Orange Lake will send a default letter to the obligor advising him or her that failure to cure the default status of the account may result in the acceleration of the timeshare loan balance and possible legal action.
At closing, approximately 6.3% of the initial collateral includes loans made to foreign obligors, including Canadian obligors.
https://www.spratings.com/documents...ust2018A/244f0e13-9a79-4cf6-94dd-d5c2b88804fd
But I have not been able to find anything showing they handle foreign defaults differently than domestic.
Being a Canadian citizen and living in Canada, as long as he maintains and conducts all his future business in Canada, there's no automatic across the border collections. Sure, they can call, they can still send letters however, it's expensive for them to sue him to try to collect. They would still need get a judgement from a U.S. court, bring that judgement to a Canadian court to have it acknowledged
in Canada. That process, in and of itself, is quite expensive and time consuming. Can they do it, of course they can however, will they do it, it's doubtful. So much depends on the amount due and is it worth doing that. If I were him, I wouldn't buy any houses, property or maintain any assets in the U.S because, those would be open for attachment.
This not legal advice just experience so, I would have him consult an attorney just to be on the safe side.
