West Virginia Cease-and-Desist Rights Under FDCPA + State Law
Under the federal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (15 U.S.C. 1692c(c)), a consumer can instruct a debt collector in writing to cease further communication. Once the collector receives the letter, they may only contact you to (1) confirm they are ceasing, or (2) notify you of specific action (suit, legal process).
West Virginia provides an additional layer of protection through its state collection statute.
West Virginia Collection Practices Statute
Primary authority: W. Va. Code 46A-2-127 through 46A-2-129 Consumer Credit and Protection Act; WVCCPA.
West Virginia notes: WVCCPA is one of the nation's strongest: covers original creditors, statutory damages per violation, attorney's fees.
The combined federal + West Virginia regime means a collector contacting you in West Virginia after receiving a valid cease-and-desist faces potentially stacking liability:
- Federal FDCPA: $1,000 statutory per lawsuit + actual damages + attorney's fees.
- West Virginia state statute: state-specific damages (often per-violation, sometimes trebled).
- Possible class action under either regime.
How to Send a West Virginia Cease-and-Desist Letter
- Identify the collector. Get their exact corporate name, mailing address, and any collection account number or reference.
- Write the letter. Must state: (a) your name + last four of account, (b) an unambiguous instruction to "cease all communication with me concerning this alleged debt," (c) citation to 15 U.S.C. 1692c(c), and (d) optionally cite WEST VIRGINIA's state statute.
- Send certified mail, return receipt requested. This is proof of receipt and starts the clock.
- Keep a copy. Store the letter, certified mail receipt, and green card in a collection violations folder.
- Log all post-C&D contacts. Every call, voicemail, letter, text, or email after receipt is a potential violation.
See our sample cease-and-desist letter template.
What Cease-and-Desist Does NOT Do in West Virginia
- Does not cancel the debt. The underlying obligation remains (if valid) until paid, discharged in bankruptcy, or time-barred by West Virginia's SOL.
- Does not stop litigation. A collector can still sue; the C&D only restricts out-of-court communication.
- Does not apply to original creditors under federal FDCPA. Federal FDCPA covers third-party collectors only. Several West Virginia state statutes (California Rosenthal, Florida FCCPA, West Virginia WVCCPA, Massachusetts c.93 s.49, Maryland MCDCA, and others) do cover original creditors - check the West Virginia statute above.
- Does not erase from credit report. Use FCRA disputes for that.
West Virginia Federal Bankruptcy Data
West Virginia courts see consumer debt collection volume that tracks Chapter 7/13 filing rates. The FJC numbers below show your state's federal resolution mix.
Numbers below come from the Federal Judicial Center Integrated Database covering 60 consumer bankruptcy cases from West Virginia's federal bankruptcy courts.
| Chapter | Cases Filed | Discharge Rate | Dismissal Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chapter 7 | 54 | 98.1% | 1.9% |
| Chapter 13 | 6 | n/a | n/a |
Rates computed on resolved cases only. Source: FJC Integrated Database.
When West Virginia Collectors Violate After Cease-and-Desist
Document every violation:
- Save voicemails verbatim (collector name, date, time, content).
- Screenshot texts and call logs.
- Keep all letters/envelopes (postmarks prove timing).
- Log emails with full headers.
Each post-receipt communication is typically a separate FDCPA violation. Three post-C&D calls in one week can be $3,000 in federal statutory damages before West Virginia state claims, actuals, and fees.
Consumer attorneys in West Virginia typically take these on contingency. See find a West Virginia FDCPA attorney.
West Virginia Bankruptcy and the Automatic Stay: Stronger Than C&D
Filing bankruptcy in West Virginia triggers the automatic stay under 11 U.S.C. 362, which is a federal court order that overrides FDCPA and West Virginia state law alike. A collector contacting a debtor after bankruptcy filing faces contempt sanctions under Section 362(k): actual damages, attorney's fees, and in some West Virginia districts punitive damages.
If you are already past the "overwhelmed" stage and heading toward bankruptcy anyway, filing is often a stronger tool than a C&D letter for stopping collection calls.