Bill
Bill > A1415
summary
Introduced
01/13/2026
01/13/2026
In Committee
01/13/2026
01/13/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
Introduced Session
2026-2027 Regular Session
Bill Summary
This bill prohibits the revival of time-barred claims for causes of actions for consumer debt. Under the bill, the period of time for filing of a claim for any cause of action for any contractual obligation to collect on a consumer debt cannot be paused by any subsequent payment of the debt, acknowledgement of the debt, or promise to pay the debt, if the subsequent payment, acknowledgement, or promise to pay was made after the statute of limitations for filing a claim, which is six years under current law, has expired. The bill defines "consumer debt" to mean debt incurred by an individual primarily for a personal, family, or household purpose, and also includes consumer credit and medical debt as those terms are defined under current law. Under State case law, consumer debt claims are subject to revival even after the statute of limitations has expired, including when a debtor makes a subsequent payment toward the debt, explicitly acknowledges the debt, or expresses a new promise to pay the full debt. See Burlington County Country Club v. Midlantic Nat. Bank South, 223 N.J.Super. 227 (Ch.Div.1987) (stating that "a statute of limitations which applies to a presently existing contractual debt or obligation may be tolled by an acknowledgment or a promise to pay" and "if such acknowledgment or promise to pay is made after the statute has run, it will act to revive the debt for the statutory period"). This bill would eliminate the revival of consumer debt claims based on those circumstances. This bill is based on Benchmark 10 by the National Center for Access to Justice, in the 2024 "Consumer Debt Litigation Index."
AI Summary
This bill prohibits the revival of time-barred consumer debt claims, meaning that once the six-year statute of limitations for filing a lawsuit to collect on a consumer debt has passed, a debtor's subsequent actions like making a partial payment, acknowledging the debt, or promising to pay it will no longer restart the clock or allow the debt to be sued upon. Consumer debt is defined as debt incurred by an individual primarily for personal, family, or household purposes, and it specifically includes consumer credit and medical debt. This change aims to prevent creditors from reviving old debts that are legally too old to be pursued in court, a practice that has been allowed under current state law based on past court decisions.
Committee Categories
Business and Industry
Sponsors (2)
Last Action
Introduced, Referred to Assembly Consumer Affairs Committee (on 01/13/2026)
Official Document
bill text
bill summary
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bill summary
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bill summary
| Document Type | Source Location |
|---|---|
| State Bill Page | https://www.njleg.state.nj.us/bill-search/2026/A1415 |
| BillText | https://pub.njleg.gov/Bills/2026/A1500/1415_I1.HTM |
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