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4 Steps to Protect Your Home and Savings When Your MCA Goes Into Default

What the Funder Sees When They Look at You

The MCA funder does not see a business. The funder sees an agreement, a personal guarantee, a confession of judgment, and a list of assets that can be reached if the first three are enforced. Your home, your savings account, your vehicle: these are not abstractions to the funder’s collections department. They are line items on a recovery worksheet. Understanding this perspective is the first step in protecting what you have.

Determine Your Actual Exposure

The first step is an audit of your own vulnerability. Pull the MCA agreement and identify every provision that creates personal liability. The personal guarantee is the most obvious, but it is not the only one. Some agreements include spousal guarantees, blanket liens that reach personally held assets used in the business, and confession of judgment provisions that authorize judgment entry against you as an individual. The distinction between what the funder can threaten and what the funder can legally enforce is the distinction that determines your strategy.

An attorney can perform this analysis in a single consultation. The result is a map of your actual exposure, not the exposure the funder claims, but the exposure a court would recognize. In eleven of the fourteen files we reviewed last quarter, the funder’s claimed exposure exceeded the legally enforceable amount by at least thirty percent. The gap between the threat and the law is where protection begins.

Understand Your State’s Exemptions

The second step requires knowledge of the state where you reside, not the state where the MCA was executed or where the funder is located. Each state provides exemptions that shield certain assets from judgment creditors. Homestead exemptions protect equity in your primary residence, though the amount varies from modest (a few thousand dollars in some states) to unlimited (Florida and Texas, with conditions). Personal property exemptions cover vehicles, household goods, tools of the trade. Retirement account protections, under ERISA and state law, are among the strongest shields available.

These exemptions are not self‑executing. You must claim them. A judgment creditor who encounters no resistance will pursue every asset. A judgment creditor who encounters claimed exemptions, supported by documentation and filed with the court, will recalculate whether the collection effort is worth the cost.

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Do Not Move Assets

The third step is a prohibition, not an action. Do not transfer assets out of your name after the default has occurred or after the funder has indicated an intent to pursue collection. Fraudulent transfer laws exist in every state, and they empower a creditor to claw back transfers made with the intent to hinder, delay, or defraud. A transfer to a spouse, a family trust, a relative’s account: each one carries the risk of being reversed by a court and, worse, of converting a civil debt dispute into a matter involving allegations of fraud.

The instinct to move money is understandable. The consequences of acting on that instinct can be severe. Protecting assets lawfully requires using the exemptions and legal tools that already exist, not creating new arrangements after the creditor is at the door. There is a reason this is the step most attorneys emphasize first: the clients who arrive having already transferred assets are in a materially worse position than those who waited and asked.

Engage Counsel Before the Judgment, Not After

The fourth step is timing. Every protection described above is stronger before a judgment is entered than after. Before judgment, an attorney can challenge the underlying agreement, dispute the personal guarantee, contest the confession of judgment on procedural or substantive grounds, and negotiate a settlement that resolves the personal exposure entirely. After judgment, the tools are narrower: motions to vacate, exemption claims, and negotiation from a position of less leverage.

Todd Spodek
DEFENSE TEAM SPOTLIGHT

Todd Spodek

Lead Attorney & Founder

Featured on Netflix's "Inventing Anna," Todd Spodek brings decades of high-stakes criminal defense experience. His aggressive approach has secured dismissals and acquittals in cases others deemed unwinnable.

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The funder’s entire strategy is built on speed. File the confession of judgment quickly. Freeze the accounts before the business owner retains counsel. Record the judgment lien before the homeowner consults a lawyer. Each day you wait is a day the funder uses.

The assets you are trying to protect are not gone. But the window for protecting them has a width, and it is narrower than you think.

A consultation today is the mechanism by which that window stays open.

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Todd Spodek
ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Todd Spodek

Managing Partner

With decades of experience in high-stakes federal criminal defense, Todd Spodek has built a reputation for aggressive, strategic representation. Featured on Netflix's "Inventing Anna," he has successfully defended clients facing federal charges, white-collar allegations, and complex criminal cases in federal courts nationwide.

Bar Admissions: New York State Bar New Jersey State Bar U.S. District Court, SDNY U.S. District Court, EDNY
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