Legal Question in Education Law in Georgia

Judge, I took a class over the summer at a different college and filled out the proper financial aid for the summer to go toward that class. I thought the summer aid paid for the class because when the class started they had me fully registered and on the attendance roll. Now two years later a debt collector says I owe $508 dollars for the class I had taken. I contacted the school and they said I was expected to pay out of pocket as a transient student. I asked to see the their policies manual and it states "Registration is not complete until all tuition and fees have

been paid...Failure to fulfill financial obligations may result in denial of readmission, registration, certification of

attendance, transcripts, graduation, etc. Official transcripts will not be issued and graduation will be denied for

students whose accounts are delinquent. The College reserves the right to cancel a student�s registration for

non-payment at any time after the payment deadline." My registration should not have been completed by the university if the class was not paid for and it should have been canceled and I should have been dropped from the class until paid and re-registered with a late fee added. They say I have to pay because I attended the class but I only attended the class because I my registration was complete and I was listed on attendance.Do you have to pay for a debt if the school neglected to follow their own policy and protocol?


Asked on 5/06/15, 1:07 pm

1 Answer from Attorneys

Scott Riddle Law Office of Scott B. Riddle, LLC

If a movie theater had a policy of only admitting people with a paid ticket, and you snuck in, could you argue that the theater violated their policy so you should have to pay? You signed up for a class you knew had a fee, and it was your responsibility to pay (with cash, student loan, or otherwise). It was also your responsibility to keep up with your financial aid. Pay the bill.

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Answered on 5/06/15, 1:12 pm


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