Sued by Cavalry SPV? Here’s What to Know
General information only — not legal advice. Debt Clarity is a document preparation service, not a law firm. Court rules and deadlines change and can differ by court and case type. The deadline printed on your summons always controls — read it carefully and verify with the court named on your papers.
Who Is Cavalry SPV?
Cavalry SPV I, LLC (often appearing with Cavalry Portfolio Services) is a debt buyer that purchases charged-off consumer accounts and appears frequently as a plaintiff in collection lawsuits around the country.
If they’re suing you, it usually means an account originally opened with a bank or lender was charged off and sold — possibly more than once — before ending up with them. The complaint you received should describe the account and how the plaintiff came to own it.
First: Confirm the Case Is Real
Real lawsuits have a court name and a case number. You can verify yours through the court’s public case lookup or by calling the clerk of the court printed on your summons. Once confirmed, treat the deadline seriously — it’s already running.
How These Lawsuits Usually Unfold
- You’re served with a summons and complaint naming Cavalry SPV as the plaintiff.
- A response window opens — commonly between 14 and 35 days depending on your state and court. The exact deadline is on your summons; you can also check our state-by-state guides.
- If you respond, the case proceeds with both sides participating — many collection cases resolve by agreement, motion, or dismissal before any trial.
- If you don’t respond, the plaintiff can typically request a default judgment — and nationally, more than 70% of debt lawsuits end exactly that way.
Why Responding Matters Even If You Recognize the Debt
Filing a response is not the same as denying you ever had a credit card. It keeps you in the case, requires the plaintiff to actually move the case forward, and preserves whatever rights and defenses may exist — questions such as ownership of the account, the amount claimed, and timing rules vary case by case and are exactly the kind of thing a defendant (or an attorney they consult) evaluates. People who respond are also in a far better position to negotiate than people facing a judgment.
Options People Commonly Consider
- Filing a written response (an Answer) by the deadline.
- Negotiating a payment plan or settlement — often while still filing a response, since talks don’t pause the deadline.
- Consulting a licensed attorney or a local legal aid organization, especially for larger or more complicated cases.
For the full response process, start here: How to Respond to a Debt Lawsuit.
Want It Prepared for You — by Real People?
If you’ve decided to respond and don’t want to battle DIY software or formatting rules alone, that’s what we do all day. A real person takes your information by phone or secure form, prepares your court-ready documents to your instructions, and walks you through what to do next — for one flat fee quoted upfront.
Book a free consultation, request a free quote, or call (855) 394-2484. We help self-represented consumers in all 50 states.