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Bankruptcy - Your Fresh Start
By Christopher
Cooper
Most American consumers are living too close to the edge.
They are carrying too much credit card and mortgage debt and
have too little in the way of savings. When the inevitable
unexpected crisis comes along, they have little left to
handle it and quickly slip into a critical financial state.
According to many bankruptcy experts, most people file for
bankruptcy due to life-changing experiences, such as a job
loss, divorce or serious illness. Uninsured medical expenses
are supposedly the cause of about 20% of bankruptcy filings.
But excessive debt also plays a very large role.
If you are drowning in debt with little realistic hope of
paying off your bills, bankruptcy is your only real option.
Although far from pleasant, bankruptcy can be easier to handle
than the constant pressure put on a debtor by lenders and
collection agencies. You can immediately stop all harassment
and legal actions, wipe out a good deal of your debt and get a
new start on life.
The anomalies of credit scoring also work against debtors
struggling to pay off debt. Your score will be low because of
excessive use of debt and missed payments. You’re unlikely to
get new credit and the interest rates on your credit cards
might be raised to usurious levels. You are likely to have a
better credit score and find it easier to get credit – very
expensive credit - after bankruptcy than before.
Also the stigma and embarrassment that used to accompany
bankruptcy has largely disappeared. To many, it has become just
another financial planning tool.
The Bankruptcy Procedure
Bankruptcy courts are part of the Federal court system. The
bankruptcy law itself is a Federal law, although the states can
have their own laws, which govern such things as exemptions.
Federal bankruptcy judges apply both the Federal and state laws
in the jurisdiction where they sit. Debtors sometimes have a
choice of which law should apply.
Bankruptcy proceedings are commenced by filing certain
required forms and paying a fee. Filling automatically stays
all legal proceedings against you as well as all debt
collection actions. Fees can be paid in installments, but must
be completely paid before the dischare will be granted.
A trustee will be appointed. His job is to review your
financial affairs, collect and sell assets, if necessary, and
distribute the proceeds to your creditors. If you are setting
up a repayment plan, he will be responsible for seeing it
implemented. He will even pursue your debtors to collect money
owed you that can be used to pay off your creditors.
The trustee’s powers include the power to set aside
preferential transfers made to creditors within 90 days before
the filing of the bankruptcy petition, the power to undo
security interests and other transfers of property that were
not properly recorded under non-bankruptcy law at the time the
petition was filed and the power to pursue claims such as
fraudulent conveyance and bulk transfer remedies available
under state law.
He also holds meetings which are attended by the debtor
filing for bankruptcy and his creditors. This is probably the
hardest part of the whole proceedure for most people.
The trustee will question the debtor about his financial
affairs and go over his financial records to determine that all
assets have been disclosed and that no fraud is being
perpetrated on the court.
Attorneys for the creditors are also allowed to ask
questions about your expenses and assets.
The trustee will also instruct you on other alternatives and
lecture you on the proper use of credit.
He will then issue a report the bankruptcy judge will use in
deciding whether to dicharge your debts and which debts are to
be included.
A debtor is unlikely to ever meet the judge. In a Chapter 7
case, the debtor will not appear in court unless an objection
is made. In a Chapter 13 case, the debtor might have to appear
at a hearing approving his repayment plan.
Most of the work will be done in the trustee’s office.
What Debt Can Be Discharged?
Not all debt can be discharged by a bankruptcy court.
A bankrupcy court cannot discharge debts arising from
alimony, child maintenance and support obligations; certain
taxes (including the last three years income taxes); debts for
educational benefit overpayments or federal student loans;
debts for willful and malicious injury; debts for death or
personal injury caused by the driving while intoxicated from
alcohol or other substances; and debts from criminal
restitution orders.
To the extent that these types of debts are not fully paid
by the sale of assets during during a Chapter Seven case or not
fully repaid during a Chapter Thirteen case, the debtor is
still responsible for them after the bankruptcy case has been
concluded.
Other debts may or may not be discharged. Debts for money or
property obtained by false pretenses, through fraud,
embezzlement or misuse of funds while acting as a fiduciary;
debts for willful and malicious injury to another entity or to
the property of another entity; and debts arising from a
property settlement agreement incurred in connection wth a
divorce or separation are discharged, unless a creditor
convinces the court to have such debts declared exempt from
discharge.
If you can't get at least half of your debts discharged,
it's not worth the effort.
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