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Spouse Needs to Join Bankruptcy to Discharge Income Taxes, But Reluctant Because Has No Other Debts and Has Separate Asset

Posted by Kevin on January 25, 2014 under Bankruptcy Blog | Comments are off for this article

Finding the best way out of this seeming Catch-22 depends on a full understanding of your unique situation and your goals.

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The last blog explained that filing a bankruptcy by yourself immediately protects YOU from IRS collection activity but does NOT protect your spouse. Similarly the legal write-off (“discharge”) of any tax applies to the person(s) filing the bankruptcy but not to your spouse if he or she does not either join you in your bankruptcy case or else files his or her own case.

That makes perfect sense—you don’t get the benefit of bankruptcy if you don’t file bankruptcy! So the simple solution is for spouses to file bankruptcy together. But there are many situations where that’s not so simple. The next few blogs discuss some of the practical problems that can arise, and how to resolve them.

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One Spouse Has Most of the Debts, the Other May Have Assets

Often one spouse is the only one individually liable on most of the debt. Or one spouse  is solely liable on all debt except they are jointly liable on the secured debts—their mortgage and/or vehicle loans–that the couple intend to keep paying on. These situations can happen when one spouse incurred all the debt from operating a business that failed, or that spouse was simply the primary income source, and/or the one with good credit.

In these situations only the spouse whose debts would be discharged would directly benefit from a bankruptcy filing, so the other is appropriately reluctant to be in a bankruptcy that appears to provide him or her no benefit.

But now add two more ingredients to this scenario: 1) a large personal income tax debt that is old enough and meets the other conditions so that it can be discharged in bankruptcy, which both spouses owe because they both signed the joint tax return; and 2) a significant asset not protected by the applicable exemption owned separately by the spouse with less debts. To make this clearer, let’s say the income tax debt is $25,000 for the 2008 tax year, and the one spouse’s separate asset is his or her share in the childhood vacation home, inherited before the marriage, with this spouse’s share being worth about $20,000.

Seeming Catch-22 for Spouse with Less Debt but Liable on Tax Debt

Without the joint income tax debt, the spouse with little or no other dischargeable debt would not want to join in a Chapter 7 bankruptcy case because his or her share of the old family vacation home could well be claimed by the bankruptcy trustee and sold to pay the couple’s creditors. But with the existence of the joint tax debt, a Chapter 7 filed by the other spouse alone would forever discharge that tax debt as to THAT spouse only, leaving the non-filing spouse owing all of the tax—and the continually accruing interest and penalties—by him- or herself. Clearly not a good result.

Indeed the situation on the surface looks like a Catch-22: the asset-owning spouse either joins in on the bankruptcy thus jeopardizes the asset, or else doesn’t join and is stuck with the tax.

Best Solution Depends on the Unique Facts of the Case

It’s in these tough situations that an experienced bankruptcy attorney becomes very valuable. Determining the best solution depends on thorough understanding of the law along with a careful analysis of all the facts of this case—such as whether the couple owed any other taxes and if so how much and for which years, whether they owed any other “priority” debts (including back child or spousal support payments from a prior marriage, or employee wages from the failed business), their current income and expenses, and lots of other potentially relevant facts.

Married Couples’ Protection from the IRS under Chapter 7 and Chapter 13

Posted by Kevin on January 18, 2014 under Bankruptcy Blog | Comments are off for this article

Filing bankruptcy with or without your spouse, and under Chapter 7 or Chapter 13, may affect what protection you each receive.

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The last few blogs have been about what happens if you file bankruptcy with or without your spouse, and whether you file under Chapter 7 or 13. Today’s blog addresses the protections you and your spouse get or don’t get from collection activity by the IRS (and any pertinent state income tax agencies) under those options.

The “automatic stay” which you get with any bankruptcy filing stops the IRS and state agencies from any further collection actions just like any other creditor. But to get this protection, whoever owes the tax has to be in on the bankruptcy filing. The co-debtor stay of Chapter 13 does not apply to income taxes, so that does not give any help to a non-filing spouse.

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The “Automatic Stay” Applies to Income Tax Debts

Some people have the misimpression that the IRS and other income tax authorities are exempt from the “automatic stay,” the protection from creditor collection you receive immediately when your bankruptcy is filed. Not true. If the IRS continues to pursue a tax debt after being given notice of a bankruptcy filing, it is breaking federal law just like any other creditor. And the bankruptcy court can order the IRS to pay damages if it does break the law. Since the IRS and similar state agencies have been punished for this in the past, they tend to follow the law and stop collections right when you file bankruptcy, like most other creditors.

There ARE some exceptions to the “automatic stay” that apply to taxing authorities—actions that they can still take in spite of a bankruptcy filing, but these actions are very limited.. They can “assess” a tax (determine the amount of tax) and send out a notice about it, make a demand for tax returns, send a notice of tax deficiency (but not act to collect on that deficiency), and conduct an audit (but again not act to collect any debt arising from the audit). So these permitted actions are deemed not to involve actual collection activity.

The “Automatic Stay” Applies Only to the Filing Spouse(s)

The “automatic stay” protects only the debtor—the person or persons filing the bankruptcy case, and his or her, or their, assets. On a jointly owed tax, if only one spouse files the bankruptcy, the IRS or state agency can continue pursuing the non-filing spouse as if the bankruptcy was not filed. And because the tax debt is jointly owed, the non-filing spouse can be required to pay the debt in full.

Chapter 13 “Co-Debtor Stay” Does Not Apply to Income Taxes

The lack of protection for the non-filing spouse is true both under Chapter 7 and 13, because the usual protections for non-filing “co-debtors” in Chapter 13 under the “co-debtor stay” do not work. As discussed a couple blogs ago, the ‘co-debtor stay” provides a way to protect even non-filing spouses from consumer debts owed jointly with a spouse filing under Chapter 13. But it’s inapplicable to income taxes owed to the IRS or other tax agencies, basically on the rationale that the “co-debtor stay” applies only to “consumer debts,” and courts have determined that income taxes are not “consumer debt.”

Applying the Stay Rules to Income Taxes

Because the tax agencies can pursue a non-filing spouse who jointly owes an income tax—under both Chapter 7 and 13—both spouses need to file bankruptcy whenever there is any significant joint tax debt.

Usually this means a joint filing—two spouses filing together on one bankruptcy case. But sometimes—when their financial circumstances are different enough, or perhaps when the marriage is not stable—they may find worthwhile for each to file a separate case, and maybe for one to file a Chapter 7 case and the other a Chapter 13 one.

Lastly, the IRS has been known to not pursue a non-filing spouse if the taxes are being paid in full through the other spouse’s Chapter 13 plan. But this would be done purely at the discretion of the IRS, and should not be counted on unless first carefully discussed with your attorney. But even in these situations, the non-filing spouse is on the hook for penalties and interest that can be wiped out in a Chapter 13 plan.  This is yet another reason to include both spouses in the Chapter 13 filing.

The Discharge of Debts for Married Couples in Chapter 7 and Chapter 13

Posted by Kevin on January 6, 2014 under Bankruptcy Blog | Be the First to Comment

Filing bankruptcy with or without your spouse affects the discharge of debts you each receive, and also affects whether you file under Chapter 7 or 13.

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Continuing from the last blog:

  • There are consequences to filing separately or together, consequences affecting:
    • the discharge of your debts.

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The last blog was about what happens to a spouse who doesn’t file bankruptcy when the other spouse does, specifically as to the “automatic stay,” the immediate protection from creditor collection activity. In a nutshell, there is NO protection from joint creditors for the non-filing spouse in Chapter 7, while there IS some important but limited protection in Chapter 13 through the “co-debtor stay.”

The “automatic stay” is temporary protection that goes into effect at the beginning of and can last the length of the case. The “discharge”—the permanent legal write-off of a debt which is the topic of today’s blog—happens at the end of either a Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 case.

Debts Are Individual

A debt is an individual liability. Discharging a debt in bankruptcy is not so much a destruction of that debt as a legal pronouncement that an individual is no longer liable on that debt.

Each person owes a debt individually—we are not automatically liable for our spouse’s debts. So if ALL of a couple’s debts are owed by one spouse and only that spouse, then a bankruptcy by that spouse will leave the couple with no debts (assuming the debts are of the kind that can be discharged).

Chapter 7 Discharges Debts Only of the Filing Spouse(s)

Much more common is the situation in which two spouses each have some individual debts and some joint debts.

If they file a JOINT Chapter 7 straight bankruptcy, at the completion of the case their debts will be discharged (legally written off). That includes debts that each spouse owes individually, as well as those for which they are both legally liable.

If only ONE of two spouses files a Chapter 7 case, only that spouse’s debts will be discharged. That includes debts that only that spouse owes individually, as well as his or her obligation on any debts owed jointly with his or her spouse. But the non-filing spouse’s debts will not be discharged. And that includes debts that only that spouse owes individually, as well as his or her obligation on any debts owed jointly with his or her spouse.

Distinguishing Individual and Joint Debts

What this means is that one spouse should not file without the other unless they know exactly how much debt the non-filing spouse is legally liable for—both his or her separate debt and their joint debt.

This is not always obvious. A seemingly non-liable spouse can in fact be legally liable on a debt in numerous possible ways. A creditor’s monthly bill that is addressed to only one spouse does not necessarily mean that the other spouse did not sign and become obligated under the original loan agreement. Under certain states’ laws a spouse is obligated for the other spouse’s debts under certain circumstances. Also, specific creditors—such as the IRS—are favored with special laws creating liability for the other spouse. So both spouses’ debts need to be reviewed carefully to see who is liable on each contractually and as a matter of law.

There’s No “Co-Debtor Discharge” in Chapter 13

There is no discharge of a non-filing spouse’s liability analogous to the special “co-debtor stay” of Chapter 13. The filing spouse has the opportunity to protect the non-filing spouse during the course of the 3-to-5-year Chapter 13 case through the “co-debtor stay,” but if the debt is not paid in full during the case then the creditor can pursue the non-filing spouse once the case is over. That’s true even though the filing spouse’s liability for the same debt is discharged at the end of that Chapter 13 case.

Take as an example a husband and wife owing $5,000 on a credit card that they both thought only the husband was liable on because they understood it was tied to his business that failed. They’d forgotten that long ago they had both signed the credit card application. If only the husband files a Chapter 13 case, the “co-debtor stay” would immediately prevent the credit card creditor from pursuing the wife. That creditor may not bother to object to the “co-debtor stay.” Then at the end of the husband’s Chapter 13 case, any of his remaining liability on that credit card debt (beyond whatever portion was paid through his plan, if any) would be discharged, and his case completed and closed. That would terminate the “co-debtor stay,” allowing the creditor to pursue the wife for the full $5,000 debt (less any payments made in the Chapter 13 plan), plus years of interest and late charges.

The Bottom Line

Be very cautious about filing a separate bankruptcy case—Chapter 7 or 13—without your spouse. Discuss your debts thoroughly with your attorney, getting strong verification that the non-filing spouse is liable neither contractually nor by operation of law on debts. Use the “co-debtor stay” to protect the non-filing spouse on a limited joint debt(s), but only to give the filing spouse time to pay off the debt(s) in full so that there is no surviving liability at the end of the Chapter 13 case for which the non-filing spouse would continue to be liable.