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The After-Christmas Bankruptcy

Posted by Kevin on December 27, 2014 under Bankruptcy Blog | Comments are off for this article

It’s human nature to hold off filing bankruptcy until after the holidays. Here’s what you need to know once you think again about filing.

The Quietest Time of the Year

For most bankruptcy attorneys December is the quietest time of the year. Because:

  • people understandably want to focus on family and friends, instead of on their financial troubles;
  • the materialism of the season discourages people from taking a realistic view of their finances;
  • many mortgage companies ease off on foreclosures, and other creditors and collection agencies back off their collections, during this season, to avoid looking like Scrooges;
  • people don’t have time to see an attorney—especially about bankruptcy–with everything they have to get done for the holidays; and
  • no one has the emotional space to go talk with an attorney about messy personal finances during this already emotionally taxing time of the year.

Things to Keep in Mind Starting December 26

After getting through the holidays, and with the time for New Year’s resolutions approaching, one of your likely resolutions is to defeat your debts once and for all. If you are considering bankruptcy as one possible way to meet that resolution, be aware of the following after-Christmas, turn-of-the-year issues:

  1. Some debts ( cash advances on your credit card or purchase of luxury items) you rang up during the few months before filing bankruptcy—to buy holiday gifts or pay for holiday expenses, for example–might not be discharged (legally erased). That depends on some nitty-gritty details of your use of credit, as well as your intentions at the time.
  2. If you are going to owe income taxes for the 2014 tax year and  expect to be filing your bankruptcy case soon after the turn of the year, that 2014 tax debt presents both some challenges and opportunities. Oddly, sometimes that debt can be paid in effect without costing you anything.
  3. A holiday bonus from your employer or a cash gift from a well-meaning relative can increase your “income” for purposes of the “means test,” either making qualifying for Chapter 7 more difficult or potentially turning your 3-year Chapter 13 case into a 5-year one. These major financial disadvantages can often be avoided through smart timing.

If you understand how bankruptcy works, these potentially troublesome issues can be turned to your advantage. The next  blogs will show you how.

A Chapter 7 Can . . . Help You Walk Away from Your Business Yet Preserve Your Business Assets

Posted by Kevin on December 23, 2014 under Bankruptcy Blog | Comments are off for this article

Protect your business assets immediately with the “automatic stay” and permanently with property exemptions.

 

Often, by the time you are ready to file a personal bankruptcy, your business has no meaningful assets—no inventory or equipment, no receivables, no brand or business name that you could sell. That simplifies your situation because, whether the business is in your own name or under an assumed business name as a sole proprietorship, or is in the form of a corporation, limited liability company, or partnership, its lack of assets avoids a bunch of thorny issues.

BUT, even if your business DOES have some assets, as long as that business is a sole proprietorship, filing a personal Chapter 7 case often provides you a sensible way for dealing with those remaining business assets. You may be able to keep those assets if you need them, or if not, you can let your Chapter 7 trustee sell them and pay some of your most important creditors.

Business Assets Protected by the “Automatic Stay”

You may want to keep business assets which you need to use to generate income after your bankruptcy—either as an employee or through self-employment.

As long as your prior business was in the form of a sole proprietorship, your personal bankruptcy filing will immediately protect your business assets (as well as your personal ones) from seizure by garnishment, foreclosure, repossession and such.

As for secured debts related to the business—secured by collateral like your business vehicle or equipment, for example—the creditor would be prevented from repossessing its collateral, at least temporarily. That gives time for your attorney to offer for you to “reaffirm” the debt—agree to remain personally liable on it—so that you can keep the collateral.

Business Assets Protected by Property “Exemptions”

Instead, the trustee will be interested in your “free and clear” business assets. However, you will be able to keep such assets to the extent they are covered by your personal “exemptions.”

A property exemption is a provision in state or federal law that allows you to shelter an asset from your creditors, and thus also from the Chapter 7 bankruptcy trustee who acts on behalf of all your creditors. Exemption laws can be quite complicated, and differ from state to state, often radically. In some states you must use that state’s system of exemptions, while in other states you have a choice of using either the state’s exemptions or a set of federal exemptions provided in the Bankruptcy Code.  NJ allows a debtor to choose; however, it is not much of a choice.  Why? Because the state exemptions are so puny that about 99.9% of debtors use the federal exemptions.  Under the federal exemptions, you get to keep a little over $2,000 of business tools.  Under NJ, it would come under the general exemption of $1000.  Clearly, in either case, the exemption is far from generous.  However, if the assets are older but usable to you, you can make an offer to the trustee.  Most trustee will entertain even a lowball offer rather than go through an auction, especially on used items of questionable value.

Disputes and Litigation Against Your Business Not Stopped by Your Personal Bankruptcy Filing

Posted by Kevin on December 13, 2014 under Bankruptcy Blog | Comments are off for this article

Careful: if your business is not a sole proprietorship, legal disputes against your business are not “stayed” by your personal bankruptcy’s “automatic stay.”

This series of blogs has been about the benefits of filing a bankruptcy case when closing down your business. Through the power of the “automatic stay”— any ongoing lawsuit against you or your property must stop.  But there are some important exceptions to this, situations in which the automatic stay would not apply

Bankruptcy and its automatic stay protect the “person” filing bankruptcy and his, her, or its assets. Other “persons” are generally NOT protected. The issue is whether you and your business are considered to be the same or separate “persons” for this purpose.

If your business is a sole proprietorship, the law considers you and your business to be the same “person.” So a lawsuit against the business would be stopped by your personal bankruptcy filing. But what if your business was set up as a corporation, a limited liability company (LLC), or a partnership, and you are dealing with a lawsuit against both you and the business?

Disputes Against Your Corporation, LLC, or Partnership

  • If your business was set up as a corporation or LLC and it is still operating when you file a personal bankruptcy, that filing does not “stay” any litigation against the corporation because it is a separate legal entity, a separate “person.” To the extent the dispute and/or lawsuit is against you personally, that portion would be stayed. But this may not help much if the lawsuit continues to disrupt and threaten your business.
  • Even if your business in the form of a corporation or LLC is no longer operating, but itself still owns some assets, those assets are not protected by your personal bankruptcy filing. This includes assets that the business might own outright—such as receivables that it was waiting to receive, or business assets that are the collateral on business loans—such as vehicles or equipment.
  • If your business is or was a formal or informal partnership, the partnership’s creditors or adversaries would very likely be able to continue pursuing the partnership and its assets, as well as pursuing your partner and his or her assets, regardless of your personal bankruptcy filing. That’s because partners are generally jointly liable for the obligations of a partnership, and your partner and the partnership itself are both “persons” separate from you. So you have the same problem just outlined above as to partnership assets.

That leads to the main lesson here. If your business legally qualifies as a separate “person,” and has assets that need to be protected, it may need to file its own separate bankruptcy.  Since we are focusing on closing down your business in this series of blogs, the filing would be under Chapter 7.

You should really consult with a bankruptcy lawyer on these issues.

Chapter 7 Bankruptcy Helps You with Your Income Tax Debt Even If It Doesn’t Write Off One Red Cent

Posted by on December 2, 2014 under Bankruptcy Blog | Be the First to Comment

Don’t assume that just because your income taxes are too new to be written off that 1) bankruptcy can’t help, or 2) only Chapter 13 can help.

Even if none of your taxes can be discharged (written-off), or most of them can’t be, a Chapter 7 bankruptcy may STILL set you up so you can deal with those taxes in a constructive way. You may not need the extra expense and time of going through a three-to-five-year Chapter 13 case.

Clean Your Slate of Other Debts So You Can Pay Your Taxes

So the simple-to-ask, maybe not-so-simple-to-answer question is whether a straight Chapter 7 bankruptcy will help you enough? More precisely, if you filed a Chapter 7 case, after it was done would you reliably be able to make large enough monthly payments to the IRS (or New Jersey)  on whatever tax debt(s) that your bankruptcy would not discharge so that those taxes would be paid off safely and in a reasonable time?

“Safely” refers to the fact that you would no longer have protection from your creditors—including your tax creditor(s)—after the three months or so your Chapter 7 will usually take to complete. So after that you’d be on your own dealing with the IRS/NJ. That’s OK if you are confident that you would be able to make consistent monthly installment payments at the required amount—not just right after your bankruptcy is completed but throughout the time until it is paid off. A Chapter 7 is a good idea if you don’t need one of the most important benefits of a Chapter 13 plan as to your tax debts—the continuous protection from creditors that you get throughout the payment process. That’s especially valuable if your circumstances change and you need to lower your payments. At that point you’d probably not want to rely on the flexibility of the IRS or NJ (which can often be more rigid than the IRS).

“Reasonable time” refers to the fact that the IRS and state agencies, in almost all circumstances, will continue adding interest and penalties throughout the time you are making installment payments. Even if they are relatively flexible about stretching out the payments, you need to look at how much the ongoing interest and penalties will add to the amount you must pay before you’re done. In a Chapter 13 case, usually no more interest and penalties get tacked on once the case is filed, which can save a lot of money if you owe a fair amount of non-discharged taxes.

So how do you know whether you will be able to make tax installment payments safely enough and large enough to pay off the tax debt(s) in a reasonable time?

First, it means calculating how much a Chapter 7 case would help your monthly cash flow and your longer term financial stability by discharging your other debts.

Second, you need to know what the IRS and/or state tax authority will likely accept as monthly payments, given the amount of your remaining tax debt and other financial information. From there the amount of additional interest and penalties can roughly be calculated.

Your bankruptcy attorney will help you with these projections and calculations. He or she will then advise you about whether you are a good candidate for cleaning your slate with Chapter 7 and then paying your remaining tax debt directly.