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Chapter 7 Bankruptcy Helps You SETTLE Your Income Tax Debt

Posted by on April 30, 2015 under Bankruptcy Blog | Comments are off for this article

The last blog was about using Chapter 7 to discharge all or most of your debts other than taxes, so that afterwards you could afford to pay off the taxes through monthly payments to the IRS and/or the state. Or if you needed more payment flexibility, the usual alternative would be a Chapter 13 payment plan.

But there’s another possibility.

What if Neither Chapter 7 + Tax Payment Plan, Nor a Chapter 13 Will Work?

You may need a bankruptcy no matter what, to deal with debts other than taxes. But a Chapter 7 case may leave you owing too much income tax to be able to afford the minimum monthly payments that the IRS or the state would require. And a Chapter 13, as helpful as it can be for dealing with tough tax problems, may not be helpful enough. Chapter 13 requires payment in full of all “priority” debts—which includes non-dischargeable taxes—during the life of the case. That means a maximum of 5 years. You may just not have enough money available to pay into a Chapter 13 plan to do that.

So your best option may be to file a bankruptcy and then try to settle with the IRS and/or the state for less than you owe them.

Chapter 7 + Tax Settlement

A tax settlement would often be done in conjunction with and after a Chapter 7 bankruptcy filing, for three reasons: 

1. If you owe a bunch of taxes, you are extremely likely to also owe lots of other debts, which need to be dealt with through bankruptcy.

2. Some of your older tax debts may be dischargeable. Trimming that debt away with a Chapter 7 bankruptcy would reduce the amount of remaining tax debt to be settled.

3. With an IRS Offer in Compromise or similar state procedure, you would need to show that you are pretty much focusing all your available financial resources on the settlement. It usually helps to get rid of your other debts to be able to do that.

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

You may owe too much in nondischargeable taxes to be able to make either the minimum permitted tax installment payments after the Chapter 7 case, or the necessary Chapter 13 plan payments. Then you may not have much choice except to attempt a tax settlement after completing a Chapter 7 case. (You generally cannot attempt an Offer in Compromise while in a Chapter 13 case.)

But even if you don’t seem to have much choice, before filing your Chapter 7 case you should still have a good idea what the IRS/state might accept once you make the offer a few months later. The basic settlement standard with the IRS is, as stated on its website, that “the amount offered represents the most we can expect to collect within a reasonable period of time.” Determining what that means in your situation, and so whether a particular settlement offer will fly, are delicate judgment calls, which is why you need to work with an experienced professional. Talk with your bankruptcy attorney about whether he or she regularly negotiates IRS Offers in Compromise and/or tax settlements with the state. If not, get a referral to a tax attorney or accountant who does.

Be Very Careful About Any Recently Filed and Dismissed Bankruptcy Case

Posted by Kevin on April 10, 2015 under Bankruptcy Blog | Comments are off for this article

The appropriately criticized Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005 (“BAPCPA”) tried to prevent perceived abuses of the bankruptcy laws in a number of ways. One of them you’ve probably not heard about and can give you a bad surprise if you stumble into it.

 The Bad Surprise

Beside the legal write-off (“discharge”) of your debts, the other big benefit you usually get from filing bankruptcy is protection from your creditors. That legal protection is called the “automatic stay,” and prohibits creditors from pursuing you or your money or your other assets. It goes into effect the moment your bankruptcy case is filed, and lasts throughout the life of your case—the few months of a Chapter 7 case and the few years of a Chapter 13 case (unless a creditor files a motion and gets special court permission, the so-called creditor’s “relief from stay”).

But imagine filing a bankruptcy and getting no protection at all from your creditors. Being in a bankruptcy case with the creditors still being able to call you, sue you, garnish your wages. Imagine this happening when you totally don’t expect it. That WOULD indeed be a bad surprise.

Having this happen is very rare, but considering the extreme consequences you want to make absolutely sure that it does not happen to you.

The Abuse Being Addressed

The problem arises in certain circumstances if you filed a prior bankruptcy case which got dismissed—closed without being completed. Before Congress put this law into effect, a very, very small minority of people filing bankruptcy–usually people without attorneys representing them—would file a series of bankruptcies, one after another, for the purpose of continuously delaying a foreclosure or some other action by a creditor. After their first bankruptcy case would get dismissed, they would file another one just in time to again impose the “automatic stay” and stop the foreclosure or other creditor action, and then repeat the cycle. You can see how this could be seen as an abuse of bankruptcy in general and abuse of the “automatic stay” protection in particular.

The Rules

So this is the law that Congress passed to counter this. It has two main parts.

First, if you are filing a bankruptcy case now, AND you filed ONE previous bankruptcy case during the one year before filing this new one, AND that previous case was dismissed, the “automatic stay” goes into effect when you case is filed BUT AUTOMATICALLY EXPIRES after 30 days UNLESS before that time we convince your bankruptcy judge that you meet certain conditions so that the “automatic stay” continues. See Section 362(c)(3) of the Bankruptcy Code.

Second, if you are filing a bankruptcy case now, AND you filed TWO OR MORE previous bankruptcy cases during the one year before filing this new one, AND those two cases were dismissed, then the “automatic stay” does NOT GO INTO EFFECT AT ALL with the filing of the new case.  The “automatic stay” CAN go into effect AFTER the case is filed if within 30 days of the date of filing we convince your bankruptcy judge that you meet certain conditions so that the “automatic stay” gets imposed. See Section 362(c)(4).

The details of the conditions that must be met to continue or impose the “automatic stay” in these two circumstances are beyond the scope of this blog, but they require you to establish your “good faith” about why the previous case(s) was (were) dismissed and why you filed the new one.

Some Important Practicalities

If you have never filed a bankruptcy case, or have definitely not done so in the last year, then you don’t need to worry about any of this. And even if you have, these rules don’t apply to you unless your prior case(s) was (were) dismissed. Usually you would know if you’ve had a case dismissed.

Nevertheless, keep in mind that people get unexpectedly tripped up on these rules more often than you might think.  It tends to happen one of three ways:

1) A person files a bankruptcy without an attorney, gets overwhelmed by the process and doesn’t follow through, so the case gets dismissed. The person may think he or she didn’t “really” file a bankruptcy case, or may simply forget about it under the stress of the time months later when filing another case.

2) A person sees an attorney, signs some papers, and the case gets filed at court, maybe without the person fully realizing it, and then gets dismissed because he or she doesn’t follow through and doesn’t stay in touch with the attorney. Months later, while seeing another attorney or trying to file a new case without one, the person isn’t aware that he or she had filed that previous case, and/or has forgotten all about it.

3) A person’s Chapter 13 case is dismissed because changed circumstances make it impossible to make the court-approved plan payments. Months later, when creditors are causing problems again he or she files a Chapter 7 without an attorney. Not realizing that the previous Chapter 13 case ended by being dismissed, in the new case the “automatic stay” expires after 30 days, letting all his or her creditors resume all collection activity.

To Be Safe…

Prevent any of this happening to you by 1) carefully considering whether you might have somehow filed a bankruptcy case within the last year, and 2) if there’s ANY chance that you did, telling your attorney in your new case right away. If you did file a case that got dismissed, there is a good chance that your attorney will be able to persuade the bankruptcy court to impose or retain the automatic stay. But that will only happen if your attorney knows about the issue in advance and determines whether your case will meet the necessary conditions.