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Consumer Bankruptcy Series Episode Nine – Chapter 13 Bankruptcy: Mortgages

Posted by Kevin on June 11, 2019 under Videos | Comments are off for this article

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Consumer Bankruptcy Series Episode Ten – Chapter 13 Bankruptcy: Motor Vehicles

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If You Owe Both 2018 AND Earlier Income Taxes

Posted by Kevin on June 3, 2019 under Bankruptcy Blog | Comments are off for this article

Chapter 13 “adjustment of debts” case enables you to include 2018 income taxes into your Chapter 13 payment plan. That would:

    1. Save you money on payment of your 2018 tax;
    2. Give you financial flexibility;
    3. Stop any present and future tax collections and the recording and enforcement of a tax lien on the 2018 tax.

So Chapter 13 is a helpful tool for dealing with taxes you owe for the 2018 tax year. Sometimes it’s even absolutely indispensable—it solves a debt dilemma that appeared otherwise insolvable.

When You Also Owe Income Taxes for Earlier Years

However, Chapter 13 is a particularly powerful tool if you owe not just for 2018 but for other tax years (or year) as well. This is true wherever you stand with the earlier tax debt, whether:

    1. the IRS/state is now aggressively collecting the taxes;
    2. you are currently paying them through an agreed monthly payment plan;
    3. you haven’t yet filed the tax returns for the prior years.

1. Dealing with Aggressive Collection of Earlier Tax Debt

The minute your bankruptcy lawyer files the Chapter 13 case for you all the aggressive tax collection actions will stop. That is the power of bankruptcy’s “automatic stay.” You will have 3 to 5 years to deal with ALL of your debts through a payment plan. This includes all your income taxes. The Chapter 13 payment plan will be based on what you can genuinely afford to pay. You may well not need to pay some of your earlier taxes. You will likely not need to pay any more accruing interest and penalties on ANY of the income taxes. You will not need to worry about tax collections throughout the time you’re in the case—including the recording of tax liens. At the completion of your case you will owe no income taxes.

2. In a Monthly Payment Plan

Are you already in a payment plan with the IRS/state for the prior tax debt?

In most cases, installment plans push you to your financial limits.  The end result is that you probably did not withhold enough to pay your current year taxes.  That digs you into a deeper hole and the IRS could care less.

Furthermore, you know that you’ll violate your installment agreement if you don’t stay current in future income taxes. As stated in IRS Form 9465, the Installment Agreement Request form, “you agree to meet all your future tax obligations.”

Chapter 13 avoids this trouble. As mentioned above, the “automatic stay” immediately protects you from the IRS/state. Your monthly installment plan is cancelled right away. You make no further payments on it once you file you file your Chapter 13 case. All your prior income taxes AND your 2018 one(s) are handled through your Chapter 13 payment plan. You get the financial advantages and the peace-of-mind referenced in the above section. When you successfully complete your Chapter 13 case you’ll be totally free of any tax debt.

3. Not Filing Tax Returns

You may be in the scary situation that you can’t pay your taxes so you don’t file your tax returns.

Or you may be in an installment payment plan and you don’t want to violate it by admitting you owe more for 2018. You know you’ll be in violation of it upon filing the 2018 tax return, so you simply don’t do so.

But you know that not filing your 2018 tax return (and any prior unfiled ones) only delays the inevitable. You’re in a vicious cycle in which you may well be falling further behind instead of getting ahead.

Chapter 13 can likely enable you to break out of that cycle. The vicious cycle is broken because your Chapter 13 budget will also address your 2019 and future income tax situation. It does so because your new budget will include enough withholding or quarterly estimated payments so you can stay current for 2019 and thereafter. Again, you should end the Chapter 13 plan being completely tax-debt free.

Save Your Sole Proprietorship Business through Chapter 13

Posted by Kevin on February 17, 2019 under Bankruptcy Blog | Comments are off for this article

“Adjustment of Debts of an Individual with Regular Income”

That is the formal name given to Chapter 13 of Title 11—the U. S. Bankruptcy Code.

As the word “Individual” indicates, you must be a person to file a Chapter 13 case—a corporation cannot file one. This also applies to a limited liability company (LLC) and other similar types of legal business entities.

But if you have a business which you operate as a sole proprietorship, you and your business can file a Chapter 13 case together.

The assets of your sole proprietor business are simply considered your personal assets. The debts of your business are simply your debts.

This is true even if your business is operated under an assumed business name or d/b/a.

Chapter 13 Helps Your Sole Proprietorship Business in 6 Major Ways

1) Chapter 13 addresses both your business and personal financial problems in one legal and practical package.  You are personally liable on all debts of your sole proprietorship business, as well as, of course, your individual debts. So as long as you qualify for Chapter 13 otherwise, you can simultaneously resolve both your business and personal debts.

2) Chapter 13 stops both business and personal creditors from suing you, placing liens on your assets, and shutting down your business. The “automatic stay” imposed by the filing of your Chapter 13 case stops ALL your creditors from pursuing you, including both business and personal ones. Your personal creditors are prevented from hurting your business, and your business creditors are prevented from taking your personal assets.

3) Chapter 13 enables you to keep whatever business assets you need to keep operating. If you do not file a bankruptcy, and one of either your business or personal creditors gets a judgment against you, it could try to seize your business assets.  Also, if you filed a Chapter 7 “straight bankruptcy,” under most circumstances you could not continue operating your business. However, Chapter 13 is specifically designed to allow you to keep what you need and continue operating your business.

4) Chapter 13 gives you the power to retain business and personal collateral which secure a business debt even if you are behind on payments. Chapter 13 will allow you to pay those arrearages over the term of the Chapter 13 plan which could be between 36-60 months usually with no interest.

5) If you have second or third mortgages of your personal residence which are completely underwater (e.g. residence worth $200,000 subject to a $225,000 first mortgage and a $60,000 home equity loan), Chapter 13 allows you to strip off the second mortgage and treat it like an unsecured date.  That means that the $60,000 second gets paid for pennies on the dollar from your monthly payments to the Chapter 13 trustee.  And if you successfully complete the Plan, the second mortgage must be cancelled of record.

6.  Business owners in financial trouble are generally also in tax trouble. Chapter 13 gives business owners time to pay tax debts that cannot be discharged (permanently written off), all the while keeping the IRS and other tax agencies at bay. Chapter 13 usually stops the accruing of additional penalties and interest, enabling the tax to be paid off much more quickly. Tax liens can be handled especially well. At the end of a successful Chapter 13 case you will have either discharged or paid off all your tax debts, and will be tax-free.

When a Chapter 7 “Straight Bankruptcy” Helps You Enough on Your Home

Posted by Kevin on February 11, 2019 under Bankruptcy Blog | Comments are off for this article

Chapter 13 Is a Powerful Package

If you want to keep your home but are behind on your mortgage payments, a Chapter 13 “adjustment of debts” is often what you need. It comes with an impressive set of tools to address many home debt problems. It gives you more time to catch up on the mortgage, may enable you to “strip” a second or third mortgage off your title, and gives you very helpful ways for dealing with property taxes, income tax liens, judgment liens, and such.

When Chapter 7 is Enough

But what if you have managed to fall only a few months behind on your mortgage, and could afford the payments if you just got relief from your other debts?

Or what if you aren’t even keeping the house, but do need a little more time to find another place to live?

Then you may not need a Chapter 13 case, and could save the extra time and cost that it would take compared to Chapter 7.

Buying Just Enough Time for What You Need

The “automatic stay”—the bankruptcy provision that stops virtually all actions by creditors against you or your property—applies to Chapter 7 just as it does to Chapter 13.  So the filing of a Chapter 7 case stops a foreclosure just as quickly as a Chapter 13 filing.

But Chapter 7 usually buys you much less time than a Chapter 13 could.

If you are not very far behind on your mortgage payment(s) and want to keep your home, when you file a Chapter 7 case your mortgage lenders will usually give you several months to catch up on your back payments. You must immediately start making your regular monthly payments, if you had not been making them, and must enter a strict schedule for catching up on the arrearage. In return the lender agrees to hold off foreclosing, as long as you make the payments as agreed.

Where do you get the money to make these extra payments?  By discharging your pre-petition debt in the Chapter 7, it could free up hundreds of dollars per month.  The key, then, is to make sure that you use that money to pay the mortgage arrearage and not spend it on other items.

If instead, you are not keeping the house but just need to have more time to save money for moving into a rental home, a well-timed Chapter 7 case will buy you more time in your house. During that time you don’t pay mortgage payments, enabling you to get together first and last month’s rent payment, any necessary security deposit and other moving costs.

The tough-to-answer question is how much extra time would a Chapter 7 filing give you. It mostly depends on how aggressive your mortgage company is about trying to start or restart the foreclosure efforts.  A pushy lender could, soon after you file your case, ask the bankruptcy court for “relief from the stay”—permission to start or restart the foreclosure process. If so, then your bankruptcy filing would buy you only an extra month or so.

Or on the other extreme, a mortgage lender could potentially take no action during the 3-4 months or so until your Chapter 7 case is finished. At that point the “automatic stay” protection expires, and the lender can start or restart the foreclosure. Or it may sit on its hands even longer.  Your bankruptcy attorney will likely have some experience in how aggressive your particular mortgage lender is under facts similar to yours.

The Most Important Things to Know If You Get Sued by a Creditor

Posted by on February 4, 2019 under Bankruptcy Blog | Comments are off for this article

 

 

Most debts that people get behind on are at some point—often quite quickly—assigned by the original creditors to collection agencies. This can happen two ways. Either the creditor still owns the rights to the debt and the collection agency simply gets a percentage of what it collects, or the creditor sells all of its rights to the debt to a collection agency and then is legally no longer in the picture.

Either way, the collection agency then tries to get you to pay the debt.  At first—it will tend to  contact you and try to make you pay whatever it can. Depending on the facts of the situation—including whether you have a job or real estate or other assets—the collection agency will then decide whether it’s worth suing you. If you ARE sued, there’s a good chance that the collection agency believes it can force payment from you by garnishing your paycheck or bank account, or by putting a lien on your home or by attaching other assets.

This is a signal you need to pay attention right away.

In fact, the collection agency is banking on you not taking the lawsuit seriously enough. The sad truth is that a large majority of the time people don’t respond to lawsuits so that judgments are entered against them by default.

Don’t assume that there is nothing you can do. Learn your options.  How? Most consumer or bankruptcy attorneys will give you a free consultation.  This consult should provide you with the following:

a) You will understand the consequences of the lawsuit, and your options for dealing with it. Know what your options are instead of assuming you have none.

b) You may have defenses so that you don’t legally owe the debt after all. Collection agencies routinely try to collect debts on which the statute of limitations has expired. They can sue the wrong person. They may include allegations which are not accurate or supported by law.

c) You may have a counterclaim—an argument that the creditor acted illegally in some way and actually owes you money for damages. At the least this could give you leverage to settle the debt under much better terms.

d) Once the time to respond expires and a judgment is entered, it is usually too late to deny the allegations in the complaint.

e) By having an attorney review the lawsuit and your overall debt picture, and discuss your options, you may end up solving deeper problems. Most consumers do not have an attorney who they talk with regularly. So problems accumulate. You don’t have a chance to ask questions when they arise. This often leads to lots of confusion and anxiety. Seeing an attorney about a pending lawsuit could lead to addressing how to improve your entire financial life.

Final advice worth repeating- if you are sued, you must act quickly.  In NJ, you have only 35 days to respond to a lawsuit.

The Four Conditions for Writing Off Income Taxes in Bankruptcy

Posted by on February 1, 2019 under Bankruptcy Blog | Be the First to Comment

The Core Principle Behind the Four Conditions

There is a simple principle behind all four of these conditions: under bankruptcy law taxpayers should be able to write off their tax debts just like the rest of their debts, AFTER the IRS (or other tax authority) has a reasonable length of time to try to collect those taxes.

What’s a reasonable length of time in the eyes of the law?

The four conditions each measure this amount of time differently, based on the following:

1) when the tax return for the particular income tax was due,

2) when the tax return was actually filed,

3) when the tax was “assessed,” and

4) whether the tax return that was filed was honest and therefore reflected the right amount of tax debt when it was filed.

To discharge an income tax debt, it must meet all four of these conditions.

Here they are in order:

1) Three Years Since Tax Return Due:

All income taxes have a fixed due date for its return to be filed. That date may be delayed by a certain number of months if you asked for an extension, but it’s still a specific point in time. This first condition gives the tax authorities three years from the tax return filing date, or from the extended filing date if you asked for an extension. Note that this is fixed date, not affected by when you actually filed the return.

2) Two Years Since Tax Return Actually Filed:

This second condition is different than the first because it is a time period triggered by your own action, your filing of the tax return.

Note that you can file a tax return late and still be able to discharge the debt if at least two years have passed since you filed the return. (Caution: there are some parts of the country where some court opinions have questioned this—be sure to talk with your attorney about the law in your jurisdiction.)

3) 240 Days Since Assessment:

This third condition can be a bit confusing. It very seldom comes into play—most tax debts meet this condition without any problem.

Assessment is the tax authority’s formal determination of your tax liability. It usually happens in a straightforward way, when it receives, processes, and accepts your tax return.

Most of the time an income tax is assessed within a few days or weeks that it is received. So the period of time of 240 days after assessment usually passes long before the above three-years-since-the-return-is-due or two-year-since-tax-return-filed time periods.  Possible exceptions- lengthy audits, litigation or offers in compromise.

4) Fraudulent tax returns and tax evasion:

This last condition effectively means that the above time periods are not triggered at all if you are intentionally dishonest on your tax return or try to avoid paying the tax in some other way.

If your tax debt meets these four hoops, you should be able to discharge that tax in either a Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 bankruptcy.

If You Don’t Meet These Conditions

Then, for the most part, not dischargeable.  That means, not able to be written off.

The “Means Test” Tries to Be Objective

Posted by Kevin on January 28, 2019 under Bankruptcy Blog | Comments are off for this article

In a Chapter 7 bankruptcy, the debtor makes no payments and gets to keep her exempt assets.  For a vast majority of debtors, this means they get to keep all their assets.  The average Chapter 7 is completed in about 4 months

Creditors did not like this and lobbied for 20 years for a major overhaul of consumer bankruptcies.  The result was the 2005 revisions to the Bankruptcy Code which was supposed to force more debtors to file under Chapter 13 where monthly payments of 36-60 months are required.  This was accomplished by imposition of the “means test” -supposedly an objective way to decide who qualifies to file a Chapter 7 bankruptcy.

The “Objective” Rule

If you make under the median income for your State based on household size, you pretty much qualify for Chapter 7.  If your income is above median, you must deduct from your income a combination of actual expenses and average local, State and national expenses to come up with your monthly disposable income.

    1. If your monthly disposable income is less than $128.33, then you pass the means test and qualify for Chapter 7.
    2. If your monthly disposable income is between $128.33 and $214.17, then you go a step further: multiply that “disposable income” amount by 60, and compare that to the total amount of your regular (not “priority”) unsecured debts. If that multiplied disposable income” amount is less than 25% of those debts, then you still pass the “means test” and qualify for Chapter 7.
    3. If EITHER you can pay 25% or more of those debts, OR if your monthly disposable income is $214.17 or more, then you do NOT pass the means test. With rare exceptions, that means that you cannot file under Chapter 7.

There is not much difference between $128.33 per month and $214.17 per month- about $86 per month.  Just enough for dinner for 2 at a decent restaurant.  But at the low end, you can get through bankruptcy in 4 months and make no payments.  At the high end, you make monthly payments for 3 to 5 years.

So where do these hugely important numbers come from?  The Bankruptcy Code actually refers to those numbers multiplied by 60—$7,700 and $12,850. When the law was originally passed in 2005 these amounts were actually $6,000 and $10,000 (therefore, $100 and $167 monthly), but they have been adjusted for inflation since then.

So where did those original $6,000 and $10,000 amounts come from?

They are basically arbitrary.  Maybe creditor lobbyists or congressional staffers floated the idea.  Who knows?   But, somewhere in the process Congress decided that it needed to use certain numbers, and those are the ones that made it into the legislation. It’s the law, regardless that there doesn’t seem to be any real principled reason for using those amounts.

The Bottom Line

Sensible or not, if your income is under the published median income amount, then you pass the “means test” and can proceed under Chapter 7.   But if you are over the median income amount, then the amount of your monthly disposable income largely determines whether you are able to file a Chapter 7 case.

Advantages of Paying Your 2018 Income Tax through Chapter 13

Posted by Kevin on January 21, 2019 under Bankruptcy Blog | Comments are off for this article

Say you owe $8000 on your 2018 federal taxes and have $18000 of credit card debt.  If you file under Chapter 7, you should discharge the $18,000 credit card debt, but you will owe the IRS $8000- and they will come after you.

Chapter 13 can help.

Payment of 2018 Income Taxes in Chapter 13 Case

Chapter 13 is a very flexible procedure, especially appropriate for taking care of income tax debt. If you file in 2019, your plan will include taxes owed in 2018.   In fact, that 2018 taxes (and any other years) income tax MUST be paid in full under the terms of your Chapter 13 plan. But the requirement that you pay that tax in full can be used to your advantage in a Chapter 13.

Basic Benefits

No matter what else is going on in your Chapter 13 case, you get three major benefits for paying your 2018 taxes through it.

1. The IRS (and any applicable state income tax agency) cannot harass you during the repayment process.

2. You have much more flexibility on the terms for paying the 2018 tax, including the ability to delay paying anything while focusing on even higher priorities (such as a home/vehicle/child support arrearage).

3. No additional interest or penalties are added while you are in the Chapter 13 case, so you will pay less while paying off the 2018 tax debt.

Paying Off Your 2018 Tax For Free

Sometimes the fact that you owe some recent income taxes can cost you absolutely nothing beyond what you would have had to pay anyway through your Chapter 13 case. How could this be?

The justification for this comes from the Chapter 13 requirement that you must pay all your “disposable income” into your plan each month during the required period of time. Usually that means that all your creditors are scheduled to receive a certain percent of the debt you owe them.  However,  priority creditors (including taxes) and secured creditors are paid first, and then whatever is left over is divided among the “general unsecured” creditors (credit cards).

An Example

Say you have disposable income of $300 per month, a 3 year plan and general unsecured debts of $18,000.  You have to pay into the plan (assuming no trustee or attorney fees for the sake of simplicity), $10,800 (36 months times $300 per month) which would go to “general unsecured” debts.

But now assume that you have a 2018 income tax debt of $8,000. You would still pay $300 per month for 36 months, but now the $8,000 income tax would be paid out first, reducing the amount paid out to the “general unsecured” creditors.  Those creditors would receive only $2,800 ($10,800 minus $8,000) out of the $18,000 owed to them, and you still get a discharge.

Since those 2018 taxes are not dischargeable, you, are, in effect, paying your taxes off the backs of your unsecured creditors.  And you not only discharge your credit card debt but you paid your taxes in full. Not bad.

Taking Advantage of the Rigidity of the Chapter 7 “Means Test”

Posted by on January 13, 2019 under Bankruptcy Blog | Comments are off for this article

Because of how precisely the amount of your “income” is calculated, filing bankruptcy just a day or two later can make all the difference.

 

Passing the “Means Test”

“Income” for purposes of the Means Test includes income from any source except monies received under the Social Security Act.  It includes income from irregular sources such as child and spousal support payments, insurance settlements, cash gifts from relatives, and unemployment benefits. Also, the Means Test is time-sensitive in that it is based on the amount of money received during precisely the 6 FULL CALENDAR months before the date of filing. This means that your “income” can shift by waiting just a month or two.

Why is the Definition of “Income” for the “Means Test” So Rigid?

One of the much-touted goals of the last major amendments to the bankruptcy law in 2005 was to prevent people from filing Chapter 7 who were considered not deserving. The most direct means to that end was to try to force more people to pay a portion of their debts through Chapter 13 “adjustment of debts” instead of writing them off Chapter 7 “straight bankruptcy.”

The primary tool intended to accomplish this is the “means test,” Its rationale was that instead of allowing judges to decide who was abusing the bankruptcy system, a rigid financial test would determine who had the “means” to pay a meaningful amount to their creditors in a Chapter 13 case, and therefore could not file a Chapter 7 case.

The Unintended Consequences of the “Means Test”

If your income is at or under the applicable median income, then you generally get to file a Chapter 7 case. If your income is higher than the median amount, you may still be able to file a Chapter 7 case but you have to jump through a whole bunch of extra hoops to do so. Having income below the median income amount makes qualifying for Chapter 7 much simpler and less risky.

Filing your case a day earlier or later can matter because of the means test’s fixation on the six prior full calendar months.

So if you receive some irregular chunk of money, it can push you over your applicable median income amount, and jeopardize your ability to qualify for Chapter 7.

An Example

It does not necessarily take a large irregular chunk of money to make this difference, especially if your income without that is already close to the median income amount. An income tax refund, some catch-up child support payments, or an insurance settlement or reimbursement could be enough.

Imagine having received $3,000 catch up support payment on July 15 of last year. Your only other income is from your job, where you make a $42,000 salary, or $3,500 gross per month. Let’s assume the median annual income for your state and family size is $45,000.

So imagine that now in January, 2019,  your Chapter 7 bankruptcy paperwork is ready to file, and you would like to get it filed to get protection from your aggressive creditors. If your case is filed on or before January 31, then the last six full calendar month period would be July 1, 2018 through December 31, 2018. That period includes that $3,000 extra money you received in mid-July. Your work income of 6 times $3,500 equals $21,000, plus the extra $3,000 received, totals $24,000 received during that 6-month period. Multiply that by 2 for the annual amount—$48,000. Since that’s larger than the applicable $45,000 median income, you would have failed the income portion of the “means test.”

But if you just wait to file until February 1, then the applicable 6-month period jumps forward by one full month to the period from August 1 of last year through January 31 of this year.  That new period no longer includes the $3,000 you received in mid-July. So your income during the 6-month period is $21,000, multiplied by 2 is $42,000. This results in your income being less than the $45,000 median income amount. You’ve now passed the “means test,” and qualified for Chapter 7.