Save Your Sole Proprietorship Business through Chapter 13
“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.