Posted by Kevin on August 3, 2017 under Bankruptcy Blog |
You can usually change from an ongoing straight Chapter 7 case into a Chapter 13 payment plan. But getting out of bankruptcy altogether is generally not allowed.
Most Chapter 7 cases are finished in about 3 months. For the most part, the bankruptcy trustee determines that everything you own is covered by property exemptions, so you get to keep it all—the trustee has “no assets for a meaningful distribution to the creditors.” You get your deb discharged and your case is closed. Not much time for your circumstances to change.
But sometimes things happen. Things do in fact change. Your uncle dies unexpectedly and even more unexpectedly you get a chunk of an inheritance. Or you find out you have an asset you didn’t know about. Or something you own is worth much more than you expected. Or you run up a major medical expense right after filing. So now you don’t want to be in the Chapter 7 case, or maybe not in that Chapter 7 case. What can you do?
Common sensically, you figure you can either end your case or switch it to some other kind of bankruptcy.
Dismissal of a Chapter 7 Case
But unlike Chapter 13, you don’t have a right to just end—“dismiss”—a Chapter 7 case.
Why not? You filed the case; why can’t you just end it?
Because the Bankruptcy Code does not give you that right. The theory is that if you submit yourself, and your assets, to the bankruptcy court in order to get the benefits you want from it—immediate protection from your creditors and a discharge (legal write-off) of all or most of your debts—then you’ve got to live with the consequences.
It’s as if you’ve created a new legal person—your “bankruptcy estate”—with the Chapter 7 trustee in charge of it. This new “person” does have a life of its own of sorts, and doesn’t disappear just because you change your mind.
That doesn’t mean you can’t ever get the court to dismiss your case. It just means that you have to have a really good reason. One that doesn’t just benefit you, but also your creditors.
Getting out of a Chapter 7 is a “depends-on-the-circumstances” situation. Honestly, having an experienced attorney at your side would be critical for knowing what to do if this kind of thing happened to you.
Conversion of a Chapter 7 Case
Changing your case from a Chapter 7 before it’s done into a Chapter 13 is much easier. The Bankruptcy Code says that the “debtor may convert a case under this chapter [7] to a case under chapter… 13… at any time, if the case has not been [already] converted… .” (Section 706(a).)
To do so, you do have to qualify for Chapter 13. Among other requirements, this means:
1) you can’t have more debt than certain limits—$394,725 in unsecured debts and $1,184,200 in secured debts (until these amounts are revised as of 4/01/13) (Section 109(e)); and
2) you must be an “individual with regular income,” meaning that your “income is sufficiently stable and regular to enable [you] to make payments under a [Chapter 13] plan.” (Sections 109(e) and 101(30).)
Whether or not you’d want to convert from Chapter 7 to Chapter 13 depends—naturally—on the circumstances. At first blush, changing from what you might have expected to be a three-month procedure into one that will likely take three years or more probably doesn’t sound so good. But if you are converting the case to preserve an asset, or to deal with a special creditor, Chapter 13 can be a very good tool for these purposes.
If either your financial circumstances significantly change after your Chapter 7 case is filed, or your case proceeds in an unexpected direction, Chapter 13 may have actually have been your better alternative at the outset. And if not, it can be a very sensible second choice.
Posted by Kevin on July 25, 2017 under Bankruptcy Blog |
How can you tell if your Chapter 7 case will be straightforward? Avoid 4 problems.
Most Chapter 7 cases ARE straightforward. Your bankruptcy documents are prepared by your attorney and filed at court, about a month later you go to a simple 10-minute hearing with your attorney, and then two more months later your debts are discharged—written off. There’s a lot going on behind the scenes but that’s usually the gist of it.
But some cases ARE more complicated. How can you tell if your case will likely be straightforward or instead will be one of the relatively few more complicated ones?
The four main problem areas are: 1) income, 2) assets, 3) creditor challenges, and 4) trustee challenges.
1) Income
Most people filing under Chapter 7 have less income than the median income amounts for their state and family size. That enables them to easily pass the “means test.” But if instead you made or received too much money during the precise period of 6 full calendar months before your case is filed, you can be disqualified from Chapter 7. Or you may have to jump through some more complicated steps to establish that you are not “abusing” Chapter 7. Otherwise you could be forced into a 3-to-5 year Chapter 13 case or your case could be dismissed—thrown out of court. These results can sometimes be avoided with careful timing of your case, or even by making change to your income before filing.
2) Assets
Under Chapter 7 if you have an asset which is not protected (“exempt”), the Chapter 7 trustee can take and sell that asset, and pay the proceeds to the creditors. You may be willing to surrender a particular asset you don’t need in return for the discharge of your debts. That could especially be true if the trustee would use those proceeds in part to pay a debt that you want and need to be paid anyway, such as back payments of child support or income taxes. Or you may want to pay off the trustee through monthly payments in return for the privilege of keeping that asset. In these “asset” scenarios, there are complications not present in the more common “no asset” cases.
3) Creditor Challenges to the Dischargeability of a Debt
Creditors have a limited right to raise objections to the discharge of their individual debts. This is limited to grounds such as fraud, misrepresentation, theft, intentional injury to person or property, and similar bad acts. With most of these, the creditor must raise such objections to dischargeability within about three months of the filing of your Chapter 7 case—precisely 60 days after your “Meeting of Creditors.” Once that deadline passes your creditors can no longer complain, assuming that they received notice of your bankruptcy case.
4) Trustee Challenges to the Discharge of All Debts
In rare circumstances, such as if you do not disclose all your assets or fail to answer other questions accurately, either in writing or orally at the trustee’s Meeting of Creditors, or if you don’t cooperate with the trustee’s review of your financial circumstances, you could possibly lose the right to discharge any of your debts. The bankruptcy system largely relies on the honesty and accuracy of debtors. So it is quite harsh towards those who abuse the system through deceit.
No Surprises
Most of the time, Chapter 7s are straightforward. The most important thing you can do towards that end is to be completely honest and thorough with your attorney during your meetings and through the information and documents you provide. That way you will find out if there are likely to be any complications, and if so whether they can be avoided, or, if not, how they can be addressed in the best way possible.
Posted by Kevin on July 2, 2017 under Bankruptcy Blog |
Here are some of the other main advantages of Chapter 13:
1. You can keep your possessions that are not protected by property “exemptions,” preventing a Chapter 7 trustee from taking them from you. Thus you retain much more control over the process of saving your assets, avoiding the unknowns of negotiating payment terms with a Chapter 7 trustee in order to keep your non-exempt possessions. Also, in a Chapter 13 case, you have 3 to 5 years to pay to protect such possessions, instead of the few months that Chapter 7 trustees generally allow.
2. Similarly, if you fell behind in payments on your home’s first mortgage, you have the length of your plan—the same 3 to 5 years–to catch up. That’s in contrast to the few months of payments that a mortgage lender would generally allow if you negotiated directly with it after filing a Chapter 7 case.
3. You may be able to “strip” a second (or third) mortgage from your home’s title, and avoid paying all or most of that mortgage. This can happen if the value of your home is less than the balance of your first mortgage. Mortgage “stripping” may save you hundreds of dollars per month. This is completely unavailable in a Chapter 7 case.
4. You may be eligible for “cramdown” of your vehicle loan. If you purchased and financed your vehicle more than two and a half years before filing your Chapter 13 case, and the vehicle is worth less than the balance on the loan, your monthly payments and the total amount you pay for your vehicle can be significantly reduced. In contrast, in a Chapter 7 straight bankruptcy case you are usually almost always stuck with the monthly payment and loan balance dictated by the vehicle loan contract.
5. In that same situation, if you are behind on the vehicle loan payments you don’t have to catch up those back payments over a few months. In a Chapter 7 case, almost always you must quickly pay off any arrearage if you want to keep the vehicle.
6. If you owe an ex-spouse non-support obligations, you can discharge (write-off) them under Chapter 13—not under Chapter 7. Non-support obligations include requirements in a divorce decree to pay off a joint marital debt or to pay the ex-spouse in return for getting more of the marital property. Discharging such debts can make a huge difference, often making Chapter 13 well worthwhile.
7. If you have any student loans, under Chapter 13, you can apply for an income driven repayment plan for federal loans and reduce payment on private loans. In most cases, you are not going to discharge those loans, but you will be able to make affordable payments while in the Chapter 13 plan. Also, you can use the payment history in Chapter 13 as a basis to qualify for a “hardship discharge” of your student loans. For more information on student loan debt, please join us on www.studentdebtnj.com.
People often assume they need and want a regular Chapter 7 bankruptcy, and it’s often exactly what they do need. But the above short list gives you some idea of the benefits of Chapter 13 that may make it a much better option. That’s one of the reasons you should talk with an experienced bankruptcy attorney, and do so with an open mind. That’s because sometimes Chapter 13 can give you a huge unexpected advantage, or a series of smaller advantages, which may swing your decision in that direction.
Posted by Kevin on June 28, 2017 under Bankruptcy Blog |
Here are 3 scenarios where a debtor tries to save his or her home. When is Chapter 7 “straight bankruptcy” enough, and when do you need Chapter 13 “adjustment of debts”?
Scenario #1: Current on Your Home Mortgage(s), Behind on Other Debts
Chapter 7: Would likely discharge (legally write off) most if not all of your other debts, freeing up cash flow so that you can make your house payments. Stops those other debts from turning into judgments and liens against your home.
Chapter 13: Same benefits as Chapter 7, plus often a better way to deal with many other special debts, such as income taxes, back support payments, and vehicle loans. May be able to “strip” (permanently get rid of) a 2nd or 3rd mortgage, so that you would not have to make that monthly payment, and paying little or nothing on the balance during the case and then discharging any remaining balance at the successful completion of your case.
Scenario #2. Not Current on Home Mortgage(s) But Only a Few Payments Behind & No Pending Foreclosure
Chapter 7: May buy you enough time to get current on your mortgage, if you’ve slipped only two or three payments behind. Most mortgage companies and their servicers (the people you actually interact with) will agree to give you several months—generally up to a year—to catch up on your mortgage arrearages. Generally called a “forbearance agreement”—lender agrees to “forbear” from foreclosing as long as you make the agreed payments. Works only if you have an unusual source of money (a generous relative or a pending legal settlement that’s exempt from the other creditors), or if filing Chapter 7 will stop enough money going to other creditors so you will have enough monthly cash flow to pay off the mortgage arrearages quickly.
Chapter 13: Even if only a few thousand dollars behind on your mortgage, you may not have enough extra money each month after filing a Chapter 7 case to catch up quickly on that mortgage arrearages. If lender is inflexible about giving you more time to catch up, a Chapter 13 case forces them to accept a much longer period to do so—three to five years.
Scenario #3. Many Payments Behind on Your Mortgage(s):
Chapter 7: Not helpful here. Buys at best only two to three months or so. Also, no possibility of “stripping”a 2nd or 3rd mortgage.
Chapter 13: Assumes that you can at least make the regular mortgage payment consistently, along with the arrearages catch-up payments. As stated above, gives you up to five years to pay off the mortgage arrearages, Your home is protected from foreclosure as long as you maintain the agreed Chapter 13 Plan and mortgage payments. Does not enable you to reduce the first mortgage payment amount, although in some situations you may be able to “strip” your 2nd or 3rd mortgage.
In my 30+ years of experience as a bankruptcy attorney, have seen Scenario #1 only once (was a close friend and he is still in his home). Usually see Scenario #3 because most debtors do not seek counsel until they are really “in the hole”. Be smart. When things start to go south, call an experienced bankruptcy attorney to learn your options.
Posted by Kevin on June 20, 2017 under Bankruptcy Blog |
Can you really keep everything you own if you file bankruptcy? The Answer: Usually Yes.
Some basics.
There are two basic types of consumer bankruptcies. Chapter 7 is an asset based approach. The Chapter 7 trustee sells your “non-exempt” property and pays your creditors. Chapter 13 is an income based approach where you generally keep your assets but have to make payments to your creditors over a 36-60 month period.
There are two types of creditors: secured creditors (they took collateral as a condition of granting you credit, and can look to the collateral to be paid even after the bankruptcy), and unsecured creditors (basically no collateral).
The purpose of bankruptcy is to give an honest debtor a fresh start. That means that most, if not all, of your debts are discharged, and you can keep all or most of your property.
Now how is that accomplished.
In a Chapter 13, as stated above, you keep the property you want to keep in exchange for making payments over the term of 36-60 months.
In a Chapter 7 “straight bankruptcy,” your debts are discharged—legally written off forever—in return for you giving your unprotected assets to your creditors (as represented by the bankruptcy trustee). But here is the good part: for most people, all or most of their assets ARE protected, or “exempt.” from the trustee and your creditors. Why? The fresh start.
Property Exemptions- The Basics
- The Bankruptcy Code has a set of federal exemptions, and each state also has its own exemptions. In some states you have a choice between using the federal exemptions or the state exemptions, while in other states you are only permitted to use the state exemptions. In New Jersey, we can use either. In many states, choosing which of the two exemption schemes is better for you is often not clear. However, in New Jersey, debtors generally use the federal exemptions. Why? Because many of the New Jersey exemptions were created by statute about 100 year ago or more, and were not adjusted for inflation. Moreover, New Jersey has no homestead exemption.
- If you have moved relatively recently from another state, you may have to use the exemption rules of your prior state. Because different state’s exemption types and amounts can differ widely, thousands of dollars can be at stake depending on when your bankruptcy case is filed.
- In some circumstances, it is not clear how the federal exemptions will be applied. What if you own a car and you owe $10,000 on your car loan. Clearly, the bank (secured lender) has an interest as do you. But, the trustee also may be able to make a claim to part of the value to the car, and sell it.
Navigating through exemptions can be much more complicated than it looks, and is one of the most important services provided by your bankruptcy attorney. It can maximize the amount of property you keep after receiving your bankruptcy discharge.
Posted by Kevin on June 15, 2017 under Bankruptcy Blog |
Bankruptcy is about Discharge
The point of bankruptcy is to get you a fresh financial start through the legal discharge of your debts.
Both kinds of consumer bankruptcy—Chapter 7 “straight bankruptcy” and Chapter 13 “adjustment of debts”—can discharge debts.
This blog post focuses on Chapter 7 discharge of debts.
What Debts Get Discharged?
Is there a simple way of knowing what debts will and will not be discharged in a Chapter 7 case?
Yes and no.
We CAN give you a list of the categories of debts that can’t, or might not, be discharged (see below). But some of those categories are not always clear which situations they include and which they don’t. Sometimes whether a debt is discharged or not depends on whether the creditor challenges the discharge of the debt, on how hard it fights for this, and then on how a judge might rule.
Why Can’t It Be Simpler?
Laws in general are often not straightforward, both because life can get complicated and because laws are usually compromises between competing interests. Bankruptcy laws, and those about which debts can be discharged, are the result of a constant political tug of war between creditors and debtors. There have been lots of compromises, which has resulted in a bunch of hair-splitting laws.
Rules of Thumb
Here are the basics:
#1: All debts are discharged, EXCEPT those that fit within a specified exception.
#2: There are quite a few of exceptions, and they may sound like they exclude many kinds of debts from being discharged. It may also seem like it’s hard to know if you will be able to discharge all your debts. But it’s almost always much easier than all that. As long as you are thorough and candid with your attorney, he or she will almost always be able to tell you whether you have any debts that will not, or may not, be discharged. Most of the time there are no surprises.
#3: Some types of debts are never discharged. Examples are child or spousal support, criminal fines and fees, and withholding taxes.
#4: Some other types of debts are never discharged, but only if the debt at issue fits certain conditions. An example is income tax, with the discharge of a particular tax debt depending on conditions like how long ago those taxes were due and when its tax return was received by the taxing authority.
#5: Some debts are discharged, unless timely challenged by the creditor, followed by a judge’s ruling that the debt met certain conditions involving fraud, misrepresentation, larceny, embezzlement, or intentional injury to person or property.
#6: A few debts can’t be discharged in Chapter 7, BUT can be in Chapter 13. An example is an obligation arising out of a divorce other than support (which can never be discharged).
The Bottom Line
#1: For most people the debts they want to discharge WILL be discharged. #2: An experienced bankruptcy attorney will usually be able to predict whether all of your debts will be discharged. #3: If you have debts that can’t be discharged, Chapter 13 is often a decent way to keep those under control.
Posted by Kevin on June 9, 2017 under Bankruptcy Blog |
How does bankruptcy stop garnishments, foreclosures, and repossessions?
Filing a bankruptcy case gets immediate protection for you, for your paycheck, for your home, and for all your possessions. This “automatic stay” provides this kind of protection for you and your property the moment either a Chapter 7 “straight bankruptcy” case or a Chapter 13 “adjustment of debts” case is filed. Virtually all efforts by all your creditors against you or anything you own comes to an immediate stop.
“Automatic Stay” = Immediate Stop
“Stay” is simply a legal word meaning “stop” or “freeze.”
“Automatic” means that this “stay” goes into effect immediately upon the filing of your bankruptcy petition. That filing itself, according to the federal Bankruptcy Code, “operates as a stay” of virtually all creditors’ actions to pursue a debt or take possession of collateral. Since the filing of your case itself imposes the stay, there is no delay or doubt about whether a judge will sign an order to impose the “stay” against your creditors.
Creditors Need to Be Informed, Sometimes Directly
Although the protection of the “automatic stay” is imposed instantaneous, practically speaking your creditors need to be informed about the filing of your case so that they are made aware that they must comply with it. If your creditors are all listed in your bankruptcy case documents, they should all get informed by the bankruptcy court within about a week or so after your case is filed. This doesn’t take any additional action by either you or your attorney (beyond making sure all of your creditors are listed in the schedule of creditors filed at the bankruptcy court). If you have no reason to expect any action against you by any of your creditors before that, just letting them all be informed by the court is usually all that’s needed.
However, if you are expecting some action by any of your creditors quicker than a week or so after filing the case, be sure to talk with your attorney about it. That way any such creditor can be directly informed by about your bankruptcy filing to stop whatever collection action it was contemplating. Make sure you and your attorney are clear which of you is informing that creditor and in what way.
Creditor Action Taken Unexpectedly
But what if a creditor has not yet been informed of your bankruptcy filing when it takes some action against you or your property in the days after your bankruptcy filing but before it finds out about it?
If this happens, the “automatic stay” is so powerful that in most circumstances such a creditor must undo whatever action it took against you after your bankruptcy was filed, even if this creditor honestly did not yet know about your filing. For example, if after your bankruptcy is filed a creditor files a lawsuit against you or gets a judgment on a lawsuit that it had filed earlier, the creditor must dismiss (throw out) its lawsuit or vacate (erase) the judgment.
Posted by Kevin on June 7, 2017 under Bankruptcy Blog |
Chasing a Discharged Debt is a Violation of Federal Law
The Bankruptcy Code makes it perfectly clear that for a creditor to try to collect on a debt after it is discharged under either Chapter 7 “straight bankruptcy” or Chapter 13 “adjustment of debts” is illegal. Section 524 of the Bankruptcy Code is about the legal effect of a discharge of debt. Subsection (a)(2) of that section says that a discharge of debts in a bankruptcy “operates as an injunction against” any acts to collect debts included in that bankruptcy case. Acts explicitly stated as illegal include:
the commencement or continuation of an action, the employment of process, or an act, to collect, recover or offset any such debt as a personal liability of the debtor.
In other words, the creditor can’t start or continue a lawsuit or any legal procedure against you, and can’t act in any other way to collect the debt.
What If a Creditor Violates This Injunction?
Nowhere in Section 524 of the Code does it say anything about what happens if a creditor violates the law by disregarding that injunction. The section does not clearly say what, if anything, the penalties are for a creditor caught doing so.
However, even though no penalties are specified in THAT section, there is a strong consensus among courts all over the country that bankruptcy courts can penalize creditors for violating the discharge injunction through another section of the Bankruptcy Code, Section 105, titled “Power of Court.” The idea is that the injunction against pursuing a discharged debt is a court order, and so a creditor violating it is in contempt of court. So the usual penalties for those who act in civil contempt of court apply.
Penalties Assessed Against Violating Creditors
These penalties for civil contempt can include “compensatory” damages and “punitive” damages.
Compensatory damages are intended to compensate you for harm you suffered because of the creditor’s violation of the injunction. These potentially include actual damages such as time lost from work or other financial losses, emotional distress caused by the illegal action against you, and attorney fees and costs you’ve incurred as a result.
Punitive damages are to punish the creditor for its illegal behavior. So the judge looks at how bad the creditor’s behavior was in determining whether punitive damages are appropriate and how much to award.
Conclusion
The vast majority of the time creditors in a bankruptcy case write the debts off their books and you never hear about those debts again. But even though it’s illegal for creditors to try to collect on a debt that’s been legally written off in bankruptcy, once in a while they do try. Some creditors don’t keep good records or simply aren’t all that serious about following the law.
So after you receive your bankruptcy discharge, if you hear from one of your old creditors trying to collect its debt contact your attorney right away. This needs immediate attention. If the creditor’s behavior is particularly egregious, you and your attorney should discuss whether to strike back at the creditor for violating the law. There might possibly even be some money in it for you.
Posted by Kevin on May 31, 2017 under Bankruptcy Blog |
The Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978, referred to as the Bankruptcy Code, provided that student loans made by a governmental unit or a non profit institution of higher education was not dischargeable in bankruptcy unless (a) the loan became due before five years before the date of the filing of the petition (in plain English, after 5 years of payments), or (b) if not discharging the loan imposed an undue hardship on the debtor or the debtor’s dependents. Note, private student loans were dischargeable under the 1978 statute. Many students took advantage of the ability to discharge their student loans after five years.
Since in the 1970’s and 1980’s student loans were to be repaid in 10 years, many said that it was unfair to allow students, in effect, to wipe half their debt obligation by filing bankruptcy. So, in the latter part of the 1980’s, the statute was amended to require 7 years of payments or undue hardship. In 1998, Congress amended that statute again to limit the discharge of student loans only to cases where the debtor could demonstrate undue hardship. In the meanwhile, the regulations relating to federal loans started to allow more flexibility in paying back student loans based on the borrower’s income. Those income driven repayment plans morphed into today’s IBR, ICR and REPAY programs.
In 2005, once again, there were major amendments to the Bankruptcy Code under BAPCPA which states for the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act (still trying to figure out where the consumer protection comes in). Under BAPCPA, a debtor cannot get a discharge of a student loan unless the debtor can demonstrate an undue hardship on the debtor and the debtor’s dependents. The types of student loans that are not dischargeable included the following:
1. loans made, issued or guaranteed by a governmental unit;
2. made by any program funded in whole or part by a governmental unit or non-profit institution: or
3. any other educational loan that is a qualified education loan, as defined in section 221(d)(1) of the Internal Revenue Code, incurred by the debtor who is an individual.
Since many private loans are qualified education loans under the Internal Revenue Codes, private lenders received a windfall under BAPCPA- their loans became non-dischargeable but the private lender was not required to provide income driven repayment plans.
It is difficult to get a undue hardship discharge. You must file an adversary proceeding (lawsuit) in the bankruptcy. The test used by the bankruptcy court in New Jersey to determine undue hardship is called the “Brunner test”, and consists of the following:
1. Based on current income and expenses, the debtor cannot maintain a “minimal” standard of living for the himself and the his dependents if forced to repay the student loans;
2. Circumstances exist which indicate that the debtor’s economic situation is likely to persist for a significant portion of the repayment period of the loan(s); and
3. The debtor has made good faith efforts to repay the loan(s).
The Court has wide latitude in either granting or withholding a discharge to student loans. It also means that if you lose at the trial level, it is very difficult to get the decision overturned on appeal. Obtaining a discharge of a student loan under the Bankruptcy Code is an expensive and not always successful way to deal with student loan debt. However, given the right set of circumstances, it can eliminate your student debt.
Because of the difficulties of proving undue hardship, student loan lawyers have developed various strategies outside of bankruptcy arena to deal with the ever increasing problem of repaying your student loans. I welcome you to visit my student loan website (http://studentdebtnj.com) which provides more options in dealing with your student loan debt.
Posted by Kevin on May 30, 2017 under Bankruptcy Blog |
Most people considering Chapter 7 “straight bankruptcy” have low enough income to qualify. Find out if you do.
The “Means” Part of the “Means Test”
When Congress passed the last major set of changes to the bankruptcy laws in 2005, it explicitly said that wanted to make it harder for some people to file Chapter 7. The idea was that those who have the means to pay a significant amount of their debts should do so. Specifically, those who can pay a certain amount to their creditors within a three-to-five-year Chapter 13 payment plan ought to do so, instead of just being able to write off all their debts in a Chapter 7 case.
How the Law Determines Whether You Have Too Much “Means”
The “means test” measures people’s “means” in a peculiar, two-part way, the first part based on income, the second part based on expenses.
The income part is relatively straightforward; the expense part involves an amazingly complicated formula of allowed expenses.
The good news is that if your income is low enough on the income part of the “means test,” then you’re done: you’ve passed the test and can skip the rest of the test. The other good news is that most people who want to file a Chapter 7 case DO have low enough income so that they do pass the “means test” based simply on their income.
Is YOUR Income Low Enough to Pass the “Means Test”?
Your income is low enough if it is no higher than the published “median income” for a household of your size in your state. You can look at your “median income” on https://www.justice.gov/ust/means-testing.
A Peculiar Definition of “Income”
Here’s what you need to know to compare your “income” (as used for this purpose) to the “median income” applicable to your state and family size:
1. Determine the exact amount of “income” you received during the SIX FULL calendar months before your bankruptcy case is filed. It’s easiest to explain this by example: if your Chapter 7 case is to be filed in July, 2017 , count every dollar you received during the six-month period from January 1,, 2017 through June 30, 2017. After coming up with that six-month total, divide it by six for the monthly average.
2.When adding up your “income” include all that you’ve acquired from all sources during that six-month period of time, including unconventional sources like child and spousal support payments, insurance settlements, unemployment benefits, and bonuses. But EXCLUDE any income from Social Security.
3. Multiply your six-month average monthly income by 12 for your annual income. Compare that amount to the published median income for your state and your size of family in the link provided above. (Make sure you’re using the current table.)
Conclusion
If your “income”—calculated in the precise way detailed here—is no more than the median income for your state and family size, then you have passed the “means test” and can file a Chapter 7 case.
But if your income is higher than that, you may still be able to pass the “means test” and file a Chapter 7 case. That is a little more complicated, however.
Posted by Kevin on May 27, 2017 under Bankruptcy Blog |
If you borrowed money to purchase your motor vehicle, you have signed a promissory note which is an obligation to pay the loan debt. You also gave to the lender a lien of your vehicle. In bankruptcy, your lender is known as a secured creditor. Although the underlying debt may be discharged in bankruptcy, the lien passes through the bankruptcy because it is a property right. That means that the lender can always foreclose on the lien if you do not make payments.
The Bankruptcy Trustee Only Cares about Equity Beyond Any Exemption
In a Chapter 7 case you have two people besides you who could be interested in your vehicle. Clearly, the lender is interested. But also, the bankruptcy trustee will become interested if there is equity in the vehicle that exceeds the amount of the exemption. In New Jersey, the vast majority of debtors use the federal exemption which is $3775. There is seldom too much equity if you owe on a vehicle, but check with your attorney to make sure this is not an issue in your case.
Dealing with the Lender-
Surrender
You may not want to keep your vehicle for a multitude of reasons. Or you may not be in a position to make the vehicle loan current within a short time after the bankruptcy filing. If you just surrendered your vehicle without a bankruptcy, you’ll very likely owe and be sued for the “deficiency balance” (amount of loan plus all repo and sale costs minus the sales price). Especially in auction situations, that deficiency balance is often much higher than you expect. Surrendering the vehicle in your Chapter 7 bankruptcy eliminates the deficiency scenario. Indeed, that is a common purpose for filing bankruptcy.
Reaffirm
If you want to keep your vehicle, generally you must be either current on your loan or able to get current within about 30 to 60 days after filing the Chapter 7 case. In New Jersey, you are required to sign a reaffirmation agreement, which legally excludes the vehicle loan from the discharge (the legal write-off) of the rest of your debts. Then you have to stay current if you want to keep the car. Remember, because the vehicle loan was not discharged in the bankruptcy, if you miss payments, the lender can repossess the car, sell it at auction and come after you for any deficiency. So talk to your attorney and think carefully about the risks before reaffirming your vehicle loan.
Redeem
You can keep your vehicle if you redeem by paying to the secured creditor the vehicle’s current replacement value (what you would pay a retail dealer for a vehicle of comparable age and condition). I mention this in passing because in over 30 years of filing Chapter 7’s, I have never had a client who redeemed a motor vehicle. Why? Given the price of motor vehicles these days, it takes thousands of dollars to redeem and most of my clients would not have filed bankruptcy if they had a spare $5-10,000 of cash laying around. But, in theory, you could do it.
Conclusion
Usually “straight bankruptcy”—Chapter 7—works best way if your vehicle situation is pretty straightforward: you either want to surrender a vehicle, or else you want to hang onto it. Chapter 7 gives you these options.
Posted by Kevin on May 23, 2017 under Bankruptcy Blog |
In a Chapter 7 bankruptcy, the trustee sells non-exempt assets to pay your creditors. The Code provides certain dollar limit exemptions for your home, car, household items and the like. The problem for some debtors is that Chapter 7 may not exempt all their assets. Chapter 13 is often an excellent way to keep possessions that are not “exempt”—which are worth too much or have too much equity so that their value exceeds the allowed exemption, or that simply don’t fit within any available exemption.
Options Other Than Chapter 13
If you want to protect possessions which are not exempt, you may have some choices besides Chapter 13.
You could just go ahead and file a Chapter 7 case and surrender the non-exempt asset to the trustee. This may be a sensible choice if that asset is something you don’t really need, such as equipment or inventory from a business that you’ve closed. Surrendering an asset under Chapter 7 may also make sense if you have “priority” debts that you want and need to be paid—such as recent income taxes or back child support—which the Chapter 7 trustee would pay with the proceeds of sale of your surrendered asset(s), ahead of the other debts.
There are also asset protection techniques—such as selling or encumbering those assets before filing the bankruptcy, or negotiating payment terms with the Chapter 7 trustee —which are delicate procedures beyond the scope of this blog post.
Chapter 13 Non-Exempt Asset Protection
Under Chapter 13 you can keep that asset by paying over time for the privilege of keeping it. Your attorney simply calculates your Chapter 13 plan so that your creditors receive as much as they would have received if you would have surrendered that asset to a Chapter 7 trustee.
For example, if you own a free and clear vehicle worth $3,000 more than the applicable exemption, you would pay that amount into your plan (in addition to amounts being paid to secured creditors such as back payments on your mortgage). You would have 3 to 5 years—the usual span of a Chapter 13 case—throughout which time you’d be protected from your creditors. Your asset-protection payments are spread out over this length of time, making it relatively easy and predictable to pay.
It gets better-in some Chapter 13s you can retain your non-exempt assets without paying anything more to your creditors than if you did not have any assets to protect. If you owe recent income taxes and/or back support payments (or any other special “priority” debts which must be paid in full in a Chapter 13 case), you can use these debts to your advantage. Since in a Chapter 7 case such “priority” debts would be paid in full before other creditors would receive any proceeds of the sale of any surrendered assets, if the amount of such “priority” debts are more than the asset value you are seeking to protect, you may well only need to pay enough into your Chapter 13 case to pay off these “priority” debts.
This is in contrast to negotiating with a Chapter 7 trustee to pay to keep an asset, in which you would usually have less time to pay it and less predictability as to how much you’d have to pay.
Chapter 7 vs. Chapter 13 Asset Protection
Whether the asset(s) that you are protecting is worth the additional time and expense of a Chapter 13 case depends on the importance of that asset, and other factors. Generally, this is not a DIY project. You need to speak with competent bankruptcy counsel to review your options
Posted by Kevin on May 10, 2017 under Bankruptcy Blog |
When you’d like to favor certain important debts over others, often Chapter 13 makes this possible.
Using the Bankruptcy Laws to Your Advantage
One of the basic principles of bankruptcy is that you usually can’t favor one debt over your other debts. However, under the Bankruptcy Code, certain creditors are recognized to be legally different. For example, secured creditors have rights over your property that you’ve given as collateral, rights that unsecured creditors don’t have. Also, bankruptcy does not discharge (write off) certain debts. These include child support, many types of taxes and many student loans, and certain other debts. These can’t be discharged while most debts can.
Chapter 13 requires that you treat certain debts differently- and that can be to your advantage.
Here are two good examples.
Catching up on Your Mortgage Arrearage
The law highly favors residential mortgage debts, especially your primary mortgage. Why? The policy reason is that these lenders should be protected in bankruptcy to lessen their risks. Arguably this encourages more investment in the residential mortgage capital markets which makes mortgages more readily available to homeowners.
So, if you were behind on your home mortgage and wanted to keep the home, you’d have to catch up. That is referred to in the Chapter 13 context as paying the mortgage arrearage. You can’t escape doing so just because the home is worth less than the debt (as you often can with a vehicle loan).
In a Chapter 13, you have up to 60 months to pay your mortgage arrearage. In New Jersey, those payments are made to the trustee while you make your regular mortgage payments going forward directly to the lender or servicer. As long as you make these payments, the automatic stay remains in effect and your mortgage lender cannot file a foreclosure. Moreover, the lender cannot demand payments that exceed 1/60 of the arrearage (assuming a 5 year plan) and cannot add late or other fees.
Child Support Arrearage
Another kind of debt that is highly favored in the law is child support. As a result, if you get behind on support payments, the collection procedures that can be used against you are extremely aggressive. In New Jersey, you can go to jail, have your driver’s license suspended or have a professional license suspended.
Chapter 7 provides no direct help if you owe back support. The “automatic stay” that protects you from other creditors does not even apply to support debt under Chapter 7. This means that the aggressive collections can just continue; the bankruptcy filing has no effect on it.
But a Chapter 13 is very different. The “automatic stay” does protect you and your property from collection of the support arrearage. You ARE protected from support collections, as long as you follow some strict rules. After the Chapter 13 filing, you must pay ongoing regular support payments, and your Chapter 13 plan payments. In addition, you have to pay off the entire support arrearage before completing the case (up to 60 months).
Posted by Kevin on April 24, 2017 under Bankruptcy Blog |
A business Chapter 13 case does not have to be complicated. Here’s how it can work.
It’s true that if you own a business that usually means you have a more complicated financial picture than someone punching a time clock or getting a regular salary. So usually if does take more time for an attorney to determine whether and how bankruptcy could help you and your business. But saving a business in the right circumstances can be relatively straightforward and extremely effective.
A good way to demonstrate this is by walking through a realistic Chapter 13 “adjustment of debts” case.
Mike’s Story
Mike, a single 32-year old, started a handyman business when he lost his job a little more than three years ago. A hard worker and self-starter, he’d been itching to run his own business. He had decent credit at the time, owing nothing except his modest mortgage that he had never been late on plus about $2,800 spread out on a number of credit cards. Mike had always lived in the same area along with most of his extended family, so he had tons of contacts, and had a great reputation as a responsible guy who could fix anything. So Mike decided to take the risk of starting his business in spite of having very little working capital. He had $8,500 of credit available on his credit cards if he got desperate.
His business started off slowly, partly because he didn’t have the cash to invest in advertising. But he was creative in setting up a website and using social media, and worked very hard building a customer base and a good business reputation. His income crept steadily upwards, but way too slowly. Over the course of the first year, Mike maxed out his credit cards to keep current on his mortgage, feed himself, and keeps the lights on. But he simply didn’t have enough money to pay any estimated quarterly income taxes to the IRS, falling behind $3,500 to them that year.
Then during the second year of his business, Mike managed to keep current on the increased payments on his credit card debts but couldn’t pay them down any. Plus he fell behind another $6,000 in income taxes. Then recently, towards the end of his third year of business, after again failing to pay any estimated quarterly income taxes and falling another $4,500 behind, the IRS required him to start making $400 monthly payments on his $14,000 debt, plus to pay his estimated quarterly payments going forward. As a result he started not being able to keep current on his credit card payments, leading to ratcheted-up interest rates, pushing him over the credit limits and into the vicious cycle of large extra fees piling up. And now he’s missed two payments on his mortgage, putting him $3,000 in arrears.
In spite of all these distractions Mike’s business now has reasonably steady income, which continues to increase, slowly but quite consistently. His accumulated debt problems ARE taking a toll on his ability to focus on growing his business. In spite of this he still very much likes his work and being his own boss, and realistically believes he can keep increasing his income, especially as the economy improves. He very much wants to keep his business going. But his creditors have him in an impossible situation.
The Chapter 13 Solution
If Mike met with an experienced business bankruptcy attorney, this is likely what the attorney would tell him that a Chapter 13 case would accomplish:
- Cancel the $400 monthly payments to the IRS, giving him 5 years to pay that debt, with no additional ongoing interest or penalties during that whole time.
- Pay the $3000 mortgage arrearages over the term of the plan.
- Stop all collection efforts by the credit card creditors and any collection agencies. They would only receive any money after Mike caught up on the house arrearages and paid off the income taxes, and then only to the extent that Mike’s budget would allow.
- Immediately protect all his business and personal assets—tools and equipment, his business truck and/or personal vehicle, receivables owed by customers for prior work, and his business and personal bank and/or credit union accounts.
- Enable Mike to concentrate on his business by greatly relieving his month-by-month financial burden, as well as save him a lot of money in the long run.
- At the end of his 3-to-5 year Chapter 13 case, Mike will be current on his mortgage, owe nothing to the IRS, and he would have paid as much as he could afford on the credit cards, with any remaining amount discharged (legally written off).
As a result the business that Mike loves and in which he has invested so much hope and effort would be thriving and providing him a decent livelihood.
Posted by Kevin on April 17, 2017 under Bankruptcy Blog |
If your business needs bankruptcy relief, you have to start with basic questions about how your business was set up and its debt amount.
Sole Proprietorship
The most straightforward business bankruptcies tend to be those in which the business is a sole proprietorship. Your business is operated through you under your name or under an assumed business name (“doing business as” or “DBA”). So, for purposes of bankruptcy, if you operate a sole proprietorship, you file bankruptcy in your name and it will include your personal assets and liabilities and the assets and liabilities of the business.
Other Forms of Business
Basically, this includes corporations, partnerships and LLC’s (limited liability companies). In these cases, the business entity is the debtor. If the owner of the business is liable under guaranties, the owner might also need to file an individual bankruptcy.
Purpose of Bankruptcy
Once you have established what type of business entity is involved, the basic question is whether you want to utilize bankruptcy as a tool to continue in business or as a tool to liquidate and shut down the business.
The General Guidance
Beyond these initial points, here are some basic rules. They will help you be a bit more prepared when you come to meet with an attorney.
1. A corporation, or LLC, or partnership cannot file a Chapter 13 “adjustment of debts.” Only an “individual” can. So, if you operate a sole proprietorship, you and the business may be eligible for a Chapter 13 filing.
2. Chapter 13s are sometimes mislabeled “wage-earner plans,” but any source of “regular income” is allowed.” The requirement is simply “income sufficiently stable and regular to… make payments under a plan under Chapter 13.” So if your business income—combined with any other income—is even somewhat stable, you would likely qualify under this “regular income” requirement.
3. But you and your sole proprietorship CAN’T file a Chapter 13 case if your total unsecured debt is $394,725 or more, or if your total secured debt is $1,184,200 or more. (Note: these limits are adjusted for inflation every three years.) While these may seem like relatively high maximums, be aware that they include BOTH personal and business debts (since you are personally liable for all the debts of a sole proprietorship). Also, the amount of unsecured debt can include that portion of your mortgages and other secured debts in excess of the value of the collateral. So a $750,000 debt secured by real estate now worth $550,000 adds $200,000 to the unsecured debt total. In addition, if you want to file a Chapter 13 as an individual and you are the owner of a corporation, you may have to consider as your unsecured debts those debts of the corporation which you personally guaranteed.
4. If your debt totals are above one of the above debt limits, you can still file a Chapter 7 “straight bankruptcy” case for the business, but that means, for all intents and purposes, the business will shut down. Chapter 7 tends to be a better option for cleaning up after a closed business, whatever its legal form.
5. A corporation or LLC does not receive a discharge in a Chapter 7.
6. If your debt totals are above one of the Chapter 13 debt limits and you are trying to save the business, one option is a Chapter 11 “business reorganization.” for the corporation, LLC, or partnership. The disadvantages of Chapter 11 are that it is a hugely more complicated than Chapter 13 which translates into substantially higher legal, filing and Trustee fees, and the financial reporting requirements are more onerous. Bankruptcy courts have tried to address these shortcomings with streamlined “small business” Chapter 11s, but they are still often prohibitively expensive.
7. If you do end up filing a personal Chapter 7 case when owing substantial business debt, you may have the advantage of being exempt from qualifying under the “means test” (a test based on your income and allowed expenses) if your business debts are more than half of your total debts.
If you are trying to save your financially struggling business, it is crucial to get competent business bankruptcy advice, and to do so just as soon as possible. You have no doubt been working extremely hard trying to keep your business alive. You will need a solid game plan for using the bankruptcy and other laws to your advantage.
Posted by Kevin on April 15, 2017 under Bankruptcy Blog |
Most small businesses do not have any reason to file bankruptcy after they fail. Instead it’s the individual owner or owners of the business who may well have to think about bankruptcy.
Business Corporation Is No Shield for Owners of Small Businesses
Why does a small business owner sets up his or her business as a corporation? One reason is a concept called limited liability. The corporation is legal entity that is separate from its owners. A corporate debt is just that- it is a debt of the entity and not its owners. In other words, the investor-owners of the business are not liable for those business debts. That’s the theory.
But in practice it doesn’t work that way, not with small businesses. Why? Because:
- Many new businesses cannot get any credit at all, and so have to be financed completely through the owner’s personal savings and credit. This credit tends to include credit cards, second mortgages on homes, vehicle loans, and personal loans from family members.
- For those businesses fortunate enough to receive financing in the name of the corporation, the creditors will very likely still require the major shareholder(s) to sign personal guarantees. This makes the shareholders personally obligated if the corporation fails to pay. Common examples of this are commercial leases of business premises, major equipment and vehicle leases or purchases, franchise agreements, and SBA loans.
As a result, when the business cannot pay its debts, the individual shareholder(s) are usually on the hook for all or most of the debts of the business. The business corporation’s limited liability is trumped by the shareholders’ contractual obligations on the debts.
Ever Worth Filing Bankruptcy for the Business Corporation?
By the time most small businesses close their doors, they have run themselves into the ground and do not have much remaining assets. And often, what little is left is mortgaged, with the assets tied up as collateral, leaving nothing for the corporation’s general creditors. This applies not just to purchases and leases of assets, but also to bank loans which require a blanket lien on all business assets, and commercial premises leases with broad landlord liens.
Without any assets with which to operate, the business dies. Without any assets for creditors to pursue in the business, the debts die with the business, except to the extent the shareholders are personally liable.
But sometimes the business does still have substantial assets when it closes its doors. Assuming the business is in the form of a corporation or partnership and so is eligible to file its own Chapter 7 bankruptcy, doing so may be worthwhile for three reasons:
- A bankruptcy would enable the owners to avoid the hassles of distributing the corporate assets by passing on that task to the bankruptcy trustee.
- There are risks for the owner of a failing business in distributing the final assets of the business, which can result in personal liability for the owner. Filing bankruptcy avoids that risk because the bankruptcy trustee takes care of that responsibility.
- In some situations, a debt owed by the business corporation is also owed by the business’ shareholder. So when that debt is paid through the trustee’s distribution of assets, that reduces or eliminates the shareholder’s obligation on it.
Most of the Time You’re Left Holding the Business’ Debts
Regardless whether your business can or can’t file bankruptcy, and whether or not it ends up doing so, you will likely have to bear the financial fallout personally. By their very nature bankruptcies arising out of closed businesses tend to be more complex than straight consumer bankruptcies. So be sure to find an attorney who is experienced in these kinds of cases.
Posted by Kevin on April 7, 2017 under Bankruptcy Blog |
Your Business as a Sole Proprietorship
Practically speaking, your business is operated as a sole proprietorship if you did not create a corporation, limited liability (LLC), partnership, or any other kind of formal legal entity when you set up that business. You own and operate your business by yourself for yourself, although the business may have a formal or informal “assumed business name” or “DBA” (“doing business as”).
There are various advantages and disadvantages of operating your business this way. For our immediate purposes what’s important is that you and your business are legally treated as a single economic entity. That’s different than if your business operated as a corporation which would legally own its own assets and owe its own debts, distinct from you and any other shareholder(s). This blog post, and the next few on this broad topic of business bankruptcies, assumes that you operate your business as a sole proprietorship.
Chapter 7
Chapter 7, “straight bankruptcy,” or “liquidating bankruptcy,” allows you to “discharge” (legally write off) your debts in return for liquidation—surrendering your assets to the bankruptcy trustee in order to be sold and the proceeds distributed to your creditors. In most Chapter 7 cases you receive a discharge of your debts even though none of your assets are surrendered and liquidated, because everything you own is protected–“exempt.”
But if you own an ongoing business—again, a sole proprietorship—which you intend to keep operating, Chapter 7 may be a risky option. You and your attorney would need to determine if all your business’ assets would be exempt under the laws applicable to your state. Certain crucial assets of your business—perhaps its accounts receivable, customer list, business name, or favorable premises lease—may not be exempt, and thus subject to being taken by the trustee. Proceed very carefully to avoid having your business effectively shut down in this way.
Chapter 13
The Chapter 13 “adjustment of debts” bankruptcy option is generally better designed than Chapter 7 for ongoing sole proprietorship businesses. It provides much better mechanisms for retaining your personal and business assets. Even business (and personal) assets that are not “exempt” can usually be protected through a Chapter 13 plan.
You and your business get immediate relief from your creditors, usually along with a significant reduction in the amount of debt to be repaid. So Chapter 13 helps both your immediate cash flow and the long-term prospects for the business. It is also an excellent way to deal with tax debts, often a major issue for struggling businesses. Overall, it allows you to continue operating your business while taking care of a streamlined set of debts.
Next…
In the next few blogs we will focus on some of the most important benefits of filing a business Chapter 13 case.
Posted by Kevin on April 3, 2017 under Bankruptcy Blog |
Same facts as previous blog.
- Without a bankruptcy, a couple would have to pay about $30,000 to the IRS for back taxes, plus about another $45,000 in medical bills and credit cards, a total of about $75,000.
- Under Chapter 13, this same couple would pay only about $18,000—36 months of $500 payments.
How Does Chapter 13 Work to Save So Much on Taxes and Other Debts?
- Tax debts that are old enough are grouped with the “general unsecured” debts—such as medical bills and credit cards. These are paid usually based on how much money there is left over after paying other more important debts. This means that often these older taxes are paid either nothing or only a few pennies on the dollar.
- The more recent “priority” taxes DO have to be paid in full in a Chapter 13 case, along with interest accrued until the filing of the case. However: 1) penalties—which can be a significant portion of the debt—are treated like “general unsecured” debts and thus paid little or nothing, and 2) usually interest or penalties stop when the Chapter 13 is filed.
- “Priority” taxes—those more recent ones that do have to be paid in full—are all paid before anything is paid to the “general unsecured” debts—the medical bills, credit cards, older income taxes and such. In many cases this means that having these “priority” taxes to pay simply reduces the amount of money which would otherwise have been paid to those “general unsecured” creditors. As a result, in these situations having tax debt does not increase the amount that would have to be paid in a Chapter 13 case, which is after all based on what the debtors can afford. In our example, the couple pays $500 per month because that is what their budget allows.
- The bankruptcy law that stops creditors from trying to collect their debts while a bankruptcy case is active—the “automatic stay”—is as effective stopping the IRS as any other creditor. The IRS can continue to do some very limited and sensible things like demand the filing of a tax return or conduct an audit, but it can’t use the aggressive collection tools that the law otherwise grants to it.
Deciding Between Chapter 7 and 13 for Income Taxes
If, unlike the example, all of the taxes were old enough to meet the conditions for discharging them under Chapter 7, there would be no need for a Chapter 13 case (but may require additional work in a Chapter 7). On the other hand if more “priority” tax debts had to be paid than in the example, the debtors would have to pay more into their Chapter 13 plan, either through larger monthly payments or for a longer period of time.
There are definitely situations where it is a close call choosing between Chapter 7 or Chapter 13. And sometimes preparing an offer in compromise with the IRS—either instead of or together with a bankruptcy filing—is the best route. To decide which of these is best for you, you need the advice of an experienced bankruptcy attorney to help you make an informed decision and then to execute on it.
Posted by on March 30, 2017 under Bankruptcy Blog |
If you owe recent income taxes, or multiple years of taxes, Chapter 13 can provide huge advantages over Chapter 7, and over other options.
The Example
Consider a husband and wife with the following scenario:
- Husband lost his job in 2008, so he started a business, which, after a few promising years in which it generated some income, failed in late 2012.
- The wife was consistently employed throughout this time, with pay raises only enough to keep up with inflation.
- They did not have the money to pay the quarterly estimated taxes while husband’s business was in operation, and also could not pay the amount due when they filed their joint tax returns for 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011 and 2012. To simplify the facts, for each of those five years they owe the IRS $4,000 in taxes, $750 in penalties, and $250 in interest. So their total IRS debt for those years is $25,000—including $20,000 in the tax itself, $3,750 in penalties, and $1,250 in interest.
- Husband found a reliable job six months ago, although earning 20% less than he did at the one he lost before he started his business.
- They filed every one of their joint tax returns in mid-April when they were due, and have been making modest payments on their tax balance when they have been able to.
- They have no debts with collateral—no mortgage, no vehicle loans.
- They owe $35,000 in medical bills and credit cards.
- They can currently afford to pay about $500 a month to all of their creditors, which is not nearly enough to pay their regular creditors, and that’s before paying a dime to the IRS.
- They are in big financial trouble.
Without Any Kind of Bankruptcy
- If they tried to enter into an installment payment plan with the IRS, they would be required to pay the entire tax obligation, with interest and penalties continuing to accrue until all was paid in full.
- The IRS monthly payment amount would be imposed likely without regard to the other debts they owe.
- If the couple failed to make their payments, the IRS would try to collect through garnishments and tax liens.
- Depending how long paying all these taxes would take, the couple could easily end up paying $30,000 to $35,000 with the additional interest and penalties.
- This would be in addition to their $35,000 medical and credit card debts, which could easily increase to $45,000 or more when debts went to collections or lawsuits.
- So the couple would eventually end up being forced to pay at least $75,000 to their creditors.
Under Chapter 13
- The 2008 and 2009 taxes, interest and penalties would very likely be paid nothing and discharged at the end of the case. Same with the penalties for 2010, 2011, and 2012. That covers $11,500 of the $25,000 present tax debt.
- The remaining $13,500 of taxes and interest for 2010, 2011, and 2012 would have to be paid as a “priority” debt, although without any additional interest or penalties once the Chapter 13 case is filed.
- Assuming that their income qualified them for a three-year Chapter 13 plan, this couple would likely be allowed to pay about $500 per month for 36 months, or about $18,000, even though they owe many times that to all their creditors.
- This would be enough to pay the $13,500 “priority” portion of the taxes and interest, plus the “administrative expenses” (the Chapter 13 trustee fees and your attorney fees).
- Then after three years of payments, they’d be completely done. The “priority” portion of the IRS debt would have been paid in full, but the older IRS debt and all the penalties would be discharged (written off), likely without being paid anything. So would the credit card and medical debts.
After the three years, under Chapter 13 the couple would have paid a total of around $18,000, instead of eventually paying at least $75,000 without the Chapter 13 case. They’d be done—debt-free—instead of just barely starting to pay their mountain of debt. And they would have not spent the last three years worrying about IRS garnishments and tax liens, lawsuits and harassing phone calls, and the constant lack of money for necessary living expenses.
The next blog post will follow up on this theme.
Posted by Kevin on March 29, 2017 under Bankruptcy Blog |
Many people believe that bankruptcy can’t write off any income taxes. In fact, it is not uncommon for non-bankruptcy attorneys to lump taxes in with other priority debts like alimony and child support payments (which are not dischargeable) and student loans (which are dischargeable in bankruptcy upon a showing of undue hardship).
Through the next few blog posts, you’ll learn what taxes can be discharged and what can’t. The fact is that bankruptcy can discharge taxes of many types and in many situations. Sometimes ALL of a taxpayer’s taxes can be discharged, or most of them. But there ARE significant limitations, which I will explain carefully in those blogs.
Besides the possibility that you may be able to discharge some or all of your taxes, bankruptcy can also:
1. Stop tax authorities from garnishing your wages and bank accounts, and levying on (seizing) your personal and business assets.
2. Prevent post petition accrual of interest and penalties in certain situations.
3. If paid through a plan, limits your payments to what is affordable as opposed to what the taxing authority demands.
4. Eliminate other debts so that money is available to pay the taxing authority.
Overall, bankruptcy gives you unique leverage against the IRS and/or your state or local tax authority. It gives you a lot more control over a very powerful class of creditors. Your tax problems are resolved not piecemeal but rather as part of your entire financial package. So you don’t find yourself focusing on your taxes while worrying about the rest of your creditors.
The laws relating to taxes and bankruptcy are somewhat complex and not easily handled by “do it your selfers”. It is recommended that a prospective debtor seek out an attorney with experience in taxes and bankruptcy.
Note I mentioned students loans above. If that is your issue, you can contact me on this website or on http://studentdebtnj.com