Posted by Kevin on March 11, 2015 under Bankruptcy Blog |
You can file a new case 8 years after filing before (so, now or very soon), or possibly only 6 or 4 or 2 years after, or maybe even with no delay.
The Bankruptcy Code underwent major amendments effective October 17, 2005. Nearly two and a half million bankruptcies were filed in the year before that date, by far the most in any year-long period in history.
Today, we focus on the rules relating to the length of time required from a previous bankruptcy filing until a new one.
More precisely the timing rule refers to the amount of time from the filing of a previous bankruptcy case which resulted in the discharge of debts until the filing of another case also resulting in the discharge of debts.
“Discharge” is the legal write-off of debts provided by the bankruptcy law. It’s the main reason—but often not the only reason—for filing bankruptcy.
If you filed a previous personal bankruptcy—whether it was a Chapter 7 “straight” bankruptcy or a Chapter 13 “adjustment of debts” payment plan—and your understanding is that you finished it successfully, almost certainly you received a discharge of your debts. Near the end of your case you should have received a copy of an order from the bankruptcy court granting you a discharge. If you do have your old bankruptcy documents, bring them to your present attorney. If you don’t, he or she should still be able to determine whether or not you received a discharge.
Finding this out is important because, in the unlikely event that you did not get a discharge, then you do not have to wait any period of time before you can file a new bankruptcy case. (The rare exception is if the bankruptcy court entered an order not allowing you to file a bankruptcy for a certain length of time, which only happens after serious abuse of the bankruptcy laws.)
The Timing Rules
Here is how long you must wait in between bankruptcy filings to receive a discharge of debts in a new bankruptcy case.
IF you want to now file a Chapter 7 case:
–and received a discharge in a previous Chapter 7 or Chapter 11 case, you must wait 8 years from the filing date of the previous case to the filing date of the new case;
–and received a discharge in a previous Chapter 13 case, you must wait 6 years from the filing date of the previous case to the filing date of the new case, BUT you don’t have to wait at all if in that Chapter 13 case you paid 100% of the allowed debts, or paid at least 70% and met some other conditions.
IF you want to now file a Chapter 13 case:
–and received a discharge in a previous Chapter 7 or Chapter 11 or Chapter 12 case, you must wait 4 years from the filing date of the previous case to the filing date of the new case;
–and received a discharge in a previous Chapter 13 case, you must wait 2 years from the filing date of the previous case to the filing date of the new case.
IF you want to file a Chapter 11 case, the timing rules are the same as for Chapter 7 above.
(Note that Chapter 11 is usually for a business, or for a huge amount of debt; Chapter 12 is for farmers and fishermen.)
It’s important to understand that the date the discharge was entered in the previous case does not matter. It’s the filing date that starts the clock running here.
So You Can File Soon, or Possibly Now
So, under any combination—7 to 7, 7 to 13, 13 to 7, 13 to 13, 7 to 11 etc., you can file now.
Posted by Kevin on November 15, 2012 under Bankruptcy Blog |
Question #1 for cleaning up financially after a failed business: can the business file a bankruptcy without you? Question #2: should it?
This blog is NOT intended to give you all you need to know about whether your no-longer-operating business (or “on its deathbed business”) or you should file bankruptcy. Many factors go into that decision. This blog addresses only the very beginning of this decision-making process: is your business ELIGIBLE to file bankruptcy?
Is Your Business Its Own “Person”?
Your business can only file its own bankruptcy if it is a legally recognized business entity, a legal “person” distinct from you. If you established and ran the business under a formally registered corporation, that corporation can file a bankruptcy. If you established and ran the business as a formal partnership, that business partnership can file a bankruptcy.
In contrast, if you operated the business under your own name, or under a “dba” (“doing business as”), that business is not legally separate from you as an individual, so it cannot file a bankruptcy. That’s true even if you legally registered that “dba” name with a state agency (usually with the “corporation division” of your secretary of state’s office), paid for a local business license, and/or had separate bank accounts for the business. That business is legally just a part of you as an individual and cannot file its own bankruptcy.
How about if your business was established as a corporation but over time you did not keep the corporation’s finances distinct from your own? How about if operated your business in fact as a partnership of three partners and kept distinct partnership books but never formalized the partnership through the state or local authorities? Whether that corporation or that partnership can file a bankruptcy, and what the consequences would be of such a bankruptcy, depends on the circumstances, and requires a careful discussion with an experienced business bankruptcy attorney.
Corporations and Partnerships Cannot File Chapter 13
Chapter 13 is reserved for “individuals”—actual people, not corporations or business partnerships. Specifically “[o]nly an individual with regular income” and who does not owe more than certain amounts “may be a debtor under Chapter 13… .”
Corporations and Partnerships Can File Chapter 7, 11 and 12
Legal business entities like corporations and partnerships can file under Chapter 7, a straight bankruptcy, to help in the orderly liquidation of the business’ assets and the fair distribution of the proceeds to the business’ creditors. Such a Chapter 7 may not be necessary or helpful if the business does not have any of its own assets, other than those which are collateral on secured debts.
Under a Chapter 11 “business reorganization,” the business would continue to operate or be sold as a going concern. Although most bankruptcy courts make an effort to run small business Chapter 11 cases efficiently, they are still very expensive—seldom less than tens of thousands of dollars in court, U.S Trustee, and attorney fees. So Chapter 11 is seldom a practical solution for very small businesses.
Under a Chapter 12 “adjustment of debts of a family farmer or fisherman,” the family farming or fishing operation would continue operating. To qualify that operation must meet certain maximum debt limits, and other qualifications to show that it is sufficiently oriented towards farming or fishing and is sufficiently family-owned.
Whether a business CAN file its own bankruptcy leads to the question whether it SHOULD do so, to be covered in the next blog.