Understanding Debts- Part 2
In the previous blog, we talked about debts in general, and secured debts in particular. Today, we will talk about general unsecured debts and priority debts.
General Unsecured Debts
All debts that are not legally secured by collateral are called unsecured debts. And “general” unsecured debts are simply those which are not one of special “priority” debts that the law has selected for special treatment. (See below.) So the category of “general unsecured debts” includes all debts with are both not secured and not “priority.”
General unsecured debts include every imaginable type of debt or claim. The most common ones include most credit cards, virtually all medical bills, personal loans without collateral, checking accounts with a negative balance, unpaid checks, payday loans without collateral, the amount left owing after a vehicle is repossessed and sold, and uninsured or under insured vehicle accident claims against you.
It helps to know that sometimes a debt which had been secured can turn into a general unsecured one. For example, a second mortgage that was fully secured by the value of the home at the time of the loan can become unsecured in a Chapter 13 bankruptcy if the home’s value falls significantly. Or what was originally a general unsecured debt may, in certain circumstances, turn into a secured debt.
Priority Debts
As the word implies, “priority” debts are ones that Congress has decided should be treated better than general unsecured debts.
Also, there’s a strict order of priority among the priority debts. Certain “priority” debts get paid ahead of the others (and ahead of all the general unsecured debts). In bankruptcy getting paid first often means getting paid something instead of nothing at all.
This has the following practical consequences in the two main kind of consumer bankruptcy:
In most Chapter 7 cases there is no “liquidation” of your assets for distribution to your creditors. That’s because in the vast majority of cases, all the debtors’ assets are protected; they are “exempt.” But in those cases where there ARE non-exempt assets which the bankruptcy trustee gathers and sells, priority debts are paid in full by the trustee before the general unsecured ones receive anything. And among the priority debts those of higher priority are paid in full before the lower priority ones receive anything.
In a Chapter 13 case, your proposed payment plan must demonstrate how you will pay all priority debts in full within the 3 to 5 years of your case. Then after the bankruptcy judge approves your plan, you must in fact pay them before you can be discharged
Here are the most common priority debts for consumers are:
- child and spousal support—the full amount owed as of the filing of the bankruptcy case
- certain income taxes, and some other kinds of taxes.