The #1 best judgment protection is bankruptcy. If you can qualify for a bankruptcy and you’re considering whether to file a bankruptcy or do debt settlement instead, consider the issue of judgment protection. Does bankruptcy protect me from judgments? Some think that hiring a debt consolidation (aka debt settlement) company provides the same level of protection as a bankruptcy.
But if you believe that a debt consolidation or a debt settlement company can protect you in any way, shape or form from debt collectors and their tactics, you’re wrong. It’s that simple. Bankruptcy can protect you from judgments and from debt collection. How does bankruptcy provide protection from judgment collection?
The Automatic Stay
Bankruptcy protections from debt collection activities come through the automatic stay. The automatic stay has the effect of a court order stopping all attempts to collect a debt from you, the debtor, during the course of your bankruptcy case. This is the biggest, most important difference between bankruptcy and debt settlement.
Bankruptcy Automatic Stay Protection vs. Debt Settlement
Whether you are settling your own debts or you’ve hired someone else to settle your debts, you need to know that no part of the debt-settlement process protects you from any type of debt collection at all. Many people believe that if they’ve hired an attorney to settle their debts, or if the debt settlement company assigns an attorney to their case, that they will get some type of protection from debt collection activities such as lawsuits, wage garnishments, or bank levy. Nothing could be further from the truth.
The reason that you don’t get any protection from debt collection through debt settlement is simply because the debt collector doesn’t have to stop trying to collect. There’s nothing to stop them.
Debt Settlement’s False Security
Federal law does require debt collectors (but not original creditors) to stop calling you on the phone if you’ve told them that you have an attorney, which gives people a false sense of security. You may falsely believe that, because the debt collector is no longer calling you, they won’t sue you or try to collect on an existing judgment. Again, it’s not true – you can be sued, you can have your wages garnished, and your bank account can be levied.
To be sure, debt collection law firms often will verbally agree to temporarily suspend collection activity while your attorney is discussing settlement with them, but there is no requirement that they do so. If settlement talks fall apart, debt collection activity will resume.
Limits Of The Automatic Stay
It’s important to know that the bankruptcy automatic stay has limits. First of all, the automatic stay only last as long as your bankruptcy case lasts. If you receive a bankruptcy discharge of your debts, you will be protected from collection on the discharged debts by the discharge order itself. The bankruptcy discharge takes the form of a court order that creditors and debt collectors must obey.
Further limits of the bankruptcy automatic stay can result from multiple bankruptcy filings within a short period of time. For example, if you filed a bankruptcy case that was dismissed and then you file another bankruptcy case within a year, your automatic stay will be limited to 30 days only, unless a judge grants your formal, written request to extend the stay. And it’s possible to have no automatic stay at all if you have filed too many bankruptcy cases in a year.
If you have questions about judgment protection, debt settlement, debt consolidation, or the bankruptcy automatic stay, call to schedule a free bankruptcy phone consultation with attorney Jennifer Weil at (201) 676-0722, or go to my Setmore page.