Tag Archives: prior bankruptcy

5 Tips For A Smooth Bankruptcy Case

Here are 5 tips for a smooth bankruptcy case that you can implement both before and after you’ve hired a bankruptcy attorney.

Tip #1: Have You Filed Bankruptcy Before?

If you have filed bankruptcy in the past, whether or not you received a discharge, you should immediately tell your attorney about the prior bankruptcy. This is important because it can affect how long you must wait before filing a new bankruptcy case, if you want to receive a discharge in the new case. Prior cases can affect other things, including, but not limited to, the length of time creditor must stop trying to collect debts from you.

If you’ve had a prior bankruptcy filing, your bankruptcy attorney should advise you about whether a new bankruptcy filing is a good idea for you and if so, when you should file the new case.

Tip #2: Don’t Repay Relatives Before Filing

If you are considering filing for bankruptcy and you owe money to relatives, don’t repay them before you file the bankruptcy. Instead, tell your bankruptcy attorney about these kinds of debts and ask them what to do. There are special bankruptcy rules about repaying relatives before bankruptcy and, if you do the wrong thing, the bankruptcy trustee can try and recoup the money you’ve repaid from that relative.

You may be able to easily repay that relative after your bankruptcy is finished, or in the case of a Ch. 13, during the bankruptcy. Ask your bankruptcy attorney for advice first before making any payments to relatives, to avoid any special difficulties such as the trustee wanting to sue your relative to claw back those funds.

Tip #3: Decide Whether To Keep Your Car

Whether to keep your car may be obvious to you, but it’s worth asking your bankruptcy attorney about your options. It is important to know that if you want to keep your car, and you took out a loan for that car, you must keep making all of your car payments in full and on time.

While bankruptcy gives you a break from your debts, you cannot get behind in your car payments when you expect to keep your car. If you’re behind on your car payments during your bankruptcy, then at some point, your car lender will be able to repossess your car.

If you have very high car payments or if your car is too expensive to keep due to repair problems, then discuss with your bankruptcy attorney the timing of getting rid of the car and of getting a replacement, if needed. If you’re doing a Ch. 13 case, you may be able to cram down the car loan closer to the actual value of the car.

Tip #4: Don’t give away or otherwise transfer any property

Especially before filing the bankruptcy, do not give away or transfer any property, such as real estate, a car, money, etc. If you are in doubt about whether you can, or should, transfer something you own out of your name and into someone else’s name, ask a bankruptcy attorney for advice first.

Transferring property to someone else can be a big problem that can prevent you from filing bankruptcy or get you into big trouble in your bankruptcy case. Some people naturally believe that the less they own on filing bankruptcy, the better. While that may be the case to some extent, it is far worse to have transferred something valuable out of your name just so that you didn’t own it at the time your bankruptcy was filed. This can lead to allegations of bankruptcy fraud, which will cause you a lot bigger problems than if you had never made the transfer in the first place.

Tip #5: Don’t Borrow Any More Money

Generally, you should not borrow money soon before filing your bankruptcy case. For most people, this means not using your credit cards anymore. There are detailed nuances to this general rule that you should discuss with your bankruptcy attorney, so be sure to ask for advice if you already have used credit cards recently, or if you feel that you need to do so.

If you need to discuss issues with a bankruptcy attorney, schedule a free phone consultation with attorney Jennifer N. Weil through her Setmore page or by calling (201) 676-0722.

What’s involved with discharging my debts under chapter 7?

Discharge of debts

The point of filing bankruptcy is to get relief from your debts. So, when and how DO those debts get discharged in a regular Chapter 7 bankruptcy?

Here’s what you need to know:

1.      You’ll receive a discharge of your debts, so long as you play by the rules. Under Section 727 of the Bankruptcy Code, the bankruptcy court “shall grant the debtor a discharge” except in relatively unusual circumstances:

  • If you’re not an individual:  Corporations and other kinds of business entities do not receive a discharge of debts, only human beings do.
  • If you have received a discharge in an earlier case too recently. You can’t get a new discharge of your debts in a Chapter 7 case if:
    • you already received a discharge of debts in an earlier Chapter 7 case filed no more than 8 years before your present case was filed, or
    • you already received a discharge of debts in an earlier Chapter 13 case filed no more than 6 years before your present case was filed (except under limited conditions).
  • If you hide or destroy assets, conceal or destroy records about your financial condition.
  • If in connection with your Chapter 7 case you make a false oath, a false claim, or withhold information or records about your property or financial affairs.

2.      ALL your debts will be discharged, UNLESS a particular debt fits one of the specific exceptions. Section 523 of the Code lists those “exceptions to discharge.” I’m not going to discuss those exceptions in detail here, but the main ones include:

  • most but not all taxes
  • debts incurred through fraud or misrepresentation, including recent cash advances and “luxury” purchases
  • debts not listed on the bankruptcy schedules on time (although there is a major exception to this)
  • money owed because of embezzlement, larceny, or through other kinds of theft or fraud in a fiduciary relationship
  • child and spousal support
  • claims against you for intentional injury to another person or property
  • most but not all student loans
  • claims against you for causing injury or death to someone by driving while intoxicated (also applies to boating and flying)                                                                                                                   

3.      A discharge from the bankruptcy court stops a creditor from ever attempting to collect on the debt. Under Section 524, the discharge order acts as a court injunction any act to collect a debt. If a creditor violates this injunction by trying to pursue a discharged debt, the bankruptcy court may hold the creditor in contempt of court and, depending on the seriousness of its illegal behavior, can require the creditor to pay sanctions.

Photo credit:  Alan Cleaver

When the automatic stay doesn’t apply

In VERY RARE circumstances, ALL of your creditors can pursue you even if you file bankruptcy. Here’s how to avoid those rare but dangerous circumstances.

In my last post I listed three special classes of debts for which you can still be pursued in spite of filing bankruptcy. They are exceptions to the automatic stay, the broad protection from creditors that you get immediately when your case is filed.  But in this post today I’m talking about a circumstance in which the automatic stay does not apply to your case AT ALL, regarding ANY of your creditors. And about another circumstance in which you can lose the protection of the automatic stay 30 days after your case is filed. 

Because of the huge importance of the automatic stay, you absolutely want to avoid these circumstances, as rare as they might be.

For anybody who is thinking about filing a bankruptcy and has NOT had a previous bankruptcy case filed in their name in the last year, and then dismissed, you can stop worrying about this. Or if you have already filed a bankruptcy case recently and I’m getting you worried here, stop worrying if you did NOT have a previous bankruptcy case filed in your name, and then dismissed, in the year before your present case was filed.

But, IF you filed TWO OR MORE prior bankruptcies in the year before your new one, AND they were dismissed, the automatic stay does NOT go into effect with the filing of the new case.  The automatic stay CAN go into effect AFTER the case is filed if certain conditions are met.

Or, IF you filed ONE prior bankruptcy in the year before your new one, the automatic stay EXPIRES 30 days after the filing date, unless certain conditions are met before then. 

The details of the conditions for imposing or preserving the automatic stay are beyond the scope of this post. What IS of immediate and absolute importance is that you must tell your attorney—AT the BEGINNING of your INITIAL CONSULTATION—if you have filed ANY prior bankruptcy cases, and especially any recent ones.

Now if you’re wondering who goes around filing multiple bankruptcy cases in one year?—it happens more often than you might think.  It tends to come up two ways: 1) A person files a bankruptcy without an attorney, gets overwhelmed by the process and doesn’t follow through, so the case gets dismissed. 2) Or a person hires an attorney, signs some papers, and the case gets filed, maybe without the person even realizing it, and then gets dismissed because he or she doesn’t follow through. In either case, eleven months later they’ve forgotten all about it. Or don’t think it’s important.

The point of these anti-automatic stay rules is to stop “serial bankruptcy filers,” the very, very small minority of folks who file multiple cases, arguably abusing the bankruptcy process, usually to repeatedly delay a foreclosure or some other creditor action.  But these rules can also seriously penalize innocent people in situations like the ones I just mentioned.

Avoid this happening to you by 1) thinking carefully about whether there is ANY possibility that you filed a prior bankruptcy case within the last year, and 2) then telling your attorney if there’s ANY chance that you did. If so, there’s a good chance the bankruptcy court can be persuaded to impose or retain the automatic stay, but only if your attorney knows about the issue in advance and determines whether your case so qualifies.

Photo by MSVG.