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How To Keep Your Car in a Chapter 7 Bankruptcy

Chapter 7 bankruptcy gives you a couple of options for your car when you’re still paying on it. Basically, you can either keep paying or you can surrender (i.e., give back) the vehicle.

What’s The Situation?

This is about a vehicle that you still owe on, where your finance company is the lienholder on your vehicle title, and where there’s no more equity (value beyond the debt) than is covered by your available exemptions. In other words, this is not a vehicle that your Chapter 7 trustee is going to be interested in, either because it has no equity (e.g., it’s worth less than the debt against it) or because the equity is small enough to be protected by the exemption. The following options also apply to car leases.

Ch. 7 Options For Your Car

Even if the bankruptcy trustee doesn’t want your car, your car finance company might. But if you need to keep the car, especially for work, there is a certain path that you need to follow.

How To Keep Your Car in a Chapter 7 Bankruptcy

  1. First, if you don’t want to keep your vehicle, you can surrender it to the creditor after your bankruptcy is filed. (Or you can surrender it before you file, but that gets risky—be sure you have talked to your bankruptcy attorney and have a clear game plan beforehand.) If you give back your vehicle without bankruptcy, you’ll owe and you might be sued for the “deficiency balance”—the amount you would owe after your vehicle is sold, its sale price is credited to your account, and all the repo and other costs are added. (The deficiency balance you’ll owe can be crazy high.) But bankruptcy will write off (i.e., discharge) the deficiency balance.
  2. If you want to keep your car through a Ch. 7, you have to be current on your loan. In other words, make your car payments during bankruptcy. So if you aren’t current, you’ll need to quickly get current and stay there. Some lenders will allow you to be a month or so behind on your loan, but I’ve found that when a bankruptcy has been filed, they suddenly change their tune and they want to you be current on your payments. Depending on the lender, you might need to sign a reaffirmation agreeing to legally exclude the vehicle loan from the bankruptcy discharge, but most lenders don’t work that way. I generally don’t recommend a reaffirmation agreement except under certain narrow circumstances. You should discuss this issue with an experienced bankruptcy attorney before your bankruptcy is filed.

The Takeaway

In general, “straight bankruptcy”—Chapter 7—can be the best way to go if your vehicle situation is pretty straightforward: you either want to give back your car, or you want to keep the car and you’re current on the loan or can quickly get current.

If you have questions about how to keep your car in a Chapter 7 bankruptcy  – or about how to get rid of it – schedule an appointment with Bankruptcy Attorney Jennifer N. Weil, Esq. by calling 201-676-0722. Or you can schedule your own appointment online at my Setmore page.

 

“If Only I’d Gone to See My Bankruptcy Attorney Sooner . . . “

Those are the words I hate to hear from a new client.

Bankruptcy attorneys are in the business because we want to help people. It’s an emotionally tough area of law, dealing all the time with clients who are financially hurting. Usually my clients are also hurting in other ways that are related to the cause of their financial problems—illness, injury, divorce, a decline in business, or a job loss. What makes my day is to give great news to a client, that they will now get relief from their debts, or that there is a feasible plan to save their home, or to deal with their child support arrearage or their income tax debt.

The information I share with clients is what they are unaware of before they contact me and it is what they need to know. There may be tough choices to make. I am here to arm you with the law and to guide you through the process.

But the most frustrating situations for both me and my clients are when we find out that they have self-inflicted wounds. These wounds are the easily-preventable-but-now-it’s-too-late bad decisions they’ve made, often just a few months or weeks earlier, without getting legal advice beforehand.

Here’s are some of the most common issues:

1) Preferences:  If you pay a creditor any significant amount before filing a bankruptcy—especially a relative you hope not to involve in that bankruptcy—the bankruptcy trustee may well be able to force that relative, through a lawsuit if necessary, to pay to the trustee whatever amount you paid to that relative.  The trustee can then turn around and pay that money to your creditors.

2) Squandering exempt assets:  Many clients tell me that they have borrowed against or cashed in retirement funds in a desperate effort to pay their debts, using precious assets that would have been completely protected in the bankruptcy case they later file.  Unfortunately, these clients use their retirement money to pay debts that would have been discharged in their bankruptcy.

3) Rushing to sell a home:  Bankruptcy provides some extraordinary tools for dealing with debts that have attached as liens against your home, such as judgments and 2nd mortgages. If you hurriedly sell your home to avoid involving it in your bankruptcy case, or for some other reason, you could lose out on opportunities to save tens of thousands of dollars.

As you look at this list, notice that the legally and financially wrong choice is often what seems to be 1) the morally right one, and 2) the common-sense one. Doing what seems right and sensible can really backfire. But nothing takes the place of legal advice about your own unique situation from an experienced attorney. Avoid ever having to say “if only I had gone in sooner.”

Jennifer N. Weil, Esq. offers free bankruptcy consultations by telephone – please call (201) 676-0722.

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“Automatic” Protection from Your Creditors

9301721438_21b25771be_z“Automatic” protection from your creditors is what you get as soon as you file for bankruptcy.

Many bankruptcy attorney ads say: “Stop garnishments.” “Stop foreclosures.” “Stop repossessions.” So bankruptcy stops all those bad things. But is it as good as it sounds? How does it really work?

The most basic protection that bankruptcy provides is the immediate protection that it gives you, your paycheck, your home, and your possessions. You get this protection the minute a bankruptcy is filed for you. Other than some rare exceptions, all collection efforts by creditors against you or your property must come to an immediate stop. You’ll hear this referred to as the “automatic stay.”

“Stay” is just a legal word for “stop” or “freeze.” “Automatic” means that this “stay” goes into effect right when your bankruptcy petition gets filed. That filing itself “operates as a stay” of virtually all creditors’ actions to pursue a debt or grab collateral.

But your creditors need to know that you filed for bankruptcy so that they can abide by the stay. If your creditors are all listed in your bankruptcy paperwork, they should all get informed by the bankruptcy court within about a week or so after your case is filed, without any additional action by either you or your attorney. If you are not anticipating any action against you by any of your creditors sooner than that, usually letting the court inform them of your bankruptcy is good enough. But if do expect some quick creditor action, be sure to talk with your attorney about it so you’re both on the same page about informing that creditor sooner.

But what if a creditor unexpectedly takes some action in the days after your bankruptcy is filed but before it finds out about it? The automatic stay is so powerful that if this does happen, the creditor must undo whatever action it took against you, even if it did not know about your bankruptcy filing. So if after your bankruptcy is filed, a creditor, for example, files a lawsuit against you or turns its earlier lawsuit into a judgment, that lawsuit must be dismissed or the judgment must be set aside.

If you are in New Jersey and you are having problems with debt, call me at (201) 676-0722 for a consultation, or email me at weilattorney@gmail.com.

Photo credit: Next TwentyEight

How to file bankruptcy and keep your assets

Bankruptcy can help both sides of your balance sheet. Getting a fresh start means not just being relieved of debt, but also protecting essential assets. You can preserve this  benefit by not selling, using up, or borrowing against your protected assets BEFORE your  case is filed. In order to regain your financial footing, you will need housing, basic household goods, clothes and – where appropriate – tools of the trade, unemployment or disability benefits and retirement savings. Bankruptcy usually protects these things. Specifically, Chapter 7 protects all “exempt” assets. And if the applicable exemptions do not protect all of your property, Chapter 13 usually provides protection. But bankruptcy cannot protect what you’ve sold, given away or used up. Clients often recount how, within the year or so before deciding to file their case, they depleted their retirement account or sold off household goods in an attempt to avoid bankruptcy. But those things usually would have been protected had they filed their case when they still had the assets. As they say, hindsight is 20/20, but if you are one of those trying to avoid bankruptcy and you are thinking of spending, selling, or borrowing against any of your assets, do you know whether it would be protected in bankruptcy? This type of decision has long-term consequences and is often made without any legal advice about the alternatives. If someone in her 50s cashes in a 401(k) retirement account to pay credit-card companies, that decision can hurt her retirement years.  Or if a couple sell a debt-free car that is in good condition, believing that they’ll lose it in a bankruptcy, that decision could adversely impact their ability to get to work. People tend to wait until they are at the end of their rope before getting legal advice, well after they have made these types of adverse decisions.  But you can obtain a better fresh start by going for legal advice early enough to preserve your assets.

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Don’t Give Up Your Vehicle Before Knowing Your Options

Why not? Because you may be able to keep a vehicle you thought you couldn’t afford. Under certain conditions, a Chapter 13 bankruptcy might allow you to pay smaller monthly car loan payments. You may be able to pay off the debt and own the it free and clear for less than the loan balance.

It may very well be a good decision for you to give up an unaffordable car, but you should consider all of your options first.

If you need a car but cannot afford the monthly payments, you probably figure that you don’t have any choice but to lose it. You know the contract requires you to make the payments or else the vehicle gets repossessed. You may have been trying hard for months to keep or to get the payments current, putting up with late fees and constant notices or phone calls from the creditor threatening repossession. You would have already let the car go except you’ve got to have it for work and/or other family obligations, and you have no way to replace it. You feel stuck, with no good options.

On top of everything else, you might have heard that a bankruptcy can’t help much, at least for hanging onto the car—that you still have to either make the payments, and catch up if you’re behind, or else lose it.

That’s true, in a “straight bankruptcy,” a Chapter 7.

But it’s not necessarily true in a Chapter 13 case. If you meet two conditions, you may be able to do a “cramdown” on the vehicle loan: lower your payments and likely pay less overall on the loan. You may well also be able to lower your interest rate.

The two conditions to be able to do a “cramdown”:

1) Your vehicle loan was entered into more than 910 days before your Chapter 13 case is filed (that’s just about two and a half years before); and

2) At the time your case is filed, the value of your vehicle is less than the balance on your loan.

If your car loan meets these two conditions, your loan could be essentially re-written through a Chapter 13.  The total amount you must pay down could be reduced to the value of the car, which is known as a “cramdown”. That’s called the “secured portion” of the debt. Also, a new monthly payment is calculated—representing the amount needed to pay off the smaller balance, often at a lower interest rate, and often on a longer remaining term.

What happens to the “unsecured portion”—the part of the debt beyond the value of the vehicle? It gets lumped in with the rest of your unsecured debts, usually not requiring you to pay anything more to all your unsecured creditors regardless of your vehicle loan.

And what if you’re behind on your vehicle loan when you file your Chapter 13 case—when do you have to pay that arrearage? You don’t. It’s just part of the re-written, new “crammed down” obligation.

As you can see, you may not want to surrender a car or allow it to be repossessed if you could keep it while having it cost you much less to do so. Sometimes having a reliable vehicle is essential to achieving a successful re-start of your financial life.  Before you lose that essential part of your financial plan, carefully consider all of your options.

Photo by m.gifford.

The automatic stay is a powerful tool

Don’t take for granted the extraordinariness of bankruptcy’s automatic stay. That’s the federal law that stops creditors from pursuing you, your money, and your other possessions the moment your bankruptcy case is filed.

In my last two posts, I discussed the relatively rare situations in which the automatic stay does not apply—situations in which certain special creditors, or sometimes even all creditors, can continue collecting their debts. But let me re-emphasize–most of the time, once your bankruptcy case is filed, all creditor efforts against you and your property stop immediately.

The automatic stay is powerful because it is 1) fast and 2) broad in what it covers.

Very Fast

Few legal procedures work as quickly as the automatic stay. To get anything done in most courts usually takes weeks, months, or years. A complaint or motion of some sort needs to be filed, the other side usually has the opportunity to respond, then there’s often a hearing, and finally a judge makes a decision.

But not with the automatic stay. It operates as a one-sided and immediate court order, made effective by the very act of filing the bankruptcy case.  A judge isn’t even involved. The creditors have no immediate say about it. There IS a procedure for creditors to object and ask the judge for “relief from the automatic stay,” in other words, for permission to continue or start pursuing you or your money or property, but that’s after the fact. The automatic stay gives you an immediate breathing spell, whether your creditors like it or not.

Broad Coverage

This breathing spell protects you from your creditors in almost every way. It stops all phone calls and letters—“any act to collect, assess, or recover” a debt. Except for those situations spelled out in my prior posts, the automatic stay stops all court and administrative proceedings against you from starting or continuing. It does not matter if your bankruptcy is filed two minutes before the start of a civil lawsuit trial or the foreclosure of your house, the trial or foreclosure should not happen. If there is a judgment against you and the creditor is about to garnish your wages or levy on your checking account, these collection efforts are stopped. If you’ve fallen a couple of months behind on your vehicle loan payment and the repo man is looking for your car in the employee parking lot, the automatic stay sends him away empty-handed. If the IRS is about to record a lien against your home and vehicle to collect an income tax debt, the automatic stay stops the tax lien. Or if you already have a recorded tax lien and the IRS is about to grab your vehicle to pay the debt, your bankruptcy filing stops this enforcement of the tax lien.

This IS powerful medicine. 

As with other strong medicine, it should be administered with the right guidance and with help for handling any potential side effects. Stopping your creditors with a bankruptcy would essentially be the end of the story for many of them. But for other creditors—those with rights against your home or vehicle, or with special kinds of debts such as taxes and student loans—the breathing space gives us the opportunity to address each of these special creditors.

Photo by bitmask.