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    STRAIGHT BANKRUPTCY: CHAPTER 7

    Q. What does Chapter 7 bankruptcy involve?
    A.
    Straight bankruptcy under Chapter 7 is available if less drastic methods will not solve
    your financial problems. It allows you to discharge (extinguish) most debts. A section
    below describes some types of debts that you cannot avoid in any form of bankruptcy.
    About 70 percent of all consumer bankruptcy filings nationwide are under Chapter 7.

    Q. How does a Chapter 7 bankruptcy case begin?
    A.
    It starts when you file a petition with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court asking it to relieve
    you (or you and your spouse) from your debts. As of the date you file the petition, your
    assets will be under the protection of the court. In addition, most collection efforts against
    you must stop. However, if someone has co-signed a loan for you, your automatic stay
    does not stop creditors for seeking payment from your co-signer.
    When you file the petition, you also must file a Statement of Financial Affairs and
    schedules that, among other things, describe your financial history and list your income,
    all of your debts and your assets. These schedules are quite detailed:
    Your liabilities:
    • your priority debts (such as taxes);
    • your secured creditors (auto dealers, home mortgages, and so on);
    • your unsecured creditors (department store credit cards and the like).
    Be sure that you list all your creditors and their correct names and addresses. If
    you omit some, or provide incorrect addresses, you might not be discharged from those
    debts.
    Your assets:
    • all your real property, including any you own together with your spouse or other
    persons;
    • all your personal property (such as household goods; clothing, cash, retirement funds,
    accrued net wages);
    • all property, whether real or personal, that you claim exempt from creditors.

    Q. Will I lose some of my assets if I file for Chapter 7?
    A.
    Under Chapter 7, you might well have to turn over many, if not all, of your nonexempt
    assets. What happens depends upon the classification of the asset:
    Assets pledged as collateral on a loan (encumbered assets). When you have
    borrowed to buy a car, boat, household furniture, appliance, or other durable item, the
    lender commonly has a lien (legal claim) on that property to secure the debt until the loan
    is fully repaid. You may also have given a lien on property you already owned to obtain a
    new loan, such as a second mortgage to finance home improvements. Some creditors may
    obtain liens without the debtor’s agreement, either because they have won a lawsuit
    against the debtor or because the law automatically provides a lien for certain claims,
    such as for duly assessed taxes.


    In bankruptcy a claim is “secured” to the extent that it is backed up by collateral.
    Often the collateral is worth less than the amount of the debt it secures, such as a $1200
    car securing a loan balance of $3000. In that case, the lender is “undersecured” and is
    treated as holding two claims, a $1200 secured claim and an $1800 unsecured claim. On
    the other hand, sometimes a debt is secured by collateral whose value exceeds the loan
    balance at the time of bankruptcy, such as a $65,000 home subject to a $30,000 mortgage.
    In that case, the lender is “oversecured.” The lender is entitled to no more than the
    $30,000 it is owed. The excess value of $35,000 is referred to as the debtor’s “equity.”
    If you cannot make the required payments on a secured claim (and also catch up
    on any back payments), the creditor has a right to take back the collateral after having the
    automatic stay lifted. However, you may be able to keep your car, boat, or other durable
    item by redeeming it or reaffirming your debt (as explained later in this chapter) or by
    continuing to make payments.


    Unencumbered assets. For present purposes, these include (1) assets on which
    there is no lien at all and (2) the debtor’s equity in assets that are collateral for
    oversecured claims. The debtor retains unencumbered assets to the extent that they are
    exempt; otherwise they must be surrendered for distribution among those holding
    unsecured claims.


    Exempt assets. These are assets that you must list on your Statement of Financial
    Affairs and schedules and that you may shield from your unsecured creditors. The assets
    that you may protect in this way are defined by federal and state law. In about fifteen
    states you may chose either of the two laws, while in most states you may use only the
    state exemptions. Exemptions vary widely. For example, under the federal statute a
    couple filing jointly may exempt a total of $32,300 in equity in their home, $16,500 for
    each of them. Thus, if the home is worth $65,000 and has a $30,000 mortgage, creditors
    can claim only $2,700 (the difference between the equity of $35,000 and the $32,300
    exemption). As a matter of practice, the couple would probably keep their home—
    perhaps at the cost of paying that $2700 in nonexempt equity to the trustee—rather than
    have it sold for the benefit of the creditors.


    In contrast, Florida allows a homestead exemption that protects from creditors a
    debtor's home and property so long as it does not exceed half an acre in a municipality or
    160 acres elsewhere. Thus, an investment banker who filed bankruptcy has been able to
    retain a beachfront home reportedly valued at $3.25 million. In Georgia the homestead
    exemption is limited to $5,000. Similar variations among the states are found concerning
    a broad array of other exempt assets such as autos, jewelry, household furnishings, books
    and tools of the debtor's trade.
    Congress has recently been considering proposals to introduce greater nationwide
    uniformity in exemptions, including a dollar cap on the most generous state homestead
    provisions.
    In cases involving an individual married debtor or joint debtors, several specific
    points about exemptions are worth noting. First, in joint cases, each spouse must claim
    exemptions under the same law, either both relying on state law or both relying on federal
    law. Second, when federal exemptions are elected and often as well when state law
    applies, each spouse can claim the full exempt amount on his or her own behalf, as
    illustrated above with the doubling of the federal homestead exemption. In questionable
    decisions, however, some courts have followed state law in limiting joint debtors to only
    a single set of state law exemptions. Third, in more than fifteen states, creditors of only
    one spouse are barred either completely or in large part from reaching real and/or
    personal property owned by the debtor with a non-debtor spouse as joint tenants or
    tenants by the entirety. Those bars generally apply in any bankruptcy case where state law
    exemptions govern.


    Finally, as mentioned above, exempt assets are beyond the reach of unsecured
    creditors. Exemptions do not ordinarily affect the rights of creditors with respect to assets
    on which they have liens. For example, homestead exemptions generally do not affect the
    rights of a mortgage lender to foreclose on the debtor’s home. Under some specific
    circumstances, the Bankruptcy Code may permit the debtor to undo a lien and then assert
    exemption rights. This is a matter about which it is probably best to consult an attorney.
    Nonexempt unencumbered assets. The Bankruptcy Code requires that you give all
    these nonexempt assets to the bankruptcy trustee. The trustee will then liquidate (sell off)
    these nonexempt assets for the benefit of your creditors. However, in actual practice, over
    85 percent of Chapter 7 filings are "no-asset filings"—that is, there are no assets left for
    unsecured creditors after the exempt assets have been claimed.

    Q. How may I keep certain possessions that I do not want the trustee to sell?
    A.
    If you are required to surrender some nonexempt property that you wish to keep—for
    example, a car—you may under certain circumstances arrange to buy it back (redeem it)
    for a price no greater than its current value. For example, if you owe $3,000 on your car,
    but its market value is only $1,200, you can recover the car by paying $1,200 to the
    creditor who has a lien on it. In the real world, of course, it may be very hard to come up
    with $1,200, which must be paid in a lump sum from the debtor’s personal assets, not
    property that has been set aside for the distribution to creditors. Possible sources of funds
    would include the debtor's post-petition salary, proceeds from the voluntary sale of
    exempt assets or loans from relatives or friends.
    Alternatively, you may reaffirm some debts, if the creditor is willing. By
    reaffirming these debts, you promise to pay them (usually but not always in full), and you
    may keep the property involved, so long as you keep your promise.
    You have the right to cancel a reaffirmation agreement within sixty days after it is
    filed with the court or prior to the discharge, whichever occurs later. Reaffirmation is not
    always in the best interest of the debtor, especially when the reaffirmed debt relates to
    property worth far less than the debt reaffirmed. Most reaffirmations relate to mortgage
    loans and the retention of personal property—car, boat, etc.—especially valued by the
    debtor.


    Finally, as for personal property securing a loan, you may simply continue to
    make payments. The law in this area is not particularly clear, but as a practical matter
    lenders will often not take action if they continue to receive full payment.

    Q. Can I protect some assets, such as a vacation home, by transferring title to
    relatives prior to filing for bankruptcy?
    A.
    No. You will be asked whether or not you have transferred property within a year prior
    to filing. The trustee can cancel the transfer and recover the property for your bankruptcy
    estate. If the trustee discovers that you made the transfer with the intention of defrauding
    any creditor, you may be denied discharge and face charges of committing a fraudulent
    act.

    Q. What happens after I submit all the above information to the court?
    A.
    The bankruptcy court clerk will notify your creditors that you have filed a petition.
    They must immediately stop most efforts to collect the debts you owe. A trustee will be
    appointed, usually a local private lawyer who does this kind of work in the normal course
    of practicing law.


    You will be required to appear at a first meeting of creditors, where the trustee
    will examine our under oath about your petition, Statement of Financial Affairs, and
    schedules. Later he or she will determine whether to challenge any of your claimed
    exemptions or your right to a discharge. If you disagree with the trustee's decision, you
    may protest to the court, which will make the final decision.


    After determining your exemptions, the trustee will assemble and distribute your
    nonexempt assets (if there are any). The trustee will first distribute to secured creditors
    the value of their collateral. Next, the trustee will pay unsecured priority claims, such as
    most taxes. If any funds are left, there is then a distribution among your general unsecured
    creditors on a pro rata (proportionate) basis. Say, for example, that after the payment of
    secured and priority claims, the proceeds from the sale by the trustee of your nonexempt
    assets equal 20 percent of your remaining debts. Then the trustee will pay each general
    creditor 20 percent of what you owe. In return, the court will discharge you from paying
    any remaining balance on your general unsecured debts.

    Q. May I use bankruptcy to get rid of all my debts?
    A.
    No, bankruptcy does not discharge all types of debt. If a debt is excepted from
    discharge you remain legally responsible for it. Exceptions include most tax claims,
    alimony, and child support, many property settlement obligations from a divorce or
    separation, most student loans, fraud debts, and debts from a drunk driving problem.
    Chapter 7 bankruptcy also will not release you from damages for "willful and malicious"
    acts such as assaulting another person. Many debts incurred though the debtor’s fraud are
    also non-dischargeable. In this regard, there is a presumption of fraud in last minute credit
    card binges involving more than $1075 in either cash advances or luxury purchases
    within sixty days before a bankruptcy filing.

    Q. Should husbands and wives file jointly for bankruptcy?
    A.
    They are permitted to, but whether it is to their advantage depends on many factors,
    such as how closely entwined their finances are and whether they live in a community
    property or separate property state (see the chapter, "Family Law.) They're best
    advised to seek the counsel of a bankruptcy lawyer well versed in the law of
    their state. If they both file bankruptcy at the same time, only one case filing fee with
    required changes (in all about $200) will have to be paid to the court in a Chapter 7 or 13
    case.

    Chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy Act
    Q. What does a Chapter 13 bankruptcy case involve?
    A.
    Chapter 13 allows individual who have steady incomes to pay all or a portion of their
    debts under protection and supervision of the court. Under Chapter 13, you file a
    bankruptcy petition and a proposed payment plan with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court. The
    law requires that the payments have a value at least equal to what would have been
    distributed in a Chapter 7 liquidation case. An important feature of Chapter 13 is that you
    will be permitted to keep all your assets while the plan is in effect and after you have
    successfully completed it.


    Chapter 13 is available only to those borrowers with regular income who have less
    than $269,250 in unsecured debts (such as credit cards) and less than $807,750 in secured
    debts (such as mortgages and car loans). Anyone with greater debts usually must declare
    bankruptcy under Chapters 7 or 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. In a joint Chapter 13 case
    those limits are not doubled, instead they are applied to the total amount owed by the
    debtors.

    Q. What is this proposed payment plan?
    A.
    Under Chapter 13, if a creditor or the trustee objects to your plan, your payments must
    represent either (1) full satisfaction of your debts or (2) all your disposable income for a
    three-year period, that is, whatever is left over from your total income after you have paid
    for taxes and necessary living expenses. If there is no objection, the plan may be more
    flexible. The plan that you prepare for review by your lawyer should take into account
    your income from all sources and your necessary expenses. What is left from your income
    after paying living expenses will be available for disbursement to your creditors. Your
    plan must provide for payment in full of all priority claims, such as taxes, although you
    can arrange to pay them over the life of the plan.


    You submit your plan to the court and a Chapter 13 trustee, who is appointed by
    the United States Trustee to handle Chapter 13 cases. The trustee will verify the accuracy
    and reasonableness of your plan and distribute your proposal to the creditors. They will
    have the opportunity at a hearing to challenge your proposal if they believe that it is
    unreasonable. With that in mind, the trustee will want to be sure that your plan provides
    enough for you to live on, but will also challenge expenses that are unreasonably high.
    The issue is whether you are making a "good faith" effort to repay your debts, even if it
    means a reduction in your living standards such as cutting your entertainment expenses
    down from five hundred dollars per month. Since the trustee's recommendation will carry
    considerable weight with the court, it pays to be honest and open with the information
    that you provide. Once the payment plan is approved by the court after the hearing, you
    make regular monthly payments to the trustee, who in turn splits up the money among
    your creditors according to the plan. A Chapter 13 discharge is granted after completion
    of the payments in the plan. If the payments are not completed, there are some
    circumstances under which a more limited discharge may be granted.


    The role of Chapter 13 trustees varies among judicial districts. Some trustees
    work with debtors to help them learn to manage their finances, and may arrange for
    automatic payroll deduction of the monthly payments to be credited directly to the
    trustee's account for disbursement to the various creditors. A small part of the monthly
    payments goes to the trustee for these services.


    A repayment plan under Chapter 13 normally extends your time for paying debts.
    The permitted repayment period usually is up to three years or, with special permission of
    the court, up to five years. Typically, the amount that you repay under a Chapter 13 plan
    is determined by the total of your planned monthly payments over three years, given your
    good faith effort to do the best that you can. A Chapter 13 repayment plan often results in
    your repaying less than you owe.

    Q. What happens if I can’t keep up the payments under my Chapter 13?
    A.
    There are several possibilities depending on the circumstances. For example, if you
    have an accident that causes you to lose time from work temporarily, you may be able to
    arrange a moratorium so that you can miss a payment and catch up later. Further, if there
    is a major permanent reduction in your income, for example, from lost hours due to a
    chronic illness, your trustee may support a modification in the plan if you meet certain
    legal requirements. This might involve either stretching payments out over a longer
    period and accordingly reducing the amount of each one or perhaps giving up some asset
    for which you had planned to make payments. If you complete performance of your
    modified plan, you are entitled to a full Chapter 13-type discharge, described below.
    If there is no modification but the default on your plan payments has resulted from
    circumstances for which you “should not justly be held accountable,” and if the unsecured
    creditors have already received as much as they would have received under Chapter 7,
    you may qualify for a “hardship discharge,” a Chapter 7-type discharge limited by the
    exceptions described above.


    If there is neither a modification nor a hardship discharge, you may instead choose
    to convert your case to Chapter 7. Following conversion, you would presumably receive a
    Chapter 7 discharge unless you have received one within the preceding six years. (Of
    course, in a Chapter 7 case you are obliged to surrender your nonexempt unencumbered
    assets.) If you fail to take the initiative in dealing with defaults under your Chapter 13
    plan—whether by modification, hardship discharge or conversion—a creditor may seek to
    have your case either converted to Chapter 7 or dismissed outright. If the case is
    dismissed, the collection calls will begin again and your may have your car repossessed or
    your home foreclosed upon.

    Q. Compared with straight bankruptcy, what advantages may there be to filing for
    Chapter 13?
    A.
    There may be several advantages.
    First, you will be able to retain and use all your assets as long as you make
    payments to the trustee as agreed. There is an important difference between the treatment
    under Chapter 13 of two types of your secured creditors: those who have a lien on your
    home and those who have a lien on some other asset. For example, say that you have an
    unpaid balance on your car loan of $8,000, but that the car is worth only $5,000. In that
    case, the court will approve the "cram down" of the loan to $5,000 as the secured claim,
    with your monthly payments reduced to reflect that lower balance. In most cases the law
    requires that little or nothing be paid on the car lender’s $3,000 unsecured claim. (If you
    cannot make the required monthly payments on your car, you must return it, unless the
    creditor agrees otherwise.)


    However, the story is quite different for your home mortgage. Even if the market
    value of your home has fallen below the unpaid balance on your mortgage, the court
    generally cannot "cram down" the amount you owe on your mortgage to the market value
    of your home. While you can put accumulated past delinquent mortgage payments (with
    interest to account for your delay) under the Chapter 13 plan, you must make future
    monthly payments on your home mortgage loan, or turn your home over to the lender.
    Second, the discharge of debts under Chapter 13 is broader than it is under
    Chapter 7. Once you successfully complete a repayment plan under Chapter 13,
    individual creditors cannot require you to pay them in full, for example, even if you gave
    them false financial information when you applied for the credit, or if you used some
    other fraudulent means to get credit. The story is different if you file for straight
    bankruptcy. Then any credit grantor to whom you gave false or fraudulent information
    may object to discharging you from repaying the debt you owe it.
    Third, under Chapter 13, if you had people co-sign any of your loans or other
    credit, your creditors cannot collect from these co-signers until it is clear that the Chapter
    13 plan will not pay the entire amount owed to the creditors. In contrast, if you file a
    straight bankruptcy (Chapter 7) petition, your creditors have the right to demand payment
    from your co-signers immediately.


    Fourth, you may discharge debts under Chapter 13 more often than under Chapter
    7. The law forbids you from receiving a discharge under Chapter 7 more than once every
    six years. However, Chapter 13 allows you to file repeatedly, although each filing will
    appear on your credit record and all Chapter 13 plans have to be filed in good faith. Note,
    however, that after you have been discharged under Chapter 13, you must wait six years
    you are eligible for Chapter 7 discharge. That six year rule does not apply if your Chapter
    13 case paid your unsecured creditors at least 70 percent of their allowed claims and your
    plan was proposed by you in good faith and was your best effort.

    Q. Why might some debtors fare better in straight bankruptcy than in Chapter 13?
    A.
    There are several circumstances in which straight bankruptcy may be preferable.
    First, there are many debtors for whom the advantages of Chapter 13 do not
    matter: debtors with no nonexempt assets they particularly wish to keep, no debts
    excepted from discharge in Chapter 7, no history of receiving any bankruptcy discharge
    within the last six years and no co-signers on their loans.


    Second, the benefits of Chapter 13 may come at the price of committing the
    debtor’s disposable income to creditors for as long as three or even five years. In Chapter
    7, the debtor can keep post-petition earnings from personal services free and clear from
    discharged pre-bankruptcy debts.


    Third, some debtors are legally ineligible for Chapter 13, either because their
    income is not sufficiently regular to fund payments under a plan or because the amount of
    their debt exceeds the limits mentioned above.

    Q. If debtors are legally eligible for either Chapter 7 or Chapter 13, may they choose
    between them solely on the basis of their own interests?
    A.
    The choice between chapters is generally left to any eligible debtor. However, courts
    have on grounds of “substantial abuse” dismissed some consumer Chapter 7 cases filed
    by debtors with significant incomes but minimal unencumbered assets. The reason for
    those dismissals is primarily that such debtors should be committing some of their
    income to unsecured creditors rather than leaving them with a minimal Chapter 7
    distribution based solely on the debtor’s heavily mortgaged assets. The courts disagree
    over the meaning of “substantial abuse” and the issue has come up relatively infrequently,
    perhaps because it can be raised only by the court itself or a public officer known as the
    United States trustee—not by creditors. Congress is currently considering more stringent
    restrictions on the use of Chapter 7 by debtors whose incomes would fund a significant
    payment to creditors.

    Q. It is very important that we keep our home. To summarize, what are the relative
    merits of Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 for this objective?
    A.
    First, under either type of filing, you will be able to keep your home only if you
    continue to make the required monthly payments on your mortgages. If you file for
    Chapter 7, you must make arrangements acceptable to your mortgage lender to catch up
    on any delinquent payments; if you file for Chapter 13, you may be able to include the
    delinquent payments in the payment plan and pay those off over, for example, three years,
    while maintaining ongoing monthly mortgage payments. As will be seen below, a
    willingness to make monthly payments on the mortgage will not assure that you can keep
    your home. But not making monthly payments in the future will make it likely that you
    will not keep your home.


    Chapter 7


    A willingness to continue making the agreed monthly payments may not prevent you
    from losing your home if you file for Chapter 7. Under a Chapter 7 filing, your unsecured
    creditors may also have an interest in your home if it is worth more than the total of the
    mortgage debt and any applicable homestead exemption. The trustee may take possession
    of your home and sell it for the benefit of the creditors; that is, it may become part of the
    collection of your assets taken by the trustee for the benefit of your creditors. Whether the
    trustee will actually take your home will depend upon two basic factors:
    • The applicable exemptions. As discussed above, these vary greatly from state to state;
    but the debtor’s home generally enjoys some legal protection from creditors. Often
    there is a “homestead” exemption with a dollar limit. For example, assume that the
    market value of your home is $90,000, and you have a mortgage of $55,000. Your
    equity is the difference between those two figures, or $35,000. If your homestead
    exemption were $30,000 (as in Colorado), the creditors could seek to claim the
    $5,000 left over from your exemption. As a practical matter, the trustee would
    probably not go to the expense and trouble of taking over the property and selling it
    for the benefit of the unsecured creditors, but you could be called upon to pay the
    $5,000 to the trustee.


    In a few states, such as Florida, there is no dollar limit on the homestead
    exemption, only a limit on the acreage that can be shielded from creditors. In Texas
    unsecured creditors cannot seek payment from a homestead, so long as it is not more
    than one acre in a city or 200 acres elsewhere, regardless of the value of the property.
    However, the homesteader will still have to make the required monthly payments to
    the bank that is financing his $2 million townhouse in downtown Dallas or his home
    in Palm Beach. As mentioned above, apart from the homestead exemption, many
    states completely block or seriously limit unsecured creditors of one spouse from
    reaching property the debtor owns together with his or her non-debtor spouse.
    • The difference between the value of your equity and your exemption. The greater the
    spread between the market value of your home and your mortgage debt, the more
    likely is it that the trustee will find it worthwhile to take over your home and sell it for
    the benefit of creditors. Take the example given above, but assume that the market
    value is $190,000, not $90,000. Now, if the house is taken over by the trustee and
    sold for the benefit of the bankruptcy estate, the funds available for unsecured
    creditors would amount to $105,000:
    Selling price $190,000
    Less: Mortgage loan 55,000
    Value of your equity 135,000
    Less: Homestead exemption 30,000
    Available for unsecured creditors $105,000


    Chapter 13


    Under a Chapter 13 plan, your basic choice is either (a) to agree to continue your lender's lien on
    your home and to make the required ongoing monthly payments, in addition to curing the default,
    or (b) to turn the property over to the lender. A lender who recovers less from the sale of the
    house than the amount that you owe will have an unsecured claim for the difference, which may
    be asserted and usually discharged in your bankruptcy case. It is possible that if housing values
    are greatly depressed, a lender might be willing to lower the monthly payments in order to gain
    some income and keep the house occupied. But don't count on it.


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