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The principal attorney
in our law firm is William A. Cohn, has over 25 years of experience
in Bankruptcy.
Chapter
7 - Straight Bankruptcy/ for all entities liquidation
I. COSTS: $306.00 Filing Fees (which is paid to the Court) and expense fee for credit reports, photocopies, check handling, postage, etc. For a total of $395.00.
PLUS:
*$650.00 for individual (commonly called a "consumer bankruptcy")
*$775.00 for individual with sole proprietorship as a "side job" or for "extra income"
*$925.00 for husband and wife (commonly called a "consumer bankruptcy")
*$995.00 for husband and wife with sole proprietorship as "side job" or for "extra income"
*$1,250.00 for individual or husband & wife (which have 12 or more creditors) also for small business sole proprietors
*$1,450.00 for corporations and partnerships
* Includes all consultations & work exclusive of litigation and motions, and one phone consultation per week until 4 weeks after creditor's meeting. Allow 3 weeks for the petition to be typed and ready to sign for filing.
** All Attorney
fees and filing fees and expenses must be paid before Petition
will be filed.
Call
901-757-5557 for a free appointment to discuss your situation.
Chapter 7
and Chapter
13 are commonly
called "consumer bankruptcies".
II. SECURED DEBT
vs. UNSECURED DEBT
A. Secured
debt is a
debt where the Creditor can take back, repossess, or foreclose an
item in satisfaction of his debt. In other words, a mortgage company
can foreclose on your house; a bank or finance company can repossess
your car or household goods; a furniture sales company can take your
furniture back; or a jewelry store can take back your jewelry. Where
the Creditor extends to you the credit to make the purchase for
consumer goods, that is a secured debt also.
B. An unsecured
debt is a
debt where a creditor cannot repossess an item or foreclose on any
item. Examples of this type of debt are: Credit cards, such as
Master Card, VISA, and American Express; Signature Loans;
Deficiencies on Cars that have been repossessed or houses that have
been foreclosed; doctor bills, hospital bills, lawyer bills; and
suppliers of small businesses that do not have a security interest
in the goods.
III. CHAPTER
7
Chapter 7 is a straight
bankruptcy. It is a liquidation. A liquidation is where the trustee
collects all of your assets and sells any assets which are not
exempt, or sells the assets and pays the debtor the amount exempted.
The net proceeds are used to pay the Trustee a commission and to be
distributed to creditors. You wipe out your debts and get a "Fresh
Start".
In a Chapter 7, after you
file it, the next day you do not owe anybody anything. Your debts
are "discharged". (Actually, your debts are discharged
when the Order of Discharge is signed by the Bankruptcy Judge.
However, the signed Order relates back to the date of filing, so
effectively your debts are wiped out the day after you file). All of your secured assets go back to the creditor
(if you wish that to be the case). You do not owe any of your
unsecured debts after that time. Certain debts cannot be discharged,
such as alimony, child support, fraudulent debts, certain taxes,
certain student loans, and certain items charged.
You may keep certain
secured debts such as your car or your furniture or house by
reaffirming those debts. To do so, you must sign a voluntary
"Reaffirmation Agreement". However, you cannot wipe out that debt
(or discharge the debt) for another six years. In other words, if
you decide that you want to keep your house or your car or your
furniture, and you reaffirm the debt, you cannot bankrupt (or
wipe-out) that debt again for six years. You will still owe that
debt and you must continue to pay it just as you were to continue to
pay it before you filed the bankruptcy. In order to reaffirm the
debt, you must also bring it current. In other words, if you are
three or four months behind, then you must pay the back payments
which are due in order to reaffirm it. You can selectively reaffirm
your debts - you can state that you wish to keep the house and the
furniture, but that you want the car and the jewelry to go back to
the respective Creditors.
Reaffirmation agreements
can be set aside during the earlier of 60 days after the agreement
is filed with the Court, or upon the Court's issuance of an
Order of Discharge.
Call
901-757-5557 for a free appointment to discuss your situation.
IV. THE AUTOMATIC
INJUNCTION
The automatic injunction
is in effect on all bankruptcies. Anytime you file a petition for
relief in the Bankruptcy Court, there is an automatic injunction
preventing any creditor from doing anything to collect a debt.
V. TYPICAL
RECOMMENDATIONS
Typically, we see two
situations develop in Consumer Bankruptcies.
A. The first situation is
where a client has secured debts in which he is current or only one
or two months behind. In other words, he may be one or two months
behind on his house note, one or two months behind on his car note,
and the same for his furniture and jewelry note. However, he comes
to us and says "I have been sick and I have a tremendous amount of
medical bills (unsecured debt)"; or "I'm going through a divorce (or
some sort of domestic problem); and I am at my limit on all my
credit cards and I owe a tremendous amount" (of unsecured debt). He
says if he just didn't have all of this unsecured debt and that if
he wasn't making monthly payments on this unsecured debt, then he
would be able to make his payments on his secured debt. In that
instance, we recommend a Chapter 7 straight bankruptcy because he is
able to discharge all of the unsecured debts and obtain a "Fresh
Start". After reaffirmation of this debt and payment of delinquent
installments, he can easily keep up his monthly notes.
B. The other situation is
where the client arrives and states that he is three or more months
behind on his house note, three or four months behind on his car
note, several months behind on his jewelry and furniture note, and
that even if he discharged all of his unsecured debts he still would
not be able to bring his secured debts current. He may not even have
any unsecured debt. However, he does not wish to lose his assets,
but merely needs time to pay off any arrearages that he owes. This
person is a candidate for a Chapter 13 wage earner plan. It allows
him to pay off his debts and to preserve his assets. That is our
recommendation in such a circumstance.
C. There is a gray area
in between the two recommendations. Many people also feel that they
have a moral and ethical obligation to pay out their debts. In those
circumstances, a Chapter 13 (Wage Earner) Plan would be our
recommendation. In the gray areas, it is largely a decision of the
client.
D. If the Bankruptcy
Chapter that you choose does not work out, you may be able to
convert to another Chapter. You have the absolute right to dismiss
a Chapter 13, or to convert a Chapter 13 to a Chapter 7.
Call
901-757-5557 for a free appointment to discuss your situation.
VI. STUDENT
LOANS
Government issued student
loans are not dischargeable.
The debtor must file a complaint to determine dischargeability. This
is not a part of a simple Bankruptcy filing. It may be the case that
the debtor would not have this debt discharged as the Bankruptcy
Courts are very conservative in allowing a person to be determined
as such a hardship.
VII.
TAXES
Generally, taxes cannot
be discharged in a Chapter 7 straight bankruptcy.
However, under certain
limited circumstances, Federal Income tax can be discharged in
bankruptcy if they are more than three calendar years old, all tax
returns have been timely filed, and the tax has not been assessed by
the IRS within the 9 months before the filing of the Bankruptcy
petition. Liens placed by the IRS can also prevent discharge. You
need to consult with the attorney if this is a problem.
Obviously, taxes CAN be
paid out in a Chapter 13 wage earner plan and the IRS can be stopped
from enforcing any liens or other collection procedures by the
filing of the Chapter 13 Wage Earner Plan.
A complaint to determine
the dischargeability should be filed. This is not a part of the
simple Bankruptcy filing.
VIII. BANK
ACCOUNTS
Any time you file a
bankruptcy, if you have a checking or savings account or any other
kind of deposit account with a bank to whom you owe any money for a
loan or credit card or other matter, then you should close out your
checking and savings account and certificate of deposit or any other
account that you have, and move it to a bank to whom you owe NO
money. This will prevent that bank from obtaining a set-off of your
funds.
IX. ADVERSE
SITUATIONS
Call 901-757-5557 for a free
appointment to discuss your situation.
Chapter 7 discharge can
be denied by the Court under certain circumstances such as
concealing property, destroying or falsifying records, or fraud.
These also can be criminal matters.
A discharge under Chapter
7 can also be denied as to specific debts when a creditor files an
"Objection to Discharge." Only that creditor's debt or a portion of
that debt may be kept from being "wiped out." Examples are certain
taxes, support, loans obtained by false financial statements or by
fraud, and loans obtained when you are insolvent ( that is, when you
borrow money by loan or by credit card and your debts exceed your
assets-at the time of the loan-, and you are unable to repay the
money borrowed).
A Chapter 7 should not be
filed before a divorce is finalized.
A proposed Chapter 13
Plan can be denied confirmation (approval by the Court) if the
Court, after a hearing, feels the proposed plan to be unfeasible
(not enough available income to fund the plan), not proposed in good
faith, or not paying the correct amounts according to the
law.
A proposed Chapter 11
Plan can be denied confirmation if not approved by vote of the
creditors, or if it fails to meet certain guidelines required by
law.
X.
MISCELLANEOUS
A Bankruptcy will stay on
your credit record from the time of filing until the credit
reporting agency's roll over period. This is usually eight years,
and can be as much as 10 years.
There are always other
circumstances that need to be addressed and questions that need to
be answered. Please feel free to ask the lawyer what happens in
these circumstances.
WILLIAM A.
COHN
Member: American Bar
Association
Member: Commercial Law
League of America
Author
of:
"Deferring Vesting of Property in a Chapter 13 Wage Earner
Plan"
Commercial Law Journal
(August, 1983).
Representative
debtor clients:
Chapter 11:
Nomad
Construction Company
Mid South Equipment Sales, Inc.
Blackie's Body Shop,
Inc.
Mid South Equipment Rentals, Inc.
B & P Enterprises,
Inc.
One Memphis
Place
Hayes & Sons Body
Shop, Inc.
Hickory Hill Shopping
Center
Chapter 7: The Donut
Shop, Inc.
Old Southern Tea Room,
Inc.
(conversion from Chapter
11)
Null's Service,
Inc.
(conversion from Chapter
11)
WHAT HAPPENS AFTER
FILING CHAPTER 7 PETITION
Call 901-757-5557 for a free
appointment to discuss your situation.
SECTION
ONE
The filing of a Chapter 7
Bankruptcy Petition constitutes an automatic injunction against any
creditor to collect any debt.
A. If you are called by a creditor
or collection agency before the filing of the Chapter 7 Petition,
merely tell them that THE COHN LAW FIRM represents you and that they
are filing a Chapter 7 Bankruptcy Petition for you and that they
should direct all calls to our office and not call you
anymore.
B. Approximately five days after your
interview in our office where you have signed all of your petitions
and documentation to be filed in Court you should call our office
to obtain your bankruptcy number. This is the number that the
Court uses and is called a DOCKET NUMBER. If any creditor or
collection agency calls you or any one has threatened to repossess
your car or has started foreclosure proceedings you should call
this creditor and tell them the bankruptcy number. Also inform
them if they start to question you, that ALL communication is
to be through your attorney THE COHN LAW FIRM in as much we
have instructed you to do so.
C. Additionally, once we have filed
the Chapter 7 Petition and you have obtained your bankruptcy
number from us, if you want a payroll deduction and have a garnishment
about to be placed or it has been placed on your wages, you
should inform your employer immediately of the bankruptcy number
and the type of bankruptcy and that they should contact our
office for further information if they need it. They should
also contact their lawyer if they have any questions. In any
event, they are prohibited from honoring any garnishment on
your wages once the Chapter 7 Petition is filed. The same applies
to any sheriff appearing to repossess any car or any other item
such as a car. Merely tell them the bankruptcy number and the
attorney's name and he should be aware of the automatic injunction
preventing him from collecting this debt or doing anything attempting
to collect this debt.
SECTION TWO: NOTICE OF INFORMATION
Approximately one week
after the filing date, you will receive an order from the Court
setting your Creditor's Meeting. This will be a piece of paper with
many boxes but which will list your Bankruptcy number and the date,
time, and place of your Creditors' Meeting.
SECTION THREE: CREDITORS' MEETING
Approximately, three
weeks after you receive the notice from the Court and four weeks
after the filing of your bankruptcy, there will be a Creditors'
Meeting held at the Bankruptcy Court. YOU MUST
ATTEND OR YOUR CASE WILL BE DISMISSED. IF YOU ARE FILING
JOINTLY, BOTH OF YOU MUST ATTEND. Call
our office: 1) if you do not receive notice of the Creditors'
Meeting within three weeks; or 2) if you cannot attend the Creditors'
Meeting. YOU WILL BE CHARGED AN ADDITIONAL
FEE IF THE LAWYER GOES TO THE CREDITORS' MEETING AND YOU
DO NOT APPEAR. You must attend a Creditors'
Meeting. You should arrive approximately ten minutes
early to the creditors' meeting. Have a seat in the creditors'
meeting hearing room. An attorney from THE COHN LAW FIRM will
be present to hear your case. If the hearing examiner or Trustee
calls your name or the attorney's name and he is not there,
stand up and mention to the examiner that you are arriving shortly.
Many times we get caught in another court and arrive late for
a hearing. However, we will try to avoid this situation.
The Creditors' Meeting
is not like a trial in which Perry Mason is working. It is merely
an informal question and answer session. Creditors will want
to have the correct information and have reaffirmation agreements
signed. The Trustee will want to know if there is any equity
in any of your assets so that he can resell the assets and make
a commission (and make a small payment pro rata to unsecured
creditors). They will ask you questions about what happened
to certain collateral security or about your income or any other
financial information. You should be prepared to answer these
questions. If you have any questions, you should contact us
and discuss these matters prior to the hearing. The vast majority
of the time, the questions asked are harmless and present no
problems to the Debtor. However, if you show on your Income
& Expense Schedules that you have a surplus if income after
your expenses are paid each month, or if the trustee feels that
you can return one or more secured items and have money available
(from not having to pay those secured debts), then the U.S.
Trustee may file a Motion to Dismiss
your Chapter 7 bankruptcy, stating that you are abusing the
bankruptcy process. This motion is based on the fact that the
U.S. Trustee and the Judge may feel that you could pay the creditors
some percentage of what you owe them in a Chapter 13 "Wage
Earner" bankruptcy with that surplus income. As of October
1, 2005 Congressional Legislation has made that requirement
law.
Bring your driver's license
and Social Security Card to the Creditor's Meeting.
The U.S. Trustee will ask
the following questions at the Creditors' Meeting, and you should
read this and your previous information sheet for their
answers:
a) the potential
consequences of seeking a discharge in bankruptcy- debts discharged,
assets lost over and above exemptions;
b) the effects on your
credit history- the bankruptcy will be on your credit history for
more than 8 years.
c) the fact that you can
file a Chapter 7, 12, or 13.
d) the fact that a discharge
in bankruptcy relieves you of all responsibility and obligation
to pay listed debts unless you re-affirm the debt (agree to
continue paying); and that re-affirmation of a debt binds you
to pay that debt and it is not dischargeable for 6 years (unless
you file a Notice of rescission of the Re-affirmation with the
Court within 60 days of signing it).
e) your duties to
disclose all debts and assets and their locations.
f) the fact that there
exists the possibility of fines and other penalties for fraud and
abuses of the bankruptcy system.
g) the fact that you can
be barred from filing bankruptcy and stopped from discharging your
debts if you violate Bankruptcy Code §707(b), which is to commit a
fraud or abuse the bankruptcy system.
SECTION FOUR: RIGHTS OF CREDITORS AFTER CREDITORS' MEETINGS
Approximately 90 days
after the creditors' meeting, the bar date set by the Court will
pass and the creditors will no longer be able to file an objection
to discharge (unless the Court extends the time for filing the
objection).
Approximately 150 days
after the Creditors' Meeting, you will receive an Order of Discharge
from the Court.
SECTION FIVE: PROCEEDINGS AFTER THE CREDITORS' MEETING
After the Creditors'
Meeting, several things may happen. For each of these things,
our contract with you states that these items
will incur additional attorney fees. In other
words, we must bill you by the hour, or in advance for additional
items.
A. If you have failed to sign a re
affirmation agreement, a secured creditor may come in and ask the
Court to lift the automatic stay to allow them to repossess an item
such as a car or to foreclose on real property such as a house or
building. For defending this, we must charge you an additional
amount.
B. Motion to Amend
If you leave
off creditors or you fail to tell us about creditors, then add
a creditor later, requires an additional proceeding. There is
a $20.00 filing fee plus an attorney fee.
The filing fee
goes to the Court.
C. Objections to Discharge
On occasion,
a creditor will attempt to have his debt exempted from discharge;
that is, not wiped out. He will file a lawsuit objecting to
the discharge which we must defend. This would require additional
attorney's work and additional billing by the attorney.
D. There are various other Motions
which can be filed and which address select situations. These
include (but are not limited to):
1. Motion to Dismiss by the U.S.
Trustee (see Section 3, above);
2. Motion to Redeem (see Section 8, below);
3. Motion to Avoid Lien (see Section 8, below).
Call
901-757-5557 for a free appointment to discuss your situation.
SECTION SIX: HOUSE MORTGAGE SITUATIONS
You will have to resume
your payments to the mortgage company and pay any and all delinquent
payments if you wish to keep your house.
If you wish to surrender
your house, you should make arrangements to vacate the house
promptly, and in no instance past the creditors' meeting. The
creditor should be notified and given possession of the
keys.
TRUSTEE'S
ACTIONS
If you elect to re-affirm
your mortgage, and if you have a substantial equity in your home,
the Trustee can sell the home , pay your first mortgage, pay to you
your exemption, pay himself a fee, pay the real estate agent and the
costs of closing, and distribute the balance to unsecured creditors
on a pro rata basis. The Trustee can send an appraiser to your home
to appraise the value of the home.
That being said, you have
the absolute right to convert your chapter 7 to a chapter 13 plan
anytime before you receive an Order of Discharge should the Trustee
elect to so proceed. You therefore would not lose your home.
SECTION SEVEN: SECURED ITEMS BEING REAFFIRMED
You will receive a
Reaffirmation Agreement for the personal property that you wish to
keep. This will keep the debt from being wiped out (or discharged).
You will then still owe the debt and will have to continue to timely
pay the installment payments. You can be sued later or have the
property repossessed or foreclosed upon if you later default in
these payments.
Different creditors react
differently. Some creditors will not sign a Reaffirmation Agreement
and will make no effort to repossess the property. Some creditors
will only sign the agreement if you will agree to reaffirm their
unsecured debt also.
SECTION EIGHT: SECURED ITEMS NOT BEING REAFFIRMED
***You should contact
each secured creditor once for small items.
***For large items, such
as a car, drive it to their office and give them the key.
***You will not owe the
debt when the item is returned or tendered.
***You will no longer owe
any of the unsecured debts.
You may also keep the
items and discharge the debt in certain select
situations.
We can file a MOTION
TO allow you to REDEEM certain secured consumer
personal property in which the value has greatly diminished.
If the Court approves it, you can tender the approved amount
to the creditor, discharge the debt, and keep the property.
We can file a MOTION
TO AVOID a LIEN if you have property valued
at less than your allowed exemption amount and if you put up
that consumer property as security for a loan. This is not
applicable where you were extended credit to purchase the
property.
You must advise us
if you meet these requirements as we do not automatically file
these motions. There is an additional charge
for each of such motions as there are additional
court appearances, and you no longer have a "simple"
bankruptcy.
SECTION NINE: RE-FILING
***You cannot file another
Chapter 7 petition for 8 years from the date of discharge.
***You can, however, file a Chapter 13 petition after your Chapter
7 case is closed.
***You must pay 100% of your unsecured debt in such a Chapter
13 case.
SECTION TEN: TELEPHONE CALLS AND APPOINTMENTS
The attorney will be
happy to answer your questions if he/she is available. If not, the
staff will answer your questions, or, if they cannot, they will take
your question to the attorney and call you back with an answer. Do
not expect call backs from the attorney. If the attorney feels that
it is important, he may call you back. The attorneys carry mobile
phones and call in for messages, and they will call you back if your
question merits their personal call. You should be available to take
the call. Attorneys will not spend time playing with pagers, and
will not play telephone tag with you. They will always be available
for appointments in the office. If you feel that you have an
important item to discuss, call and make an appointment with the
attorney. The time you spend coming to an appointment will be less
than the time you spend playing telephone tag. If you do not feel it
is important enough to make an appointment, then it is clearly not
important enough for a special return call from an attorney.
SECTION ELEVEN: PAYMENT OF ATTORNEY FEES AND COSTS
Any balance owed to
this Firm must be paid
before the first creditors' meeting or the
Bankruptcy Court will dismiss your bankruptcy You will be charged
additional fees for certain post filing representation.
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