Personal Bankruptcy
Personal bankruptcy generally is considered the debt management
option of last resort because the results are long-lasting and far
reaching. People who follow the bankruptcy rules receive a discharge —
a court order that says they don’t have to repay certain debts.
However, bankruptcy information (both the date of your filing and the
later date of discharge) stay on your credit report for 10 years, and
can make it difficult to obtain credit, buy a home, get life insurance,
or sometimes get a job. Still, bankruptcy is a legal procedure that
offers a fresh start for people who have gotten into financial
difficulty and can’t satisfy their debts.
There are
two primary types of personal bankruptcy: Chapter 13 and Chapter 7.
Each must be filed in federal bankruptcy court. As of April 2006, the
filing fees run about $274 for Chapter 13 and $299 for Chapter 7.
Attorney fees are additional and can vary.
Effective
October 2005, Congress made sweeping changes to the bankruptcy laws.
The net effect of these changes is to give consumers more incentive to
seek bankruptcy relief under Chapter 13 rather than Chapter 7. Chapter
13 allows people with a steady income to keep property, like a
mortgaged house or a car, that they might otherwise lose through the
bankruptcy process. In Chapter 13, the court approves a repayment plan
that allows you to use your future income to pay off your debts during
a three-to-five-year period, rather than surrender any property. After
you have made all the payments under the plan, you receive a discharge
of your debts.
Chapter 7 is known as straight
bankruptcy, and involves liquidation of all assets that are not exempt.
Exempt property may include automobiles, work-related tools, and basic
household furnishings. Some of your property may be sold by a
court-appointed official — a trustee — or turned over to your
creditors. The new bankruptcy laws have changed the time period during
which you can receive a discharge through Chapter 7. You now must wait
8 years after receiving a discharge in Chapter 7 before you can file
again under that chapter. The Chapter 13 waiting period is much shorter
and can be as little as two years between filings.
Both
types of bankruptcy may get rid of unsecured debts and stop
foreclosures, repossessions, garnishments and utility shut-offs, and
debt collection activities. Both also provide exemptions that allow
people to keep certain assets, although exemption amounts vary by
state. Note that personal bankruptcy usually does not erase child
support, alimony, fines, taxes, and some student loan obligations. And,
unless you have an acceptable plan to catch up on your debt under
Chapter 13, bankruptcy usually does not allow you to keep property when
your creditor has an unpaid mortgage or security lien on it.
Another major change to the bankruptcy laws involves certain hurdles
that a consumer must clear before even filing for bankruptcy, no matter
what the chapter. You must get credit counseling from a
government-approved organization within six months before you file for
any bankruptcy relief. You can find a state-by-state list of
government-approved organizations at www.usdoj.gov/ust.
That is the website of the U.S. Trustee Program, the organization
within the U.S. Department of Justice that supervises bankruptcy cases
and trustees. Also, before you file a Chapter 7 bankruptcy case, you
must satisfy a “means test.” This test requires you to confirm that
your income does not exceed a certain amount. The amount varies by
state and is publicized by the U.S. Trustee Program at www.usdoj.gov/ust.
Source: Federal Trade Commission
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Date Added: 2009-04-06 Views : 321