How
Chapter 7 bankruptcy works.
Chapter
7 bankruptcy is sometimes called "liquidation" bankruptcy -- it cancels your debts, but you might have to let the bankruptcy
court liquidate (sell) some of your property for
the benefit of your creditors. ("Chapter 7" refers to the chapter of the federal Bankruptcy Code that contains the bankruptcy
law.)
Chapter 7 Bankruptcy Costs in Time and Money
The
whole Chapter 7 bankruptcy process takes about four
to six months, costs $299 in filing and administrative
fees, and commonly requires only one trip to the
courthouse.
You
must also complete credit counseling with an agency
approved by the United States Trustee. (For a list
of approved agencies in each state, go to the Trustee's
website,www.usdoj.gov/ust, and click "Credit Counseling and Debtor Education.")
Who Can File
You
won't be able to use Chapter 7 bankruptcy if you
already received a bankruptcy discharge in the last
six to eight years (depending which type of bankruptcy
you filed) or if, based on your income, expenses,
and debt burden, you could feasibly complete a Chapter
13 repayment plan. (For more information on these
eligibility requirements, seeChapter 7 Bankruptcy
-- Who Can File?)
Bankruptcy Forms
To
file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy, you fill out a petition
and a number of other forms and file them with the
bankruptcy court in your area. Basically, the forms
ask you to describe:
* your property
* your current income and monthly living expenses
* your debts
* property you claim the law allows you to keep through the Chapter
7 bankruptcy process (called "exempt
property") -- most states let you keep some equity in your home, clothing, household furnishings,
Social Security payments you haven't spent, and other necessities
such as a car and the tools of your trade.
* property you owned and money you spent during the previous two
years, and
* property you sold or gave away during the previous two years.
You'll
find step-by-step instructions for filling out all
of the required forms in How to File for Chapter
7 Bankruptcy, by Stephen Elias, Albin Renauer, and
Robin Leonard (Nolo).
Bankruptcy's Magic Wand -- The Automatic Stay
Filing
for Chapter 7 bankruptcy puts into effect an "Order for Relief" -- known informally as the "automatic stay." The automatic stay immediately stops most creditors from trying to collect what
you owe them. So, at least temporarily, creditors
cannot legally grab ("garnish") your wages, empty your bank account, go after your car, house, or other property,
or cut off your utility service or welfare benefits.
For more information, seeHow Bankruptcy Stops Your
Creditors: The Automatic Stay.
Bankruptcy Court's Control Over Your Financial Affairs
By
filing for Chapter 7 bankruptcy, you are technically
placing the property you own and the debts you owe
in the hands of the bankruptcy court. You can't sell
or give away any of the property you own when you
file, or pay off your pre-filing debts, without the
court's consent. However, with a few exceptions,
you can do what you wish with property you acquire
and income you earn after you file for bankruptcy.
The Bankruptcy Trustee for Chapter 7 Bankruptcy
The
court exercises its control through a court-appointed
person called a "bankruptcy trustee." The trustee's primary duty is to see that your creditors are paid as much as
possible on what you owe them. And the more assets
the trustee recovers for creditors, the more the
trustee is paid.
The
trustee (or the trustee's staff) will examine your
papers to make sure they are complete and to look
for nonexempt property to sell for the benefit of
creditors. The trustee will also look at your financial
transactions during the previous year to see if any
can be undone to free up assets to distribute to
your creditors. In most Chapter 7 bankruptcy cases,
the trustee finds nothing of value to sell.
The Creditors Meeting
A
week or two after you file, you (and all the creditors
you list in your bankruptcy papers) will receive
a notice that a "creditors meeting" has been scheduled. The bankruptcy trustee runs the meeting and, after swearing
you in, may ask you questions about your bankruptcy
and the papers you filed. In the vast majority of
Chapter 7 bankruptcies, this is the debtor's only
visit to the courthouse.
What Happens to Your Property
If,
after the creditors meeting, the trustee determines
that you have some nonexempt property, you may be
required to either surrender that property or provide
the trustee with its equivalent value in cash. If
the property isn't worth very much or would be cumbersome
for the trustee to sell, the trustee may "abandon" the property -- which means that you get to keep it, even though it is nonexempt.
(For information on which types of property are typically
exempt, see When Chapter 7 Bankruptcy Isn't the Right
Choice. However, which property is exempt varies
by state -- you can find complete lists of exempt
property for every state in How to File for Chapter
7 Bankruptcy, by Stephen Elias, Albin Renauer, and
Robin Leonard (Nolo).)
Most
property owned by Chapter 7 debtors is either exempt
or is essentially worthless for purposes of raising
money for the creditors. As a result, few debtors
end up having to surrender any property, unless it
is collateral for a secured debt (see below).
How Your Secured Debts Are Treated
If
you've pledged property as collateral for a loan,
the loan is called a secured debt. The most common
examples of collateral are houses and automobiles.
If you're behind on your payments, the creditor can
ask to have the automatic stay lifted in order to
repossess or foreclose on the property. However,
if you are current on your payments, you can keep
the property and keep making payments as before --
unless you have enough equity in the property to
justify its sale by the trustee.
If
a creditor has recorded a lien against your property
because of a debt you haven't paid (for example,
because the creditor obtained a court judgment against
you), that debt is also secured. You may be able
to wipe out the lien in Chapter 7 bankruptcy.
The Chapter 7 Bankruptcy Discharge
At the end of the
bankruptcy process, all of your debts are wiped out
(discharged) by the court, except:
* debts that automatically
survive bankruptcy, such as child support, most tax
debts, and student loans, unless the court rules
otherwise, and
* debts that the court has declared nondischargeable because the
creditor objected (for example, debts incurred by your fraud or
malicious acts).
For
more information and step-by-step help filing for
Chapter 7 bankruptcy, see How to File for Chapter
7 Bankruptcy, by Stephen Elias, Albin Renauer, and
Robin Leonard (Nolo).
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