Monthly Archives: February 2010

What Happens if I Forget to List a Creditor in My Bankruptcy Petition?

When you are filing for bankruptcy, it’s all too easy to forget to list a creditor or to discover, after the petition has been filed, a creditor that you did not even know existed. When debts are bought and sold by creditors and collection agencies faster than a credit report can often account for the exchanges, it’s a commonplace phenomenon for a filing debtor to receive, after filing the petition, a collection letter from one of the seemingly endless fly-by-night collection agencies for a debt that the debtor did not know had changed hands. (As a consumer bankruptcy attorney working in a specific geographic area, the Detroit area of southeast Michigan, I am often amazed at the sheer number of these companies that come and go like schools of fish … Outside of a few larger agencies, each petition I file brings a slew of collection agencies I have never seen before and will likely never see again!)

Other times, leaving a creditor off of a listing is just a matter of simple error. No big deal. It happens. I try to avoid such error with my clients by working with them to obtain their latest credit report prior to filing their petitions. Most of the time, this nets all of the creditors swimming around them, and it will usually ensure that at least the original debts owed by my clients are successfully listed in the petition, even if a debt happens to have been recently sold off to some random collection agency.

So long as the error or omission is caught early enough in the roughly 4 month bankruptcy process, it is a simple matter to add a missed or missing creditor to a filed petition. The court charges a $23 fee for such amendments, but it is worth the cost. Although, in a Chapter 7, a non-listed debt will still be discharged, if the creditor has a claim against the debtor for fraud, theft, some willful or malicious act against the filing debtor, or if the creditor would have received funds from the filing debtor’s bankruptcy estate if they had been listed, that debt may not be discharged.

Additionally, it goes without saying that all debts and creditors must be disclosed. When you file a bankruptcy petition, your signature on the petition in several places indicates that you have completely and accurately disclosed all of your assets and liabilities. At the 341 Meeting of Creditors, about halfway through the bankruptcy process, you likewise will swear under oath that you have completely disclosed all of your assets and liabilities. A missing creditor that you are aware of or should have been aware of means that this cannot be true.

It is, thus, very important to work closely—and patiently—with your attorney when filing bankruptcy to ensure that all of the necessary information (especially creditors!) gets included. If your attorney works as I and most other bankruptcy attorneys that I am acquainted with do, you will be required to fill out a lengthy questionnaire at the beginning of your bankruptcy process from which your attorney will create your bankruptcy petition. It is not fun to fill out these questionnaires, but it is extremely necessary. Bankruptcy, like every legal process, is only worth doing if it is done right. It is always worth taking the time and effort up front to ensure that your bankruptcy filing is completely accurate in every way.

If you are a Michigan resident and are considering filing for bankruptcy, please contact me at jhilla@aronofflinnell.com or (248) 977-4182 to schedule a free, initial consultation.

Am I Responsible for My New Spouse’s Debts?

This question is a very common one, and it is, unfortunately, often the basis for uncomfortable discussions between those wishing to marry.

Much of the confusion regarding the answer is, I think, a result of media reports of the divorces of the rich and famous, many of whom reside in California, a community property state. My state, Michigan, is not a community property state … For the purposes of divorce, it is what is known as an “equitable distribution state.” That is, couples who divorce are entitled to a distribution of the property that they accumulated through their marriage according to the contribution they made to that property. It is not an even 50% split by any means, though that can, in some circumstances, be the result. All of that discussion, however, concerns the question of property—not debt.

When it comes to bankruptcy and to concerns about “marrying into debt,” the equation is more cut-and-dry: the answer to the question of whether your are responsible for your new spouse’s debt-load is NO.  You are not automatically made party to the contracts of sale and credit your new spouse has agreed to be party to by virtue of your marriage. There is no mechanism in the law that automatically adds your name to any contract to which you have not agreed to be personally liable.  While the civil act of marriage does, depending on the state that you live in, potentially entitle you to some portion of your new spouse’s property either in the case of divorce or death, a marriage does not have any legal effect with regard to each participating spouse’s personal debt accrued prior to the marriage.

It is always a good idea, of course, to discuss your financial liabilities with a prospective spouse prior to marriage so that, as a couple, you can adequately plan for the lifestyle you wish to achieve together. Further, one may consider it a matter of personal ethics or morality to “warn” a prospective spouse if your debt-load is high. However, regardless of the outcome of that necessary discussion, unless you co-sign for loans or credit-cards after the marriage is completed, you will NOT “marry” each other’s debt.

If you are a resident of Detroit or southeast Michigan and have questions about debt and bankruptcy, please contact me at jhilla@aronofflinnell.com or (248) 977-4182 to schedule a free, initial consultation.