Tag Archives: southfield

Can I Repay a Personal Loan to a Friend or Family Member before Filing for Chapter 7 Bankruptcy?

Following a Chapter 7 bankruptcy, you may repay any debt you choose regardless of the fact that it has been formally discharged in bankruptcy. Therefore, debtors with outstanding debts to friends or family-members for personal or other types of loans do not lose the ability, first of all, to repay those loans. The bankruptcy affects only that friend or family member’s ability to collect on the debt short of the debtor’s voluntary repayment of the debt. Prior to the filing of the bankruptcy, however, such repayments, in certain cases, may affect a debtor’s ability to file for bankruptcy within a desired timeframe.

Many debtors wish to pay off personal loans entirely so as to maintain a good personal relationship with the friend or family-member who made them the loan. It is not generally the case that these sorts of outstanding debts are those that have driven the debtor to consider bankruptcy in the first place. Rather, they are often secondary steps taken to avoid bankruptcy or other drastic actions in the face of the general hardship of a job-loss, medical situation, or divorce. Someone did them a favor, in other words, and they are reluctant to appear to be biting the hand that fed them.

Nevertheless, as I’ve written elsewhere on this blog, prior to the filing of the bankruptcy petition, there is a 90-day period of time known as as the “preference period,” in which any payments larger than $600 made to any one creditor are scrutinized by the court-appointed trustee overseeing the bankruptcy case to determine whether a “preferential transfer” has been made. Such “transfers” are those that “prefer” one creditor over another, and, if the trustee has determined that such a transfer has occurred, he or she may reclaim those transferred funds and/or dismiss the bankruptcy case entirely.

When a payment of this sort has been made to an “insider,” the preference period is much longer. An “insider” is classified, basically, as a friend or family-member, among other things. Any payment over $600 made to an “insider” within one year of the filing of the bankruptcy petition may be considered a preferential transfer.

Thus, if you have an outstanding personal loan that absolutely must be repaid before filing for bankruptcy, it may mean holding off on filing your petition for an entire year. In individual cases, there may be good reasons to elect to make this repayment and delay filing for bankruptcy for that amount of time; in other cases, it may be better to simply file and “voluntarily” repay the loan in smaller incremements after the bankruptcy discharge is granted.

If you are a southeast Michigan resident and are considering filing for bankruptcy, please contact me at (866) 674-2317 or john@hillalaw.com to schedule a free, initial consultation.

How Long Will It Take to Rebuild my Credit after Bankruptcy?

While it is true that filing for bankruptcy is a serious blow to anyone’s credit-report, it is no longer completely true that, after a bankruptcy, it is impossible to rebuild your credit standing within a reasonable amount of time. The amount of time that rebuilding your credit actually takes varies from person to person, naturally, but, for many, filing for bankruptcy is actually the first step on the road to a renewed credit standing rather than the last, particularly if you are one of those whose credit health is in such a state of disrepair that a bankruptcy discharge actually is an improvement of sorts, in that it allows some positive progression to be made rather than a neverending cycle of minimum monthly charge payments, late-payment fees, collection lawsuits, and garnishments.

It is an unavoidable truth that a bankruptcy will remain on your credit-report for up to 10 years, of course. The bankruptcy itself will be an obvious detriment for several years, but, eventually, it will be a detriment for future credit lenders examining your report to take into the context of, first, your report as a whole and, additionally, your baseline FICO score. In other words,  the bankruptcy can balanced out somewhat by the steps you take in the first few years immediately following your bankruptcy discharge to rebuild your credit.

These steps will be obvious once your discharge is received in that, at least assuming our current credit-crunch magically eases at some point, credit-card issuers and other credit-lenders now, in the wake of the deregulation of the banking industries in the Clinton and Bush years, actually target post-discharge bankruptcy filers as what they believe to be a viable market-segment for their business. After your discharge, you will receive credit card and other solicitations fairly shortly. Most of these will be high-interest offers that you should avoid like the plague, generally, but, at some point, an offer will be made that will not look too badly that you may consider accepting in order to begin rebuilding your credit. Naturally, you’ll not want to end up in the same situation again and will want to be sure to pay off any new balances each month, but the opportunity will be there to begin rebuilding your credit the old-fashioned way: through the use of credit. Additionally, for FICO purposes, the bankruptcy discharge itself, which liquidates most of your actual debt, improves your income-to-debt ratio instantly.

Again, since you won’t be able to file for bankruptcy again for a number of years, you’ll need to be extremely careful accepting new sources of credit so that you don’t fall into the same personal crunch that led you to file bankruptcy in the first place. But, unlike in previous decades, when a bankruptcy discharge really did drop a nuclear bomb in the middle of your financial existence for many years, it is now possible to genuinely view a bankruptcy as a fresh start, if you handle it properly and don’t fall back into old habits.

If you are a southeast Michigan resident and are considering filing for bankruptcy, please contact me at (866) 674-2317 or john@hillalaw.com to schedule a free, initial consultation.

Michigan Bankruptcy Lawyer: Best of the Bankruptcy Basics

I began this blog only last December, and, although six months is not a lot of time to assess the effectiveness of anything, one thing that has become clear to me is the number of people interested in very basic information about bankruptcy. The ground-level hows and whys and whens remain a mystery to many people, despite the huge amount of information about bankruptcy available on the internet and elsewhere. The posts I’ve written here that address some of these basic questions are among the most-viewed, far exceeding the readership of my posts addressing very specific issues within the framework of bankruptcy.

Therefore, for the benefit of any new readers who may stumble upon this blog, I’d like to take the opportunity, to point toward some of my previous posts that have touched upon the very basic basics of bankruptcy. Wondering where to get started? Try reading these first, below, first.

If you are a southeast Michigan resident and are considering filing for bankruptcy, please contact me at (866) 674-2317 or john@hillalaw.com to schedule a free, initial consultation.

How Long Does the Bankruptcy Process Take? What IS the Bankruptcy Process?

I have tended to write about somewhat more substantive matters on this blog, so far, but the #1 question that potential clients ask me when they call actually is, “How long does bankruptcy take?” What they are often curious about, in general, is what exactly the bankruptcy process entails, how often they themselves will have to go to court, and, in addition, how long all of it will, in the end, take. The answers to these questions are quite different for Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 bankruptcies, so I will describe only the Chapter 7 process in this post.

A Chapter 7 bankruptcy, in general, takes about 4 months from the filing of the petition to the receipt of the discharge. That is the official process, however, and does not take into consideration the amount of time the collection of the necessary information and documentation by the filing debtor and his or her attorney requires up front. That up-front time aside, which can take anywhere from a handful of days to a few weeks, depending upon the level of organization and the assets and liabilities in question of each client. The “official process,” however, begins when the debtor’s attorney has utilized all of that collected documentation to draft the bankruptcy petition. When that petition is filed with the court, it sets into place the Automatic Stay against creditors’ collection attempts. This means that, beginning in the exact moment of the petition’s filing, creditors may no longer call with harassing collection phone-calls, send invoices or other mailings, pursue or collect garnishments, or repossess or foreclose on property. This Automatic Stay remains in place for the entire length of the bankruptcy proceeding.

After the petition is filed, what is usually the one-and-only “court date” for a Chapter 7 debtor is scheduled. This is the “341 Meeting of Creditors,” named after the section of the Bankruptcy Code (Sec. 341) which allows for the meeting. This meeting, which is held, generally, at the Federal Bankruptcy Court in your district (in my own Eastern District of Michigan, Southern Division, it is held on the 3rd floor of the Bankruptcy Court at 211 W. Fort St. in downtown Detroit), is generally very short. Typically, the filing debtor simply meets briefly with the Bankruptcy Trustee overseeing the case and not with a judge at all. The Trustee will ask the debtor to verify his or her identity by producing a Social Security Card and Driver’s License and will then ask the debtor any questions he or she has about the petition. The 341 Meeting is generally an opportunity for creditors to make an appearance on the record and ask questions regarding the debt. For most Chapter 7 debtors, creditors generally do not appear, though it does happen. Once this meeting is concluded, there is a mandatory 60-day waiting period before the discharge is granted. This is, again, an opportunity for creditors to challenge the discharge. Provided that none do, the discharge is granted at the end of the 60 days. If the discharge is granted, all of the petitioners’ debts are discharged and need, then, not be paid. If, for any reason, a discharge is not granted, it is after this 60-day period that the Automatic Stay is lifted and creditors may again renew collection efforts.

Any challenge of any sort at any point along this timeline can complicate it significantly, but, by and large, this is the timeline that most Chapter 7 debtors can expect, particularly those who do not own real estate or other secured property more likely to be pursued by creditors than other personal possessions are.

If you are a southeast Michigan resident and are considering filing for bankruptcy, please contact me at (866) 674-2317 or john@hillalaw.com to schedule a free, initial consultation.

What Happens to my Reverse Mortgage if I File Bankruptcy?

Real estate subject to a “reverse-mortgage” is valued the same way that real estate subject to other sorts of mortgages are for purposes of bankruptcy. Both an “ordinary” mortgage and a reverse-mortgage are liens against the value of the property that will affect the determination of whether the owner of the property actually has any equity in it or not. In this manner, there is no difference between the two types of liens, and a determination that a debtor has no equity in his or her real estate governs the options available for retaining the property through bankruptcy.

The difference between the two lies not in valuation of the property but in the chief benefit that consumers look to reverse-mortgages to receive: a line of credit.  Typically, in the most common reverse-mortgage situation, a homeowner meeting certain criteria assigns a future interest in the full value of the real estate—their home, generally—in exchange for a line of credit which pays out a set amount per month for an allotted period of time, which, in many cases, particularly with regard to elderly consumers, may be the remainder of the consumer’s life. It is a means for a consumer living on limited income, often, to increase their monthly standard of living without losing the benefit of the roof over their heads—at least, when it works as advertised (I won’t comment further here about when this is or isn’t the case).

When that same consumer, however, runs into other trouble and needs to file for personal bankruptcy, the sticking-point for debtors with real estate subject to a lien that is a result of a “reverse-mortgage” is whether or not the finance company providing the reverse-mortgage will continue to provide the line of credit to the consumer under the terms of the original reverse-mortgage agreement. Whether or not this is the case is determined by a wide variety of factors, such as the amount of credit remaining in the line of credit, the business strategy of the finance company when confronted by such situations, as well as others.

If you are a southeast Michigan resident and are considering filing for bankruptcy, please contact me at (866) 674-2317 or john@hillalaw.com to schedule a free, initial consultation.

Can I File for Bankruptcy if I Have Previously Filed for Chapter 7 or Chapter 13?

By and large, if you have filed for bankruptcy before, you need to be a little careful in considering whether or not to file again. As with every other part of life, timing is everything in bankruptcy. This is one of the least complicated considerations in bankruptcy planning, but, nevertheless, many do find it confusing.

I have written about Chapter 13 eligibility, including the timing with regard to prior bankruptcy filings here. To recap, though, if you have never filed bankruptcy before, there is no problem, but, if you have filed for and received a Chapter 7 bankruptcy discharge within 4 years before you would file the new Chapter 13 petition, you are not eligible. Likewise, if you have filed for and received a Chapter 13 discharge within 2 years of the date you would file the new Chapter 13 petition, you are not eligible.

With regard to Chapter 7 filings, you are not eligible to file a petition if, during the 180 days (i.e., 6 months) prior to the planned filing, you have had either a Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 bankruptcy petition dismissed due to your wilfull failure to appear before the court or comply with the court’s orders or if you voluntarily dismissed the previous case after a creditor sought relief from the court to recover property burdened by liens held by that creditor. A Chapter 13 petition voluntarily dismissed because, for example, your circumstances worsened and you could not make the required plan payments should not, on the other hand, make you ineligible to file a subsequent Chapter 7 petition, even within 180 days. If you have received a Chapter 7 discharge within the past 8 years, you are also not eligible to file again until that 8 year-mark has passed.

If you are a southeast Michigan resident and are considering filing for bankruptcy, please contact me at (866) 674-2317 or john@hillalaw.com to schedule a free, initial consultation.

Can I Discharge My Business Debts in a Personal Chapter 7?

Many people consider the possibility of bankruptcy as a means of dealing not just with personal debt but also with debt that is a result of expenses accrued in past business ventures. Depending upon the corporate structure of the business venture in question, this debt may or may not be dischargeable through a personal Chapter 7 filing.

If the business the debtor was involved in was a sole proprietorship, the debt resulting from the business is treated as individual debt and is dischargeable through the individual’s personal Chapter 7 filing to the same extent as other, non-business related debts. If the business in question was a general partnership or other corporate form, such as an LLC, the debt is likely not dischargeable in the individual’s personal Chapter 7, particularly if, say, the business was a single-member LLC (or PLLC in Michigan), a corporate form which is not recognized by the IRS.

The reason for this, as anyone who has been in business knows, is that a corporation is a stand-alone legal entity, a separate person entirely from the individual or individuals running the business. Just as any individual filing for bankruptcy could not list and discharge debts for their uncle or a friend, individuals cannot list and discharge debts belonging to a corporation, even one which, like the single-member LLC, is not taxed separately by the IRS.

Thus, it is extremely important when listing your debts for your bankruptcy attorney to specifically designate any debts which may be business-related rather than personal. This does not necessarily mean that your attorney does not need to know that they exist. To the contrary, there are steps that a bankruptcy attorney must still take in reporting the debts to the trustee and the bankruptcy court to protect you from the possibility that creditors of the business will “pierce the corporate veil” to pursue you personally for the debts. In addition, if one business venture in an individual’s past has succeeded another, prior venture, there may be state laws regarding corporate successorship and liability that need to be taken into consideration.

If you are considering filing for bankruptcy and are concerned about the balance of personal and business debt that you are carrying, please contact me at jhilla@aronofflinnell.com or (248) 977-4182 to schedule a free, initial consultation so that we can discuss the best options for you.

Thanks to North Carolina attorney Adrian M. Lapas and South Carolina attorney Russell A. DeMott for providing information used in this article.

Can Bankruptcy Stop Me from Being Evicted?

The “automatic stay” that goes into effect upon the filing of a petition for bankruptcy has the effect, with a few exceptions, of immediately halting all collection attempts against the person filing the petition. Among the things that are “stayed” by this automatic stay are eviction attempts. Once a bankruptcy petition has been filed, either Chapter 7 or Chapter 13, landlords or other property lessors may not proceed with eviction attempts.

There are, however, a couple of notable exceptions to this rule as a result of the 2005 BAPCPA bankruptcy amendment act.

First, where the landlord or lessor, prior to the filing of the bankruptcy petition, has received a court judgment for eviction or other action allowing them to re-possess the property, the eviction will not be stopped by the automatic stay so long as the lessor is the holder of a valid rental agreement. This exception applies only to an action for possession, further, and not to claims for back-rent owed or other money judgments, among others. Additionally, the debtor retains a right to make up the money default that resulted in the judgment to a certain extent.

Second, if the eviction has been premised, as based upon the serving of a certification under penalty of perjury, on the use of controlled illegal substances on the property or endangerment to the property, the automatic stay will not apply unless the debtor successfully contests the certification and proves his or her case in this regard in a series of hearings and other proceedings. As with the first exception to the automatic stay, above, this exception also does not allow the landlord or lessor to pursue collection efforts for back-rents owed, etc.

If you are considering bankruptcy and have questions regarding the possibility of eviction before, during, or after your bankruptcy processs, please contact me at jhilla@aronofflinnell.com or (248) 977-4182 to schedule a free, initial consultation.

Can Bankruptcy Stop My Garnishment?

Consumers who have had difficulty making ends meet often find themselves on the wrong end of a court judgement after their creditors have taken them to court to pursue their debt. These judgements typically result in wage or tax-refund garnishment, often at the expense of the consumer’s ability to pay more pressing necessities, such as rent, a mortgage payment, or medical expenses.

That being the case, the first question I often hear from potential clients is, “Can filing for bankruptcy stop this garnishment?!?” Sometimes the garnishment has already begun, sometimes it is imminent, but it is always a great worry to consumers who do not have a penny to spare from their paychecks when it comes to simply keeping a roof over their children’s heads that month.

The good news is that, in nearly every case, the answer to their question is, “Yes. Filing for bankruptcy can stop this garnishment.” With some exceptions, such as garnishment for child-support or other court-ordered domestic support obligations, a bankruptcy will stop a garnishment at least for the duration of the bankruptcy proceeding and, upon successful discharge, permanently. Further, any funds garnished within a certain period prior to the filing of the bankruptcy petition must be returned to the debtor immediately upon receipt of the bankruptcy filing notification, so long as the garnishment is, for consumer debts, over $600.

If you are suffering from an income loss due to garnishment or will soon have your wages or other incoming funds garnished, please contact me at jhilla@aronofflinnell.com or (248) 977-4182 to schedule a free, initial consultation, and we will work together to secure the monthly income you depend on.

What Is The Means Test and How Does It Work in Chapter 7 Bankruptcy?

Many people contact me and ask whether I think they make too much money to file for a Chapter 7 bankruptcy. What they are really asking is whether the “means test” that they may or may not have heard about by name excludes them from the Constitutionally guaranteed bankruptcy process. Some of them have even spoken with a lawyer who has expressed an opinion on their question in terms of its answer being a yes-or-no or black-and-white fact. “No, if you make $X per year, you cannot declare bankruptcy,” or, “Yes, since you make less than $X per year, you may declare bankruptcy.”

Fortunately, it is not so simple as that. The so-called Means Test, which is the result of a provision inserted into the Bankruptcy Code in the 2005 BAPCPA amendment to the Code, is a somewhat disengenuous attempt by anti-consumer lawmakers to root out fraudulent bankruptcy petitions, despite that fact that no evidence was proffered to prove that there was any widespread national problem with consumer bankruptcy fraud. Regardless of the baselessness of its alleged purpose, what it is, at its core, is a mathematical formula, the result of which determines whether a given bankruptcy petition should be assigned a “presumption of abuse” or not by the bankruptcy court. Petitions that fall within this “presumption of abuse” range must prove that they are not, in fact, fraudulent. The same, new section of the Bankruptcy Code allows the bankruptcy court to dismiss a Chapter 7 case if it is not proven that the petition is not “abusive.”

The Means Test is applied to consumers whose debt is primarily consumer debt and not business or other debt.

Before the Means Test formula is applied, however, there are some “safe harbors” which save certain consumers from having to work through the test in the first place. The primary “safe harbor” is for debtors with incomes below the state’s median income. If your current monthly income X12 is equal to or less than your state’s median income, the Means Test need not be applied and motions to involuntarily dismiss the petition as abusive, as described above, may not be brought. In Michigan, where I practice, the median income is set to increase after March 15, 2009 to $44, 703 for a single earner (it increases incrementally for each additional person in the household), so, for example, a single person earning $40,000/year would not be subjected to the Means Test. There are various particulars involved in determining exactly what incoming assets are considered to be part of a person’s “income” for purposes of this test, but, if, in total, the figure is below the median-line, there is considered to be “no presumption of abuse.” Additionally, there is a separate safe harbor for disabled veterans if their debt was incurred primarily while they were on active duty or performing related activities.

Where the debtor’s income is over the median-line for their state for a household of their size and they are not a qualifying, disabled veteran, the next step in the process is to apply the Means Test to determine whether there is a “presumption of abuse.” A presumption of abuse occurs when the result of the Means Test formula is that, after various expenses specified by the Bankruptcy Code are deducted, a debtor’s income, when multiplied by 60, is the lesser of $10,000 or 25% of the debtor’s non-priority, unsecured debt—as long as that 25% is $6000 or more.

Get that?

What it means is that, once you deduct a bunch of expenses that the Bankruptcy Code allows you to deduct, you multiply your monthly income by 60, and, if the result is either under $10,000 straight off or over $6000 and also amounting to 25% or more of your “non-priority, unsecured debt,” the bankruptcy court will presume that your petition is fraudulent.

As I said, it’s not a simple process, and there is no easy determination of “eligible to file” or “not eligible to file.” Even if reading my explanation of the test itself makes pretty good sense to you—and I hope it does—the devil, as always, is in the details. For instance, some of the expenses you are allowed to deduct from your income off the top are education expenses, charitable contributions, secured debt expenses, health insurance, etc., etc., etc. Figuring out exactly what that final monthly income amount is prior to even administering the test itself is no mean feat. In addition, the question of whether debt is “priority” or “non-priority,” “secured” or “unsecured” is also something that cannot be answered at first glance. For an experienced bankruptcy attorney, these are, however, familiar terms and concepts, and he or she can quickly and properly ascertain these things—just not usually over the phone in a brief conversation.

If the Means Test, after all of this, determines that there is a “presumption of abuse” in the debtor’s petition, that presumption can be rebutted by certain “special circumstances.” What this amounts to, basically, is an argument that there are reasonable reasons why your income falls where it does and that those reasons are not abusive or fraudulent. Each bankruptcy court has wide latitude to agree or disagree with this argument, and it takes a skilled attorney to carry it across.

In short, if you have spoken with an attorney who has, rather too quickly assured you that you are ineligible to file for bankruptcy, seek a second opinion. On the other hand, if you are hoping to simply call an attorney and, in a two-minute conversation, find out whether you are eligible to file a Chapter 7, think again. Determining a Means Test outcome requires a lot of work for both a debtor and his or her attorney, and it is truly a process requiring mutual effort.

If you are a southeast Michigan resident and are considering filing for bankruptcy, please contact me at (866) 674-2317 or john@hillalaw.com to schedule a free, initial consultation.