In most instances, a
Chapter 7 bankruptcy
case is relatively
quick; typically, a case
will be completed and
the debtor will receive
a discharge within six
months of the filing of
the bankruptcy petition.
However, there are a
number of important
dates that can affect
the debtor's right to
file a case and the
relief available. The
following timeline
illustrates the relevant
dates in the typical
Chapter 7 bankruptcy
case.
6 Years Before Your Bankruptcy
You are ineligible for a
Chapter 7
discharge until eight years from the
date you filed a prior
Chapter 7 and
received a discharge. If you
received a
Chapter 13 or Chapter 12
discharge in a case filed within the
previous six years, you will be
eligible for a
Chapter 7 discharge
generally if, in the prior case, you
paid at least 70 percent of your
allowed unsecured claims, and your
plan was proposed in good faith and
was your best effort.
1 Year Before Your Bankruptcy
If you have tried to delay or
defraud your creditors by
transferring, hiding, or destroying
your property within the 1-year
period prior to your bankruptcy, the
court may deny you a
Chapter 7
discharge and even allow your
creditors to recover the property
that you transferred.
Also, if you pay back one of your
creditors who is also a relative or
close business associate ("insider")
at any time within the 1-year period
prior to the filing of your
bankruptcy case, the payment is an
unlawful preference and the court
may recover all such payments and
distribute them to your other
creditors.
If you had a prior bankruptcy case
dismissed within one year of the
time you file a
Chapter 7 case, the
Automatic Stay entered in the
Chapter 7 case will be terminated
within 30 days unless you can
demonstrate that the
Chapter 7
case
was filed in good faith.
180 Days Before Your Bankruptcy
If within 180 days before your
bankruptcy you had a prior
bankruptcy case that was dismissed
because you failed to obey court
orders or you voluntarily requested
a dismissal, then you may not file
your bankruptcy case until this
180-day period expires.
Also, within 180 days of your
bankruptcy filing, you must receive
an individual or group briefing from
an approved nonprofit budget and
credit counseling agency.
90 Days Before Your Bankruptcy
You must be a resident of the state
in which you intend to file your
bankruptcy case for at least 90 days
before the filing. If you have not
lived in the state in which you
intend to file your case for at
least 90 days, you may only file
your case in the state where you
have resided, or which has been the
location of your principal assets,
for a majority of the prior 180
days.
Also, if you pay back any of your
creditors, even one who is not a
relative or close business associate
("insider"), at any time within the
90-day period prior to the filing of
your bankruptcy case, the payment is
an unlawful preference and the court
may recover all such payments and
distribute them to your other
creditors.
If you incurred new credit of $500
or more for "luxury goods or
services" within the 90-day period
before your bankruptcy, or if you
obtain a cash advance in the amount
of $750 within 70-day period before
your bankruptcy, the debt is
presumed to be non-dischargeable.
Your Case is Filed!
Your case is formally commenced when
you file your bankruptcy petition
with the appropriate bankruptcy
court. As soon as you file your
petition, the court will enter an
Automatic Stay order prohibiting
your creditors from taking or
continuing any collection or legal
action against you. This means no
more harassing letters or phone
calls while your case is in
progress.
Next, the court will send a notice
of your case to all of the creditors
listed in your petition.
Additionally, the bankruptcy court
will assign a bankruptcy trustee to
oversee your case. The trustee is a
federal employee appointed by the
court to monitor your case and make
sure you are eligible for
bankruptcy. The trustee will review
your petition, make sure that it is
complete, and then schedule a
Meeting
of Your Creditors.
5 Days After Your Case is Filed
You have a deadline of 15 days after
you file your petition to file
certain financial "schedules" with
the court-documents declaring your
assets, liabilities, expenses,
income, and a statement of your
affairs. In most case, however, your
attorney will file these schedules
with your petition.
Approximately 15 Days After Your
Case is Filed
Within approximately 15 days after
you file your case, the court will
mail the Notice of Commencement of
Case to you and to all of the
creditors listed in your petition.
This notice will inform you of the
date set by the court for the
Meeting
of Your Creditors, and the
deadlines for your creditors to
object to your case and file their
claims against you.
Approximately 30 Days After Your
Case is Filed
Within 30 days after you file your
case, or before the meeting of your
creditors if that occurs first, you
are required to file a Statement of
Intention. In this document, you
advise the court whether you intend
to keep your property that serves as
collateral for your debts, or
whether you intend to surrender it
to your creditors.
If you intend to keep the property,
you must indicate your intention to:
(1) reaffirm your debts and continue
making all of your payments on those
debts; or (2) redeem the property by
paying the fair market value for it,
in which case you will receive a
discharge of debt owed over the fair
market value of the item.
You must serve a copy of your
Statement of Intention on the
bankruptcy trustee and your
creditors at the time you file it
with the court.
45 days After Your Statement of
Intention is Filed
You have 45 days after your
Statement of Intention is filed to
surrender or keep your property as
you indicated in your Statement and
make all necessary payments.
Approximately 6 Weeks After Your
Case is Filed
The court will hold the
Meeting
of Your Creditors about six weeks after
your bankruptcy case is filed. At
least seven days before this
meeting, you are required to provide
to the trustee and any creditor
requesting it a copy of your most
recently filed tax return.
The court-appointed trustee will
preside over this meeting. At the
meeting, which you are required to
attend, you will be asked to testify
under oath as to the accuracy of the
statements in your petition.
However, most of your creditors will
not appear at the meeting, and you
will not be before a judge. The
meeting is very informal, and in
most cases will last no more than 10
minutes. If you do not attend the
meeting, your case will be
dismissed.
Within 45 days after you file your
petition, you must file a statement
containing a certificate from your
attorney that you received an
explanation of the various chapters
available to you under the
bankruptcy code, evidence of any
payments you’ve received from any
employer within 60 days of your
filing, an itemized statement of
your monthly income, and an estimate
of any increase income or
expenditures you expect over the
next 12 months.
30 Days After The Meeting of Your
Creditors
The bankruptcy trustee and your
creditors have to object to all of
your exemption claims within 30 days
after the conclusion of the
meeting
of your creditors.
60 Days After The Meeting of Your
Creditors
Your creditors have 60 days after
the date first set for the
Meeting
of Your Creditors to object to the
discharge of any of the debts listed
in your petition and schedules.
Your creditors can object to your
request to discharge a debt if the
debt was obtained or incurred as a
result of any of the following types
of misconduct: fraud; embezzlement
or larceny; and any willful or
malicious injuries you have caused
others; or a divorce or separation
(this does not include debts for
child support and spousal
maintenance, which are
non-dischargeable by law).
Additionally, your creditors can
object to the discharge of all your
debts if you have engaged in any of
the following conduct: concealment
or destruction of property or
financial records; false statements;
withholding information; failing to
explain losses; failure to respond
to material questions; or a
discharge in a prior case filed
within the last 6 years.
The trustee must move to dismiss
your case within this time period if
he finds that the granting of relief
would be an abuse of the provisions
of
Chapter 7. You will receive your
Chapter 7 discharge 60 days after
the meeting of your creditors You
will receive your discharge as soon
as the 60-day time period for
objecting to discharge or moving to
dismiss your case expires. Even if
you receive your discharge, the
trustee may, however, move to set it
aside if you do not turn over
nonexempt property or if you commit
other bankruptcy violations.
The Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and
Consumer Protection Act of 2005
imposes one last hurdle before
you’re eligible for your
discharge--the financial education
requirement. This requires you to
complete an instructional course
concerning personal financial
management. Your attorney can refer
you to an approved financial
management class.
90 Days After The Meeting of Your
Creditors
All of your creditors (except for
government entities) must file their
proofs of claim (these are documents
your creditors submit to the court
specifying how much you owe them)
within 90 days after the first date
set for your creditor meeting if
they wish to share in the payments
from your case if any assets are
available for liquidation.
3 Years From the Date of Your First
Repayment
Government entities that have claims
against you (such as the IRS) have
180 days after the filing of your
case to submit their proofs of
claim.
Get Started Today!
If your creditors are making your
life miserable, bankruptcy may be
able to help make a lot of the pain
disappear. At Total keithmoskowitz.com,
our experienced bankruptcy lawyers
do nothing but Chapter
7 and
13
bankruptcies for people just like
you, and they have extensive
experience in getting the most for
their clients-both during the
bankruptcy process, and in their
lives after bankruptcy.
Want to stop those harassing
creditor phone calls and collection
letters? Contact us today. You can
use our secure and confidential
online case evaluation form to
schedule a free no obligation
consultation with one of our
attorneys, who will then contact you
at a convenient time to discuss your
bankruptcy options.
You can also call our
hotline at
1 (303) 447-2703.
In fact, we even make it
easy for you to afford
your bankruptcy. We can
begin your case for a
small down payment, and
you can pay our low fees
off in an easy
installment plan.
If you're not quite ready to take
action, please feel free to review
the educational resources throughout
our website. You can find out
whether bankruptcy is right for you
and what you can expect in your life
after bankruptcy, and you can learn
more about
Chapter 7 or
Chapter 13.
Whatever you do, don't delay; you
have nothing to lose but your debts!
Will I Qualify For
Chapter 7
-
Chapter 7 Bankruptcy
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