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And....don’t forget the interest. When you get rid of debt....you also get rid of the obligation to pay interest on that debt....and this is “huge...plus”. You know....from your own experience....how much of your payments goes into just paying interest...and interest....and interest. Not only do you get rid of the debt.....you also get rid of all that interest. So...is that amazing or what? And....most importantly...this can translate into
hundreds of dollars per month in lower payments. Want
to see examples? Go to “Real Client/Real Results”. You know....you’re right. It does seem too good to be true. In life, we learn that....if something seems too good to be true....it generally is....except for Bankruptcy. Bankruptcy is the real deal. As I always say: “Other ads promise....but only Bankruptcy delivers.” If I could get people to keep an open mind about bankruptcy....my phone would ring off the hook with people wanting to know more. But...why are the Bankruptcy laws this powerful? That answer is...long ago....Congress decided that it was important to give good, honest, hard-working people a way...if need be... to get free from the burden of debt. Why? Because saving good people....like you and me....from getting discouraged and losing hope and from becoming unproductive members of society....all because of crippling amounts of debt....is good for society. But....to achieve this goal ...to make it really work....Congress had to give the bankruptcy laws some real teeth....to make the Bankruptcy laws powerful enough to really make a difference. And that is exactly what Congress did...and that is
why bankruptcy....and Chapter 7.... is the real deal.
(2) Get rid of “debt” stress and worry. Getting rid of certain types of unsecured debts is important, but it’s mostly important because it helps you achieve an even more important goal. It gets rid of some...and hopefully all...of the stress and worry that comes with having to deal....day in, day out.... with crippling amounts of debt. I have found that....until people find out how bankruptcy really works...they believe there is nothing they can do to get rid of debt...that they will be in debt for the rest of their lives...that there is no hope....that with so much debt, their families will have to go without...that with so much debt, they will never get ahead.....and that they will never be able to buy anything again. In most cases....very simply....these things are just not true. What a relief people feel when they come into our office and find out how bankruptcy really works. I cannot describe what a happy surprise this is for many people. For many...it seems like a dream come true. And....it is. It’s the way Congress created the bankruptcy laws. I have found that people don’t file bankruptcy to get rid of debt. They file bankruptcy to get rid of the stress...the stress of dealing with debt...that hopeless feeling of dealing with something that has gotten out of control....something that has taken over their lives and all their waking moments....something that is putting their future on hold. The look on the faces of many people, when we tell them how much debt and how much stress they can get rid of by filing bankruptcy, is almost comical. They don’t know how to react. They are so used to feeling stressed out...so used to worrying and feeling helpless....that they don’t know how to feel when they find out...for the first time.... how much debt bankruptcy can really get rid of. When we tell them how much debt bankruptcy can get rid of ....and how easy it is to file bankruptcy....it’s like there is a heavy anvil being lifted from their chests. It doesn’t seem normal to them. We have to keep telling them: “It’s true. Believe it or not. It’s true. Bankruptcy really does this.” For a while, they just go on saying things like “But I thought” this...or “But I thought” that, and we have to keep reassuring them that what we are telling them is absolutely true. Sometimes....we even have to tell them to sit back and take some deep breaths to let the information sink in. Giving people news that brings this kind of
relief...to people who have been struggling with
overwhelming debt for months and years....is what it’s
all about for lawyers....like me....and why practicing
bankruptcy law is both a privilege and a pleasure. (3) Keep and protect property you want to keep. For whatever reason, people think that if they file bankruptcy, they will lose everything that they have. Nothing could be further from the truth. Most of our clients keep everything they own...and lost nothing. Why? Because there are these things called "exemptions". We talked about them in the section entitled: "Learn About Chapter 7.". The same exemptions apply to help protect property in cases filed under Chapter 13. In the occasional case where it looks like a client has too much "stuff" to cover with exemptions...that is where Chapter 13 comes to the rescue. In Chapter 13, people can keep all their stuff; they just have to pay in a little more money....as mentioned above. Using California as an example....there are exemptions to cover lots of things including houses, mobile homes, land, cars, trucks, household goods and furniture, wages, life insurance cash value, personal injury and worker's compensation claims, tools of trade, retirement plans, IRA's, and the list goes on. A Word Of Caution: Federal and State exemptions can provide some wonderful and amazing results, but exemption law can be very tricky and complicated. There are many traps for the unwary. A thorough understanding of all available exemptions....including a thorough understanding of all the Court cases interpreting those exemptions...is crucial. Not knowing about exemptions you have available to you may unnecessarily keep you from obtaining bankruptcy relief you deserve. On the other hand...claiming exemptions you do not have a right to may cause you to lose some of your property. Why? Because once you file a Chapter 7 bankruptcy case, you do not have the right to “unfile” it. Solution: Pick an attorney who does nothing but bankruptcy for a living....one who knows the exemptions laws...where you live....inside and out. Valuing property: A big part of the process of analyzing a potential client’s case...so that a determination can be made as to what property can be protected....is to determine the correct value for the client’s property. This is a fairly complicated....but extremely important.... part of the process. The problem is that.....there are values and then there are other values. That is...an item may have different values depending upon the reason you are trying to value it. For purposes of Chapter 7....it is important to determine what we call the “liquidation” value, as opposed to the listing value, the value to the client, what the client paid for the property, what the client would like the property to be worth, etc.. Filing bankruptcy does NOT mean you get to keep all your property for free. If there is a lien against the property.....as in the example above with the house....the creditor holding the lien still needs to be paid. In our house example, equity is no problem, but if the husband and wife want to keep the house....they would still have to keep current on the $100,000 mortgage. The same would apply for a car loan. Generally, when you get a car loan, you give the lender a lien against your car title. In most cases, this lien is not affected by filing a bankruptcy under Chapter 7. That is...generally....liens pass through bankruptcy unaffected. Assuming there is an exemption to cover whatever “equity” there is in the car, the client would still have to keep current on the car loan if the client wants to keep the car. If the car loan is not kept current, filing under Chapter 7 will not keep the lender from eventually repossessing the car. For purposes of Chapter 7, if a client wants to keep a
piece of property and there is money owed on that
property....the client would have to “catch-up” on
the payments owed before filing bankruptcy. Chapter 7
has no rules for catching up on payments due on
property that has a lien against it. If the client
cannot catch up on these payments, but the client
still wants to keep the property....as in the case of
the house or car in the examples above...the client
would have to consider filing a Chapter 13 case.
Chapter 13 does have a rule for catching up on such
payments. For more information on Chapter 13, see “Learn
About Chapter 13".
(4)
Get out from under debt on property you are
willing to say Example 1 (Property you have lost control of) : Let’s say you and your spouse own a house and that both of your owe on the mortgage. Then, let’s say you get divorced, and in the divorce, you agree to give your spouse the house, with the idea that your spouse will refinance the mortgage and therefore get your name of the mortgage. But...let’s say the spouse does not refinance. This can be a big problem because you are still liable on the mortgage and if your former spouse does not pay the mortgage, the mortgage company will come after you for the money. By filing bankruptcy, you can remove your name from the mortgage, at least in terms of having to worry about the mortgage lender ever coming after you. This let’s you stop worrying about the mortgage and let’s you get on with your life. What a great benefit of bankruptcy. Example 2 (Property you no longer want): Let’s say you own a mobile home that is worth $15,000, but you owe $25,000 on it. You have tried unsuccessfully to sell it, but the people who want to buy it cannot get approved for the financing to complete the purchase. And say...for example.... you have had to move elsewhere. Unless you can figure out a way to get rid of the mobile home and the debt owed on it, you are stuck. Filing bankruptcy under either Chapter 7 or 13 can help. Here is how it works. As part of your bankruptcy, let’s say you decide to “surrender” (which means give back) the mobile home to the person or company that holds the lien against it....that is.... the person or company to whom you owe $25,000. This person or company would then come get the mobile home and put it up for sale. Outside of bankruptcy....if this happened....once they sell it...they would come back at you to collect any money they did not get from the sale. In our example...if they sold it for $15,000, you would still owe them for the residual $10,000 of the original $25,000. But.... not in bankruptcy ....especially Chapter 7. In Chapter 7....under the law....after you surrender property back to a lender....all that’s left is an “unsecured” claim against you....and unsecured claims are what bankruptcy gets rid of best. Therefore....back to our example....filing Chapter 7 helps you solve a big problem. It gets rid of both the mobile home and the entire debt against it. Is that amazing or what? And this does not apply to just mobile homes. The same applies with respect to all types of property you want to get rid of.
Example
3 (Property you can no longer afford): Let’s say
you own a home, but you can no longer afford to make
the mortgage payment. What do you do? By filing
bankruptcy, and by agreeing to give up the home, you
can get out from under the mortgage payment. In this
case, the house would get foreclosed on. Outside
bankruptcy....the problem is....the house would get
foreclosed on...and then the mortgage lender would sue
you for whatever money it did not get out of the
house. By filing bankruptcy under Chapter 7....if you
decide to give up a house....you are discharged from
the whole debt. What this means is that the mortgage
lender cannot come after you. The mortgage lender can
sell the house and that’s it. If the mortgage lender
does not get enough out of the sale of the house to
pay the full mortgage debt....by filing Chapter 7....
the mortgage lender is forever barred from coming
after you for the unpaid part.
(5)
Stopping Lawsuits and Creditor Harassment.
Immediately....when you file bankruptcy....you get bankruptcy protection. The protection comes in the form of a Court Order, which the Court immediately sends out to all creditors, demanding that they leave you alone. This Order has a name. It is called the “automatic stay”. If a creditor does NOT comply with this order....the Bankruptcy Court has the power to punish the creditor severely. Most creditors know this and takes steps to immediately comply with the Order. More specifically....the creditor must stop all collection calls....at home and at work....stop writing collection letters, stop all lawsuits and take whatever steps are necessary to “call off the dogs”, as in the case of “repo” men and foreclosing attorneys....and to stop all garnishments for at least taxes and student loans. Thereafter...and for the duration of the Chapter 7 case.....if the creditor feels it has the right to do something, the creditor must make a formal application to the Court. By having to make a formal application to the Court, the Court can take steps to provide you the protection you need and deserve. At the end of your Chapter 7 case, the automatic stay expires, but in most cases, it doesn’t matter. Why? Because....with respect to all the debts that get “discharged” (which means permanently “gotten rid of”), it is immediately replaced with a “permanent” order to protect you. This order also has a name. It is called the “discharge injunction”. At the end of your Chapter 7, creditors with “non-dischargeable”
debts.....like alimony, child support, student loans,
and certain taxes can take up where they left off. The
good news is that....hopefully....if you got rid of
enough other debt in your bankruptcy case.....you will
now have more income and be in a better position to
deal with these residual “non-dischargeable”
debts.
(6)
Freeing up income for your family.
And, being in a better position to take care of your family can get your life started again. Not filing bankruptcy can mean you get “stuck in
neutral” or worse, “stuck in reverse”. Filing
bankruptcy....and getting rid of some of the burden of
debt....generally means you and your family
can....once again.... start moving forward You and
your family get a “second chance” at a fresh
start.....one of the amazing things that filing
bankruptcy can do for you and your family.
(7) Putting you in a position to earn more money and
save. Filing bankruptcy solves a lot of these problems. The
idea is this. Hopefully...by filing bankruptcy...you
can get rid of enough debt so that you can live on
what you earn. This is the first step. The second step
is to earn more money....but in a more “debt free”
situation where you do not have to use it just to stay
current. If you get rid of enough debt in bankruptcy
to really make a difference....then, and
thereafter....if you are careful....you should be able
to start saving money...especially as you get wage
increases or promotions in your job.
(8)
Filing bankruptcy can help you re-build your
credit. Assuming everything else in your life holds together....you keep your job....you don’t get divorced....there aren’t a lot of emergencies....and you get the raises and promotions you deserve (a job where you now bring less and less stress to work each day because debts are no longer stressing you out)....then....for the first time in a long time....you can start saving some money. Saving money gives you the necessary down payment for buying new things...and on and on you go rebuilding credit. In addition....having gotten rid of some debt by
filing bankruptcy.....your debt to income ratio looks
better. Over time....you have money in the bank from
saving money on income no longer sucked away by your
“now-gone” bills. And then....gradually and
naturally....you start attracting the attention of
more and more lenders willing to give you more credit.
And why not? You are now in a position to handle more
credit. At this point....life is starting to look good
again and you are well on your way to rebuilding your
credit....in no small part because you made a smart
decision to file bankruptcy.
(9) Important
Disclaimer.
The experienced bankruptcy attorney is just that....experienced....and you get the benefit of all that experience.... to help you decide whether to file bankruptcy or not....to guide you in analyzing the pros and cons of Chapter 7 versus Chapter 13....to avoid mistakes that less experienced attorneys often make....to help you apply exemptions to protect your property....to answer questions that only an experienced attorney knows how to answer....to make the experience more understandable...to efficiently guide you and your case through the process...to deal with anything unexpected that may come up...and to explain....from experience.....what you can expect from life after bankruptcy. A good, experienced bankruptcy attorney can also... optionally... provide you extra services like: (1) lien avoidance and vehicle redemption...which save you even more money...and (2) defense of adversary proceedings in case some creditor wrongly accuses you of fraud or some other wrongdoing. And....all this is in addition to the fact that the experienced attorney knows how to achieve the best results...in terms of getting rid of most debt possible. And...all this is in addition to the fact that the cost of hiring an experienced attorney is generally minimal when compared to the amount of debt (and future interest) from which you can get relief from. Many times, the money saved in just one month....on debts you no longer have to pay.... is enough to pay the entire attorney fee. In addition to the cost of the attorney...there is the bankruptcy filing fee. The filing fee
for Chapter 7 is
$274. The attorney collects this from you...and then
simply forwards it to the Court. In
addition...there may be some other small costs.... for
such things as obtaining credit reports and performing
judgment searches.
(3)
How fast
can I get relief?
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