Credit Reports and DebtSavings and RetirementBudgeting and Money Saving TipsCollege PlanningLoansReducing TaxesInsurance
Print this page  Email this page to a friend Save this page to my page
Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 Bankruptcy Basics

by Staff Writer on Thursday, February 08, 2007

Effects on Your Credit

By federal law, a bankruptcy can remain part of a debtor's credit history for 10 years.

Information You Must Disclose if You Are Considering Filing for Bankruptcy

You are notified as follows:

  1. All information that you are required to provide with the filing of your case and thereafter, while your case is pending, must be complete, accurate and truthful.
  2. All your assets and all your liabilities must be completely and accurately disclosed in the documents filed to commence your case.
  3. Some sections of the Bankruptcy Code require you to determine and list the replacement value of an asset such as a car or furniture. When replacement value is required, it means the replacement value, established after reasonable inquiry, as of the date of the filing of your bankruptcy case, without deduction for costs of sales or marketing. With respect to property acquired for personal, family or household purposes, replacement value means the price a retail merchant would charge for "used" property of that kind considering the age and condition of the property.
  4. 4. Before your case can be filed, it is subject to what is called "Means Testing". The Means Test was designed to determine whether or not you qualify to file a case under chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code, and if not, how much you need to pay your unsecured creditors in a chapter 13 case. For purposes of means test, you must state, after reasonable inquiry, your total current monthly income, the amount of all expenses as specified and allowed pursuant to section 707(b)(2) of the bankruptcy code, and if the plan is to file in a Chapter 13 case, you must state, again after reasonable inquiry, your disposable income, as that term is defined.
  5. Information that you provide during your case may be audited pursuant to the provisions of the Bankruptcy Code. Your failure to provide complete, accurate and truthful information may result in the dismissal of your case or other sanctions, including criminal sanctions.

This information has adapted from www.kjlaws.com

 

Page 2 of 2
Comments
 Rate This Post:    Rate This Comment as Good Rate This Comment as Bad
Uieywywye dhdhhfjdk odfodfodf dfdf
reclaim marshallk information exogenous available capability deposited lancet correlates inherited parasitic
lolikneri havaqatsu
14 out of 32 people found this comment informative.
Add a Comment to This Article
Comment Title:
Username: Anonymous (Please Login to Post With Your Account)
Your Comment:

      
HTML not permitted, some code allowed in [brackets]:
[b]bold[/b] , [i]italicized[/i], [br] line break, other formatting...


Code Image - Please contact webmaster if you have problems seeing this image code Load New Code
Please enter the code above
 
Please submit your comment only once, some comments may be reviewed by moderators
© 2007 WatchThat Media Ltd.