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Debt Consolidation, or Chapter 13, is that
part of the Federal Bankruptcy Code under which a person may repay all or
a portion of his or her debts under the supervision of the Bankruptcy
Court. The most important thing about debt consolidation is that it will
allow you to keep your valuables-especially your home and car-which might
otherwise be lost.
In a debt
consolidation case, the person who files must submit to the Court a plan
for the repayment of all or a portion of his or her debts. The plan must
be approved by the Court to become effective. Once the Court approves the
plan, it will prohibit your creditors from collecting their claims from
you during the course of the case.
You must make
regular payments to a person called the Chapter 13 Trustee, who collects
the money paid by you and disburses it to your creditors as called for in
the plan. Upon completion of the payments called for in the plan, you will
be discharged from liability for the remainder of your debts.
You should consider filing a Chapter 13 plan if you:
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Own your home
and are in danger of losing it because of money problems;
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Are behind on
debt payments, but can catch up if given some time; or
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Have valuable
property which is not exempt, but you can afford to pay creditors from
your income over time.
You will need
to have enough income in a debt consolidation plan to pay off your
necessities and keep up with the required payments as they come due.
Frequently Asked Questions of Chapter 13 Bankruptcy
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Can I File Debt Consolidation With No
Money Up Front?
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Can Foreclosure Be Stopped?
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Can Automobile Repossession Be Stopped?
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Will I Lose My Possessions?
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What Is The Automatic Stay?
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Can I Include Student Loans?
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Can I Include Taxes?
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How Will It Affect My Credit?
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How Long Will The Proceeding Last?
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How Will Lawsuits Be Affected?
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May Employers Discriminate Against Me For Filing Debt Consolidation?
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How Does Chapter 13 Differ From A Private Debt Consolidation Service?
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When Is Chapter 13 Preferable To Chapter 7?
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Must All
Debts Be Paid In Full?
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Do Both Husband And Wife Have To File Debt Consolidation?
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What If I Cannot Complete My Debt Consolidation Payments?

Can I File Debt Consolidation With No
Money Up Front?
In many jurisdictions, most debtors are allowed to file a debt
consolidation petition with minimal money up front. The attorney's fee
which is
approved by the Court, together with the other administrative costs, is
paid out of the monthly plan payments which you make to the Trustee. There
are some exceptions to this general rule and you should discuss your
situation with an attorney. A Bond & Botes, P.C. attorney can explore your
particular situation with you.
In order to schedule a free consultation with the law offices of Bond &
Botes, P.C. where we will discuss everything in detail with you, simply
locate the office nearest you OR
check out all the different ways to contact us to
get started today!
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Can Foreclosure Be Stopped?
When you get behind on your house payments, your creditor, perhaps a
mortgage company, savings and loan bank, credit union or even an
individual, may foreclose on your property. The number of months you are
behind may vary, but at some point in time the creditor may refuse monthly
payments unless you pay all of the arrearage. If you cannot, the entire
amount owed on the note may be accelerated and the full amount will be due
at once, and your home posted for foreclosure. You should receive proper
notice of the foreclosure, at least three (3) weeks prior to the actual
sale of your home.
At foreclosure, the property is sold to the highest bidder, usually the
creditor itself. If your mortgage is guaranteed, such as a VA or FHA loan,
the creditor will be paid off.
The creditor, or its guarantor, will then sell the home and apply the
proceeds against the costs of foreclosure, fix-up, resale and the balance
of your mortgage. If the proceeds of this sale are equal to or more than
this amount, you will have no further liability. If the proceeds of this
sale are less than this amount, which is usually the case, there is a
resulting deficiency. You are obligated to pay this deficiency. Like any
other debt, the creditor can pursue whatever collection action it deems
appropriate.
The filing of a debt consolidation petition prior to the actual sale of
your home may give you the opportunity to stop the foreclosure, keep your
home and pay the arrearage over a reasonable period of time while
continuing to make future mortgage payments. The mortgage holder can only
continue with the foreclosure if it receives permission from the Court. In
most instances, the Court will not allow the foreclosure to proceed if you
are capable of making your current mortgage payments and catching up what
you are behind within a reasonable period of time.
If your mortgage payments are behind, you should immediately determine
your debt consolidation options. Quick action can possibly avoid the
foreclosure altogether allowing you to keep your home and avoid
expensive additional costs and fees.
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Can Automobile Repossession Be Stopped?
When you get behind on the payment of a debt which is secured by a
security interest or lien on your car, furniture, jewelry, or other
personal items, the creditor can proceed to repossess these items. Upon
repossession, the items are sold and proceeds are credited to the amount
you owe. If the sale proceeds are equal to or greater than the debt, you
have no further liability. If the sale proceeds are less than the debt,
which is quite often the case, you owe the amount of the deficiency. Like
any other debt, the creditor can take whatever collection actions it deems
appropriate, including filing a lawsuit against you.
The filing of a debt consolidation petition may give you the opportunity
to stop the repossession, keep the item and pay for it under controlled
circumstances at a rate you can afford.
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Will I Lose My Possessions?
The filing of a Chapter 13 debt consolidation petition will usually allow
you to keep all of your possessions. In a debt consolidation proceeding,
creditors are usually paid out of your income and from your property. You
are, in fact, repaying your debts. Accordingly, you are usually allowed to
keep your property.
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What Is The Automatic Stay?
Sometimes, the most valuable feature of a debt consolidation proceeding is
the Automatic Stay gained instantaneously upon the filing of a petition.
When a person gets behind in paying his debts, creditors begin to take
various actions to collect:
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Telephone
calls at home, at work, to family, to neighbors or friends.
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Personal
contact by bill collectors creating embarrassment in front of family,
friends, fellow employees or your employer.
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Co-signers
may be called upon to make payment.
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Foreclosure
proceedings may be started against your home.
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Automobiles, furniture, jewelry, appliances or other personal items may
be repossessed.
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If you owe
the IRS or other taxing authorities, they may garnish your wages, put a
lien on almost all your property, seize your bank account or even close
your business.
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Lawsuits
can be filed and judgments taken against you.
The filing of
a debt consolidation petition automatically stops a creditor from further
collection efforts. No more phone calls, letters, bill collectors,
foreclosures, repossessions, demands on co-signers in some instances,
garnishments or seizures by the IRS, lawsuits or judgments; all collection
efforts stop until the creditor first files a request with the court to
get permission to continue collections. Beyond all this, the
Automatic
Stay affords an opportunity for the debtor to have a breathing spell, a
chance to sort things out, through the additional time gained to solve
problems.
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Can I Include Student Loans?
Often, the filing of a debt consolidation petition can provide benefit to
an individual facing student loan obligations. Federal law provides that
student loan obligations are generally non-dischargeable in any type of
bankruptcy proceeding. The only exception to this general rule is if the
loan repayment would cause the individual "undue hardship".
Nevertheless, inclusion of a student loan obligation in a debt
consolidation proceeding may provide some benefit. Importantly, the
Automatic Stay provisions of a debt consolidation proceeding apply to
student loan creditors even though a student loan is not dischargeable.
Accordingly, the filing of a debt consolidation petition will stop
telephone calls, harassment, lawsuits, and garnishments from proceeding
without permission of the Court. Also, if you are able to satisfy your
entire student loan obligation during the term of your debt consolidation
plan, you may avoid interest and late charges which would otherwise become
due on such obligation. If you are delinquent on your student loan
obligations, you should consider the filing of a debt consolidation
petition.
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Can I Include Taxes?
Although taxes cannot be avoided through a debt consolidation proceeding,
they can be repaid over a period not to exceed five (5) years and, often,
in a monthly amount the taxpayer can afford, rather than the amount the
IRS is demanding. Debt consolidation is the only tax repayment relief
available to the tax payer for non-dischargeable taxes other than having
the IRS agree to your terms of repayment.
Once debt consolidation is filed, the IRS cannot garnish your wages, seize
your bank account, close your business, perfect a tax lien or take any
other collection effort. There are generally two kinds of tax obligations.
One is a secured obligation, where the IRS has perfected a tax lien on
your property and the other type is unsecured.
If you file a debt consolidation petition and your tax obligation is
unsecured, then the tax obligation accrues no further interest or penalty
charges. This could amount to a substantial savings over a five (5) year
period of repayment. If you have an unmanageable tax obligation, you
should act immediately to determine your debt consolidation options and
avoid the possibility of having the IRS take collection measures against
you or perfect a tax lien which means you may have to pay interest and
penalties on the tax obligation.
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How Will It Affect My Credit?
A major concern that most of our clients have is to what extent their
credit will be affected by filing a debt consolidation proceeding. Your
credit will be adversely affected. There is no question about that. The
fact of your filing will be reflected on your credit report for a period
of ten (10) years from the date your petition is filed. That, however, is
not the main issue. It is important to recognize that your underlying
financial problems are the real cause of your negative credit, not the
debt consolidation. Actually, filing a debt consolidation petition can be
the first step in reestablishing your credit. As stated, a debt
consolidation filing will be on your credit report for a period of ten
(10) years. However, any negative or bad information currently on your
credit report will stay on your credit report for a period of seven (7)
years and that time period does not start until you pay off your creditors
in full or it is "written off as a bad debt." As a practical matter, your
credit will be affected for a period of at least seven (7) years without
your doing anything. The reason we say that filing a debt consolidation
may be the first step in reestablishing your credit is that it provides a
cut-off, or a beginning point for you to obtain a fresh start.
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How Long Will The Proceeding Last?
A debt consolidation plan generally lasts for three (3) years to five
(5) years, unless all debts can be paid off in full in less time. A debt
consolidation plan cannot last longer than five (5) years.
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How Will Lawsuits Be Affected?
The filing of a debt consolidation proceeding prevents any lawsuits from
being filed or judgments taken against you. If you file a debt
consolidation petition and a lawsuit against you is pending, it can go no
further. If a judgment has been taken, its enforcement can go no further,
without first getting permission from the bankruptcy court.
If there are potential lawsuits against you, often the bankruptcy court
offers a forum where the dispute can be rapidly settled--thus avoiding the
time and expense of litigating the matter in state court. If a judgment
has already been taken against you, you may be able to arrange payment and
satisfaction of the judgment over a period not to exceed five (5) years.
If lawsuits or judgments are either a threat or an existing problem, there
may be relief available for you.
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May Employers Discriminate Against Me For Filing Debt Consolidation?
An employer may not discriminate against you for filing a debt
consolidation. It is illegal for either private or governmental employers
to discriminate against a person as to employment for filing debt
consolidation. It is also illegal for local, state, or federal
governmental agencies to discriminate against a person as to granting of
licenses, permits, and similar grants because that person has filed debt
consolidation. It is also illegal for governmental student loan or grant
units to deny a student loan or grant solely on the basis of filing.
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How Does Chapter 13 Differ From A Private Debt Consolidation Service?
Under Chapter 13, the court has powers to aid you that private debt
consolidation services do not have. For example, the court has the power
to prohibit creditors from attaching or foreclosing on your property, the
power to force unsecured creditors to accept a Chapter 13 plan that pays
only a portion of their claims, and the power to discharge a debtor from
the unpaid portion of debts. Private debt consolidation services have none
of these powers.
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When Is Chapter 13 Preferable To Chapter 7?
Chapter 13 is usually preferable for a debtor who:
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Wishes to
repay all or most of his or her unsecured debts and has the income with
which to do so within a reasonable time,
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Has
valuable nonexempt property or has valuable exempt property securing
debts either of which would be lost in a Chapter 7 case,
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Is not
eligible for a discharge under Chapter 7,
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Has one or
more substantial debts that are not dischargeable under Chapter 7 but
are dischargeable under Chapter 13, or
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Has
sufficient assets with which to repay most debts, but needs temporary
relief from creditors in order to do so.
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Must All
Debts Be Paid In Full?
Not all debts must be paid in full in a debt consolidation proceeding.
While certain debts, such as tax debts and fully secured debts, must be
paid in full under a Chapter 13 plan, only an amount that you can
reasonably afford must be paid on most debts. The unpaid balance of most
debts that are not paid in full under a Chapter 13 plan is discharged upon
completion of the plan.
How Will Debt Consolidation Affect Co-Signers?
If you seek relief to repay your debts under a debt consolidation
proceeding, an individual co-debtor is protected, to the extent that the
plan proposes to repay the debt in full, and if the following conditions
are met:
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The debt is
a consumer debt;
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The debt is
not a debt incurred pursuant to a business transaction;
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The
co-debtor was not the sole beneficiary of the debt.
As long as your debt consolidation is pending, then the creditor cannot
act to collect all or any part of the obligation, including the filing
of a lawsuit, without first getting permission from the bankruptcy
court.
This
permission will not ordinarily be granted if your plan of repayment has
been approved and you are making the required payments under your plan.
The purpose of this provision is to allow you the opportunity to repay
your debt without permitting your creditor to bring undue pressure on you
by approaching a co-debtor for repayment.
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Do Both Husband And Wife Have To File Debt Consolidation?
A husband and wife may file jointly under Chapter 13 and should do so if
both are liable for any significant debts. There is no mandatory
requirement, however, that a husband and wife both file under Chapter 13.
Whether or not you and your spouse should file jointly should be
determined following a consultation with an attorney.
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What If I Cannot Complete My Debt Consolidation Payments?
A debtor who is unable to complete his or her debt consolidation payments
has three
(3) options:
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Dismiss the
debt consolidation proceeding, or
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Convert the
debt consolidating to Chapter 7 straight bankruptcy, or
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If the
debtor is unable to complete the payments due to circumstances which he
or she cannot be held accountable, close the case and obtain a second
type of discharge offered in debt consolidation proceedings which gets
rid of some but not all of your debts.
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