As a general rule of thumb yes you can. Lawyer fees are also tax deductible.
Yes. They are includable, (like all debts and assets MUST be) and dischargeable.
Yes, except for a very limited selection of family law cases. However, the attorney will wish death on you, and it would behoove you to use another attorney in the future
Yes you can.
Not if they were discharged. they can say you owe whatever they want but they can't collect.
no, you are still liable for the charges, no matter if you file for bankruptcy.
The process is elaborate and your Bankruptcy Lawyers Near Me will ask you for a long list of documents. It includes your assets, your debts and your rights. Your income and expense statement is a crucial document. For businesses filing for bankruptcy, you may have to answer tons of questions pertaining to your business to the Bankruptcy Lawyers Near Me to enable flawless filing. Prepare a complete list on what you owe and own. Not all the items on the list are taken away, you still get to retain some. The Bankruptcy Lawyers Near Me may be in a position to identify what you retain and what you lose. The document is scrutinized and after signing the documents, the petition is formally filed with the Bankruptcy Court.
In the US, at least, you don't file bankruptcy against specific loans, you file bankruptcy in general. You do have to list all your assets and debts as a part of the filing. So, technically the answer is "no", but ignoring that for a moment, why on Earth would you want to do such a ridiculous thing as spend filing and attorney's fees on a debt you don't owe any money on? However, the fact that you have a loan you don't owe anything on (most people do) doesn't stop you from filing bankruptcy.
You can add attorney fees for services rendered that are due and owing to an attorney. i.e. you owe a family law attorney $3500 for a divorce that he handled for you and you can't make that payment or payments to your other creditors and decide to file bankruptcy, you can discharge the fees owed to him. If your bankruptcy attorney has even an ounce of bankruptcy knowledge he will have you pay him in full before filing your petition as any fees owed pre-petition (that is, before the case is filed) are discharged.
No, they will pay the claim to you and then you will be able to do what is fiscally responsible.
You still owe money.
If you file bankruptcy, you file bankruptcy on everything. You can not file bankruptcy on one loan.
hrblock says i owe them money for preperation fees .i need to know how much?
not if you still owe money on it
No. The debt is simply discharged so you don't owe it.