Not unless the c. 11 has been dismissed or closed. You cannot have two bankruptcy proceedings pending at the same time. If the c. 11 was dismissed for cause, you may have to wait 180 days to file the c. 7.
I have closed a business and gone through a divorce leaving me with an unpaid lease of $5,000 and unpaid lease on the business location. Can these be included a bankruptcy?
You will need to file conversion papers either yourself or by an attorney. This will have to be approved by a trustee and a judge.
You should not tell them anything...the court will handle communication. Ypu should refer them to ask any Qs they have to the court.
Ch7 Bk must be discharged prior to acquiring a mortgage.
The cast of CH7 - 2004 includes: Navin Benny Kiser as Henry Hurter Isabel Ineichen as Marianne Denise Meili as Tschanz, Tina
It used to be on toasted TV, on ch7, but its not on any more.
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This Q has been pushed around a lot here...and this is what I've pieced together: It depends...a bit on which circuit court your in and how they feel...and especially how much is involved...(obviously large amounts are wanted for creditors...and it just seems unfair for you to not pay someone your debt, because you didn't have the money, because you had too much withheld or prepaid...when the amount withheld/prepaid is entirely controllable by you! The withheld tax account at the IRS is really nothing more than a savings account to pay for the tax actually determined to be due). The other aspect is when you file for BK compared to when you made your money...If the overpaid tax is for a pre-petition filing period...most trustees want it...but if it really isn't - then you can argue it's post petition and yours. So say it's a refund for the past year and you filed BK in December.....well it was basically all withheld as part of the Jan-Dec period in your tax return...and its part of the BK...but if you filed BK in say March...well not much of it is really from the covered BK period - and much of the overpayment should be given to you. So as I write this in March of 08, if your thinking about the return you file in April 08 for earnings in 2007, and say you filed recently or expect to, any refund in that is simply money on deposit that you had back in 07 and should be used for the debts you had then and are declaring bankruptcy on now...same as if you put that money in a bank. (Of course, things like not making $ or deductions evenly through the year can complicate the calculation). Sort of makes sense.
KEY WORD="CO-buyer". They are EQUALLY responsible for the debt. IF one is slick enough to file CH7 and get out of that responsibility, the entire debt falls on the OTHER buyer.
It is possible, but not probable, that your payment to the creditor for the lawn mower might be avoided (recovered) by the trustee in bankruptcy as a "preference". That means that the trustee in theory could use the money to pay administrative expenses and, in theory, claims in your estate. If the debt was secured by the lawn mower, you would either have to make the payment again or lose the mower. However, the trustee likely would do nothing. It would likely take more time and money to recover the preference than it would be worth.
Yes, but it will take some time. 800 is a very high score. Mid 700's will still get you the best rates and can be achieved within a few years. I'm in the high 600's within a few months of Ch7. Striving to get back to the high 700's as I was pre-BK. Hang in there and drive towards financial well being. Success!