chapter 7
Secured claims are those debts that have been secured by collateral. Because of this, the creditor can take the collateral and sell it, if the debt isnâ??t paid. Some examples are home mortgages and car loans. With Chapter 13, the loan would have to be paid for these claims if the owner wishes to keep the property.
This is not a question. If your question is, "What happens when the trustee moves the Court to declare a secured claim withdrawn," then one should object, particularly if the secured creditor still has a claim. If this is chapter 7, a secured creditor has no claim except on its collateral. In chapter 13, fight for your claim.
Secured debt is a debt that is guaranteed by the use of collateral. If the debt is not repaid, the creditor has the right to take the collateral from the borrower.
A secured home loan is a home loan where there is a security or collateral used to secure the mortgage. Often times the home itself can be used as collateral to lower the interest rate and monthly payment. By using the equity in the house as collateral for the secured loan.
collateral
Collateral.
A secured promissory note has collateral attached - usually an item/items of value or a deposit. If the note is not fulfilled, the creditor can seize the collateral as payment. An unsecured note has no collateral attached.
A secured loan is a loan in which the borrower declares an asset (e.g. a car or property) as collateral for the loan, which then becomes a secured debt owed to the creditor who issues the loan. The debt is thus secured against the collateral - in the event that the borrower defaults on the loan, the creditor takes possession of the asset used as collateral and may sell it to satisfy the debt by regaining the amount originally lent to the borrower.
Secured lending differs from unsecured lendings in a number of a ways, although there is one big difference between them. A secured lending is such named before the lendee puts up collateral against the debt to the bank. An unsecured lending has no collateral.
When there are two secured parties claiming security interest in the same collateral, the creditor that is perfected (having filed a financing statement) will have priority over the interests of an unsecured creditor or unperfected secured party
collateral
If there is a loan which used the car as collateral, yes.