On the surface, no. As long as you have not defaulted on the loan contract, there is no reason for repossession. The lender wants your money, not your car.
Bring all the payments up to date.
Yes. Assessments are due and owing on the date of filing and thereafter. If past-due assessments -- owed to the date of filing -- were listed in the bankruptcy filing, they have been handled by the referee and must be treated as subject to those rulings.
Assuming there is a discharge order, probably not. A discharge affects all dischargeable debts, not only the ones listed in the bankruptcy, unless the debtor deliberately tried to create a "preference." In that case, the trustee might be able to capture the payments made after the filing date and apply them to his fee and the creditors.
It is 10 years from the date of discharge.
Your bankruptcy attorney can help you add assessments due and owing up to the date of your filing. Assessments incurred post filing are due and owing.
Late payment will drive your credit score into the ground rapidly. Many people question filing a Bankruptcy even though their credit is shot through late payments on mortgages and other bills. Filing Bankruptcy put all collection activity on hold and your accounts show current and up to date as long as you make your payments on time. Most people are surprised tofine their credit in much better shape after a BK than before with a much higher credit score Late payments can always be corrected, and this will be reflected on your credit file. Bankruptcy, however, will stay on your credit file for six years.
Work with your bankruptcy attorney to verify which debts are included in your filing. As of the date of your filing, ongoing assessments become due and owing, together with any new special assessments or fines incurred after that date.
Ten years from the date of the discharge, not the date of the filing.
In general it is 6 years after the discharged date.
"Included in" bankruptcy? No. It stops any interest or penalties on unsecured debts. If the bankruptcy fails, the accrued interest or penalties will be added to the account, and the statute of limitations starts ticking from where it was on the date of filing.
Bankruptcy does not get discharged. Debts are discharged. The bankruptcy will remain on your credit report for 10 years from the date of filing. The debts that were discharged can remain for 7 years from the date of discharge, showing a zero balance and that they were discharged in bankruptcy.
Creditors list the charge off date as the date the bankrupcty was filed