Of course! Your lawyer must know all the actions to be taken. You must consult to your lawyer first before in whatever you do.
If you are filing for personal bankruptcy it is not necessary to have a lawyer. If you are filing for business bankruptcy, you must retain a lawyer on your behalf.
It depends on the type of lawsuit you are filing. Contact an attorney in your state and tell him or her what type of lawsuit you are filing. He or she will be able to tell you what criteria you must meet.
Very possibly.
You should liquidate the company after filing bankruptcy. If you do it prior to filing, it might be seen as an attempt to commit fraud and not pay off debtors. You would be safer to file and then follow the directions necessary. Consult an attorney in your area before making any big moves!
Yes. Consult a knowledgeable bankruptcy attorney.
The use of a corporate bankruptcy attorney is to assist in the legal proceeding of filing for bankruptcy for a corporation. An attorney is necessary to make sure the process goes smoothly and everything is taken care of.
Your bankruptcy attorney can help you decide what to include in your filing petition.
Just call the bankruptcy attorney's network at 877-530-8616 and they will hook you up with a local attorney in your area that gives out free bankruptcy evaluations.
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.
Yes. That issue should be discussed with an attorney before filing a bankruptcy.
The average here is the Central District of California is about $1,500-$2,500 for chpt. 7 and $3,500 for a chpt. 13
If your partner files for bankruptcy and you don't then the bankruptcy will not appear on your credit report. But you will be partly responsible for before bankruptcy filing. Generally filing bankruptcy will affect the credit rating of the individual who filed it.