Generally the exemption can only be applied to one vehicle. Such decisions are made by the BK trustee, regardless, all decisions are subject to appeal, in which case the BK judge would make the final ruling.
If you don't return a vehicle after it's put in repo status, it goes on your credit report as "Vehicle cannot be located." Once this is on your credit report, it's impossible to get refinancing for a new vehicle. The best thing to do after that is to file for a bankruptcy. The auto credit company will usually hire a investigator and they can file a lawsuit. But there is typically no criminal charges because, it's technically your vehicle.
What happens if you file bankruptcy differs depending on what chapter of bankruptcy you or your business decides to file under. The most common form of bankruptcy for the individual is Chapter 7. Under Chapter 7 bankruptcy, the banks may liquidate property and assets-except things that are explicitly protected. After this, most debts are forgiven-but not all, as certain debts do not qualify. Your credit score will then be severely damaged by the filing, but you will be free to slowly bring it back up as you will not be suffocated by debt. The article below goes into further detail on the process of bankruptcy.
no you can not That answer is incorrect. Whether you can file a bankruptcy case and under which Chapter you can file needs to be evaluated under the terms of Bankruptcy code. Whether or not a particular debt is dischargeable needs to be evaluated under the terms of the Bankruptcy code. Consult an attorney. This is serious business. Do not rely on answers by unidentified people without information about their credentials or the basis of their opinion. That goes for people you meet at cocktail parties or the ball game. Consult an attorney.
I am not sure what you are asking, but here goes. If you file bankruptcy for yourself, it only applies to you. The debtors can, and probably will go after your ex. It happened to me already. Your ex can file bankruptcy on his own behalf, and be protected also. If you have a judgment against your ex, and he owes you, I do not think that you, filing bankruptcy would interfere. I am not an attorney , but do believe that he would still owe you whatever the court ordered .
I don't think anyone will be ready for that.So its better that you can take a way or option where you house will be save from foreclosure.Filing bankruptcy is the very right option for this.Once you file chapter 7 bankruptcy or chapter 13 bankruptcy bankruptcy law has a provision called stop foreclosure and it goes in to the effect immediately after you file the bankruptcy.This way you can save you house and other important stuff.
You would first want to find an attorney to represent you, then start referring creditors to the attorney. Then file-or if you have a lawyer, he or she will do it-a bankruptcy petition for whichever chapter you have decided on/qualify for. Then you will meet with all of your creditors, your attorney, and possibly a bankruptcy trustee. If you are filing on your own, you will want to do a large amount of research on how to go through this process. The article below goes into more detail on the process.
That would be a good trick No if you go bankrupt all of you goes bankrupt, Unles you have freinds in high places. Can't spell and is dangerously wrong. You can only "cram down" the second mortgage in a Chapter 13, and only if there is no equity for the second to attach to. But it can be done if you meet those criteria. You don't "file bankruptcy" on a debt. You file bankruptcy and list all your debts.
No. You virtually never "have to" file bankruptcy.Doing so will involve all of your other assets, including those ht aren't secured by property...and the secured property is still reserved to benefit those who have it is security in bankruptcy.
The short answer is no. As long as you are making the payments the car will not be repossessed. When the co-buyer goes before the bankruptcy judge they can have the car included or excluded from the bankruptcy. If it's included then the car will be "voluntary" repossessed. If it's excluded then everything is "business as usual" for you. The key is to keep your payment current and on time.
Perhaps, many judgments can be discharged in bankruptcy. The ones which are allowable are determined by state and/or federal laws, depending on the type of bankruptcy chosen. Understanding that if it gets removed it is because it was included and settled/discharged as part of the BK, generally by using the asset it is secured to, or other assets...it isn't just file BK and the lien/debt goes away.
It is not necessary for both spouses who do not reside in a CP state to file bankruptcy if there are no joint debts. If there are joint debts then the non-filing spouse will be subject to collection procedures from creditors. On Oct 17th new bankrupcy reform goes into affect and it will be almost impossible for the average consumer to file a Chapter Seven BK.
ALL of these are false: A amount of debt is less than the income earned B after bankruptcy you can't get credit for 10 years C everything you own goes into bankruptcy