No. You can only claim debts that are in your name.
The other person took the responsibility to allow you to use his/her card and they are liable.
This answer is wrong. You can and should list the debt. List both the creditor and the person who let you use the card.
You must list all debts you owe under penalty of perjury! Yes, even those you plan t pay. If there is a possibility someone may claim that you are liable, it is wise to list them even if are sure are not liable
Consult a competent experience bankruptcy attorney as soon as you experience financial problems, not when you believe you might have to file. The potential costs of delay and errors can be large.
No...you only have the right to use it...(and I'm not absolutely certain of that). The credit obligation is still whoever it was issued to.
The amount of time a bankruptcy stays on your credit report after discharge differs between Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 Bankruptcy. With Chapter 7 bankruptcy, the Chapter 7 stays on your credit report for 10 years. Chapter 13 bankruptcy, after discharge, it shows for 7 years on your credit report.
Both have the same negative impact on your credit.
This would be best answered by a good bankruptcy attorney who knows Arizona law. I believe no matter what you do bankruptcy or not, they will get the car, it does not wipe your credit clean.
Yes.
By law, a person (or couple) can only declare bankruptcy every seven years. If you go through with a Chapter 7 bankrupcy, it will take 7 years for it to rotate off of your credit history.
Income has little to no determination on one's ability to file for bankruptcy. It's the debt to income ratio that most bankruptcy courts look for. Consult a bankruptcy attorney; there may be other options that will not impact your credit as harshly as bankruptcy.
A Chapter 7 bankruptcy stays on your credit report for 10 years. Generally a Chapter 13 bankruptcy will be removed after 7 years, but can remain up to 10 years.
A Chapter 13 bankruptcy will remain on a person's credit report for the required ten years not seven.
You can't. A valid entry for a dismissed chapter 13 bankruptcy will remain on a credit report for seven years from the date of dismissal.
Chapter 7 will stay on your credit report for 10 years from the date bankruptcy was filed. Chapter 13 typically stays on your credit report for 7 years from the date the bankruptcy was filed, however, can remain on your credit report for 10 years.
Bankruptcy filings typically stay on a debtor's credit report for 10 years.
A chapter 7 bankruptcy filing remains on your credit report for 10 years. Chapter 13 bankruptcy remains for seven years. Under chapter 13 bankruptcy you repay at least a portion of the debt, so it is removed a little sooner.