Technically you should inform your trustee or the court that you received the raise so they can adjust the figures. I think it depends on the trustee on whether or not they continually check your financial satus.
After declaring bankruptcy it is smart to wait six months before obtaining a new account. If a trustee finds that you have XXXX amount of dollars in bank B after closing an account at bank A it will look as if you tried to defraud the bankruptcy law. For chapter 7 wait until discharge for chapter 13 as long as you are making timely payments it doesn't matter.
Open Bankruptcy means that your petition has been filed, but you have not yet received your discharge papers. The discharge papers officially relieve you of your debt.
If the debt was truly unsecured and you properly listed the debt in the bankruptcy, then the debt has been discharge. If the creditor persists in violating the discharge order, the creditor could be held on contempt of court and held liable for fines and attorney's fees.
Depending on the type of bankruptcy you are in, you can drop out of it, often just by not making the required payments. Please note though that the bankruptcy will still appear on your credit reports for 10 years and you may have a hard time filing again, if you need to.
The card holder is under no legal obligation for the card holder to continue making payments after filing for bankruptcy, unless the case is dismissed without a discharge. There are some who believe that they can improve their credit rating by pay off debts that were discharged in a bankruptcy, but I believe there are better methods to reestablish credit after bankruptcy.
You can't just make a way for you to get discharge. It is a substance in the body that helps clean the vigina. Just like your period, it does the same techniques. It comes from inside the vigina and often you will see it in your underwear. Ok, now I don't know if somthing is wrong, but depending on your age, this may have a big effect on why you haven't experienced discharge.
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!
Bankruptcy is a Federal court and legal action. Your State makes little difference (albeit some federal district courts use the laws common to the States in their jurisdiction for some things in their rulings). * Bankruptcy laws were reformed in 2005 making the time limit between chapter 7 filings 8 years from the time of discharge and the time for filing a chapter 13 after a chapter 7 discharge 4 years.
You can get a Chapter 13 bankruptcy dismissal by asking your lawyer to ask the trustee for a dismissal. If you are having trouble making the payments, you can ask for you bankruptcy to be modified.
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.
APA stands for "Automatic Payment Avoidance." It is a term used in bankruptcy to describe the process where a debtor stops making automatic payments to a creditor after filing for bankruptcy.
YES, you can include it whether the payments are current or not.