Chapter 13 is a payment plan form of bankruptcy. You make payments to creditors based on your income over a set number of years. It is the more responsible choice over other forms of bankruptcies. You take a chance anytime you cosign. It should be based on the borrowers character.
They should be, however if the petitioner does not list, they may not be notified. However, there are ways to verify if a petitioner has filed for bankruptcy.
Only if you have filed chapter 6.
They have filed Chapter 11
Yes. I co-signed for an auto loan and the other borrower filed bankruptcy without notifying me. I was in the process of buying a home and before I went to settlement they pulled my credit again and her bankruptcy came up - preventing me from getting the house. So yes it will affect your credit because it will show up on your credit report that that person has filed for bankruptcy.
If you filed on May 20, 1994, then the statute of limitations for that will be up on May 20, 2004, and should then be deleted from your credit history. The rule is 10 years from the date filed. Hope this has been a help!
You either pay or dont pay or file B/K also. If a co-borrower has debt discharged through bankruptcy, the other signatory is 100% liable for the balance of the loan.
You guaranteed to pay the loan if the primary borrower does not. That is what a cosigner does. The lender is going to be looking at you for their money.
A Chapter 7 can be filed with an open Chapter 13.
if you filed chapter 13 and it was discharged in 2005 can you file chapter 7 in 2009
If you filed chapter 7 then you have a lawer. Call and ask him. I would think you should be able to.
If (a) you filed Chapter 7 *AND* (b) the injury occurred *AFTER* you filed, no. Otherwise, you should discuss it with your bankruptcy attorney.
They should be, however if the petitioner does not list, they may not be notified. However, there are ways to verify if a petitioner has filed for bankruptcy.
Chapter 11 is a type of bankruptcy that can be filed by both businesses and people. Testa Corp filed bankruptcy on October 11, 2013.
It depends on the chapter you filed under. If you filed under Chapter 7, you have to wait 8 years before filing again. If you filed under Chapter 13, you only have to wait four years.
Generally you should not have to because a chapter 13 protects your assets through the payment plan you filed with the court.
If the Chapter 13 was filed before the car was sold at auction, you should get it back. Otherwise, it's too late.
You would be able to file for chapter 7 but not your husband.