Basically a Chapt. 7 BK is the liquidation of debts and the forfeiture by the debtor of non exempt properties. There are certain debts that cannot be discharged in BK. A
Chapt. 13 BK allows the debtor to consolidate debts and make arrangements through the court for the repayment of such.
Chapter 7 is a complete discharge of all dischargeable debts. Chapter 13 is a repayment plan of the debts under the bankruptcy court's supervision and protection.
Yes, you can covert a chapter 13 to a chapter 7 and vice versa.
No. Once a chapter 7 bankruptcy has been discharged it is final.
A chapter 13 Bankruptcy, dismissed, discharged, or otherwise, stays on your credit report for 7 years from the date it was filed.
If they have you reported as having a chapter 7 discharge when it should be a 13 you should clear it up. It won't do anything to raise your score, but it does look a little better, that you are paying off your debts. You will need to send documentation and probably "pitch a fit" to get their attention.
Chapter 7 is a complete discharge of all dischargeable debts. Chapter 13 is a repayment plan of the debts under the bankruptcy court's supervision and protection.
Yes, you can covert a chapter 13 to a chapter 7 and vice versa.
No. Once a chapter 7 bankruptcy has been discharged it is final.
1, 7, 13, 19, 91, 133, 247, 1729 The prime factors are 7, 13, 19
13
The sum of 6 and 7 is found by adding the two numbers together, which equals 13. The product of 6 and 7 is found by multiplying the two numbers, which equals 42. Therefore, the difference between the two is 42 - 13 = 29.
15. It is the difference between 5 and 20.
The difference between 7 and 3 is 4.
13 + 7 = 20 13 - 7 = 6
7
A "difference" is either the result of a subtraction (the difference between 7 and 5 is 7 minus 5), or its absolute value (so that the difference between 7 and 5 is the same as the difference between 5 and 7).
-5