I am not sure what you mean by corporate "members" - but C-7 is certainly available to corporations. If the corporation is part of a consolidated group - owned by another corporation - you would want legal to explain the repercussions to the parent.
If her name is on a loan that you file bankruptcy on than she would then be responsible for that loan. Filing a bankruptcy only gets your name off the loan(s), you would both need to file together.
Mark S. Pulliam has written: 'Collier labor law and the Bankruptcy Code' -- subject(s): Bankruptcy, Corporate reorganizations, Labor laws and legislation
Jukka Kilpi has written: 'The ethics of bankruptcy' -- subject(s): Bankruptcy, Corporate debt, Moral and ethical aspects, Moral and ethical aspects of Bankruptcy, Moral and ethical aspects of Corporate debt, Social responsibility of business
Richard D. Coates has written: 'Restructuring and bankruptcy in Central and Eastern Europe' -- subject(s): Miscellanea, Corporate reorganizations, Bankruptcy
Peter Totty has written: 'Corporate insolvency' -- subject(s): Bankruptcy, Corporation law
David A. Gill has written: 'Personal bankruptcy and wage earner plans' -- subject(s): Bankruptcy
Nancy Trejos has written: 'Hot (broke) messes' -- subject(s): Compulsive shopping, Debtor and creditor, Personal Finance, Bankruptcy 'Hot (broke) messes' -- subject(s): Compulsive shopping, Debtor and creditor, Personal Finance, Bankruptcy 'Hot (broke) messes' -- subject(s): Compulsive shopping, Debtor and creditor, Personal Finance, Bankruptcy
Charles Price has written: 'Life after bankruptcy' -- subject(s): Bankruptcy, Consumer credit, Personal Finance
Moritz Eisenhardt has written: 'Sanierung statt Liquidation' -- subject(s): Composition (Law), History, Law and legislation, Corporate reorganizations, Bankruptcy, Corporate governance
George G. Triantis has written: 'The paradox of managerial discretion and the texture of secured transaction laws' -- subject(s): Discretion, Economic aspects, Economic aspects of Security (Law), Security (Law) 'Corporate reorganization and bankruptcy' -- subject(s): Cases, Corporate reorganizations, Bankruptcy 'Covenants not to compete from an incomplete contract perspective' -- subject(s): Covenants not to compete, Incomplete contracts
If your business credit is established as a completely separate entity from your personal credit, then you can reduce the risk of having your personal credit and assets affected by a business bankruptcy. One of the best ways to establish business credit is to register to receive a D&B D-U-N-S® Number.
Terence C. Halliday has written: 'Formative professionalism and the three revolutions' -- subject(s): Lawyers, Practice of law 'Minimalist organizations' -- subject(s): Bar associations, States 'Professionalization and the moral regulation of markets' -- subject(s): Bankruptcy, Business ethics, Corporate reorganizations 'Making the courts safe for the powerful' -- subject(s): Bankers, Bankruptcy, Judicial power, Political activity 'Empowering the weak' -- subject(s): Corporate reorganizations, Debtor and creditor 'Epistemological conflicts and institutional impediments' -- subject(s): Bankruptcy, Business failures, Law and legislation, Law reform 'The fractured profession' -- subject(s): Lawyers, Professions, Sociological aspects, Sociological aspects of Professions 'Professionalization from abroad' -- subject(s): Economic stabilization, International Financial institutions 'The legal construction of organizational mortality' -- subject(s): Bankruptcy, Corporate reorganizations