No, a company in receivership cannot be forced into bankruptcy because the company is already under the control of a court-appointed receiver. The receiver's role is to manage the company's assets and operations to protect the interests of creditors. If the receiver determines that bankruptcy is necessary, they can petition the court for bankruptcy proceedings, but it cannot be forced upon them.
If you file bankruptcy, you file bankruptcy on everything. You can not file bankruptcy on one loan.
1st bankruptcy = 7 years 2nd bankruptcy = 20 years 3rd bankruptcy = life
You will need to begin by contacting the company in where the debt originated from. They can tell you if they are still holding the debt collection or if it has been released to another company.
Some companies that offer information on bankruptcy include Dow Jones and Jacob Meyers Bankruptcy. You can also find information on bankruptcy on the bankruptcy Wikipedia page.
no , ther not in bankruptcy
The plural of bankruptcy is bankruptcies.
The bankruptcy will appear on their credit if you include this card in your bankruptcy. If you leave the card off the bankruptcy, it will not effect their credit.
If you are filing for personal bankruptcy it is not necessary to have a lawyer. If you are filing for business bankruptcy, you must retain a lawyer on your behalf.
If you are talking about a Chapter 7 bankruptcy, It takes 7 to 9 years after you can file bankruptcy again.
Bankruptcy can be filed at the Bankruptcy court for the area you are in. For instance in Northern Florida, it's the Florida Northern District Bankruptcy Court.
The first two digits of the docket number, before the hyphen, tells you the year. If you don't have the docket number, you can go to a bankruptcy court or bankruptcy lawyer's office and look it up on the computer.