Well..time to realize you have to reprioritize. Make a budget, that includes your responsibilities first and not what you want first....and hold to it.
Apparently, you don't make enough money to afford the life you've been living...and paying for the things you have been first while not paying the others.
Or are you expecting that you should be able to keep everything...go happily along as you have been, and have everyone else just pay for it entirely...because you haven't/didn't decide to give up spending on new things before paying off the old soon enough?
It has already paid its debts
They do not have the money to pay back their debts!They do not have the money to pay back their debts!They do not have the money to pay back their debts!They do not have the money to pay back their debts!
Buying call options that are already in the money can offer several advantages. Firstly, they have intrinsic value, which means they are less risky compared to out-of-the-money options. Secondly, in-the-money options have a higher probability of being profitable as they are already closer to the strike price. Lastly, they provide a way to benefit from the underlying asset's price movement without needing a significant price increase.
You can start by paying off small debts then working your way to the bigger debts. You can use the money from paid off debts to double payments on bigger debts instead of blowing that money.
You owe the loan. The bankruptcy of who you gave it to makes no difference on who or what you owe your debts. (And if you owe the school money, you will be required to pay it too, and that money will be used to pay some of the debts of the BK school.) It would seem you just made a bad, and possibly costly, choice of places to buy an education from.
No. As long as you are filing for bankruptcy by yourself, your money with your husband will remain joint. Keep in mind that any debts you may share with your husband will remain with him as well.
Any money you get from such a claim will most likely go to those which already have a judgment against you for not paying debts that you own. It depends on what types of debts and payments you have. I would suggest asking your bankruptcy attorney. He should do something for the money he was paid.
Manuel stole Buck to sell him and pay off his gambling debts.
The estate is responsible for the debts of the decedent. However, you should seek the advice of an attorney if there is money but not enough money to pay all the debts. There is a legal scheme by which debts must be paid.
Title 11 is the US Bankruptcy Code. Chapter 7 is a part of Title 11. A chapter 11 (also part of Title 11) is for business reorganizations. A chapter 13 (yes, also part of Title 11) is for people who have the income to pay current bills and pay money into a plan to pay a Chapter 13 Trustee and to pay all secured debts arrears in no more than 5 years.
You should file a claim in his/her Chapter 13 case; you may or may not get your money back. If you don't file a claim, you're out of luck; he/she is protected by the automatic stay while in Chapter 13, and by the discharge afterwards. (If you think it's fraud, consult an attorney.)
Your sister's debts are not part of the estate. The estate's responsibility is to pay the mother's debts and distribute the remainder. What your sister does with her share of the inheritance is up to her.