Dallas Bankruptcy Attorney
Debtors should be aware that there are several
alternatives to chapter 7 relief. For example,
debtors who are engaged in business,
including corporations, partnerships, and sole
proprietorships, may prefer to remain in
business and avoid liquidation. Such debtors
should consider filing a petition under chapter
11 of the Bankruptcy Code. Under chapter 11,
the debtor may seek an adjustment of debts,
either by reducing the debt or by extending
the time for repayment, or may seek a more
comprehensive reorganization. Sole
proprietorships may also be eligible for relief
under chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy Code.
In addition, individual debtors who have
regular income may seek an adjustment of
debts under chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy
Code. A particular advantage of chapter 13 is
that it provides individual debtors with an
opportunity to save their homes from
foreclosure by allowing them to "catch up"
past due payments through a payment plan.
Moreover, the court may dismiss a chapter 7
case filed by an individual whose debts are
primarily consumer rather than business debts
if the court finds that the granting of relief
would be an abuse of chapter 7. 11 U.S.C.
§ 707(b).
If the debtor's "current monthly income"1 is
more than the state median, the Bankruptcy
Code requires application of a "means test" to
determine whether the chapter 7 filing is
presumptively abusive. Abuse is presumed if
the debtor's aggregate current monthly
income over 5 years, net of certain statutorily
allowed expenses, is more than (i) $10,000, or
(ii) 25% of the debtor's non-priority unsecured
debt, as long as that amount is at least
$6,000.2 The debtor may rebut a presumption
of abuse only by a showing of special
circumstances that justify additional expenses
or adjustments of current monthly income.
Unless the debtor overcomes the presumption
of abuse, the case will generally be converted
to chapter 13 (with the debtor's consent) or
will be dismissed. 11 U.S.C. § 707(b)(1).
Debtors should also be aware that out-of-court
agreements with creditors or debt counseling
services may provide an alternative to a
bankruptcy filing.
A chapter 7 bankruptcy case does not involve
the filing of a plan of repayment as in chapter
13. Instead, the bankruptcy trustee gathers and
sells the debtor's nonexempt assets and uses
the proceeds of such assets to pay holders of
claims (creditors) in accordance with the
provisions of the Bankruptcy Code. Part of the
debtor's property may be subject to liens and
mortgages that pledge the property to other
creditors. In addition, the Bankruptcy Code
will allow the debtor to keep certain "exempt"
property; but a trustee will liquidate the
debtor's remaining assets. Accordingly,
potential debtors should realize that the filing
of a petition under chapter 7 may result in the
loss of property.
To qualify for relief under chapter 7 of the
Bankruptcy Code, the debtor may be an
individual, a partnership, or a corporation or
other business entity. 11 U.S.C.
§§ 101(41), 109(b). Subject to the means test
described above for individual debtors, relief
is available under chapter 7 irrespective of the
amount of the debtor's debts or whether the
debtor is solvent or insolvent. An individual
cannot file under chapter 7 or any other
chapter, however, if during the preceding 180
days a prior bankruptcy petition was
dismissed due to the debtor's willful failure to
appear before the court or comply with orders
of the court, or the debtor voluntarily
dismissed the previous case after creditors
sought relief from the bankruptcy court to
recover property upon which they hold liens.
11 U.S.C. §§ 109(g), 362(d) and (e). In
addition, no individual may be a debtor under
chapter 7 or any chapter of the Bankruptcy
Code unless he or she has, within 180 days
before filing, received credit counseling from
an approved credit counseling agency either in
an individual or group briefing. 11 U.S.C. §§
109, 111. There are exceptions in emergency
situations or where the U.S. trustee (or
bankruptcy administrator) has determined that
there are insufficient approved agencies to
provide the required counseling. If a debt
management plan is developed during
required credit counseling, it must be filed
with the court.
One of the primary purposes of bankruptcy is
to discharge certain debts to give an honest
individual debtor a "fresh start." The debtor
has no liability for discharged debts. In a
chapter 7 case, however, a discharge is only
available to individual debtors, not to
partnerships or corporations. 11 U.S.C.
§ 727(a)(1). Although an individual chapter 7
case usually results in a discharge of debts,
the right to a discharge is not absolute, and
some types of debts are not discharged.
Moreover, a bankruptcy discharge does not
extinguish a lien on property.
A chapter 7 case begins with the debtor filing
a petition with the bankruptcy court serving
the area where the individual lives or where
the business debtor is organized or has its
principal place of business or principal assets.3
In addition to the petition, the debtor must
also file with the court:
(1) schedules of assets
and liabilities;
(2) a schedule of current
income and expenditures;
(3) a statement of
financial affairs; and
(4) a schedule of
executory contracts and unexpired leases. Fed.
R. Bankr. P. 1007
(b). Debtors must also
provide the assigned case trustee with a copy
of the tax return or transcripts for the most
recent tax year as well as tax returns filed
during the case (including tax returns for prior
years that had not been filed when the case
began). 11 U.S.C. § 521. Individual debtors
with primarily consumer debts have additional
document filing requirements.
They must file:
a certificate of credit counseling and a copy of
any debt repayment plan developed through
credit counseling; evidence of payment from
employers, if any, received 60 days before
filing; a statement of monthly net income and
any anticipated increase in income or
expenses after filing; and a record of any
interest the debtor has in federal or state
qualified education or tuition accounts. Id. A
husband and wife may file a joint petition or
individual petitions. 11 U.S.C. § 302(a). Even
if filing jointly, a husband and wife are
subject to all the document filing requirements
of individual debtors. (The Official Forms
may be purchased at legal stationery stores or
downloaded from the internet at
http://www.uscourts.gov/bkforms/index.html.
They are not available from the court.)
Normally, the fees must be
paid to the clerk of the court upon filing. With
the court's permission, however, individual
debtors may pay in installments. 28 U.S.C.
§ 1930(a); Fed. R. Bankr. P. 1006(b);
Bankruptcy Court Miscellaneous Fee
Schedule, Item 8. The number of installments
is limited to four, and the debtor must make
the final installment no later than 120 days
after filing the petition. Fed. R. Bankr. P.
1006. For cause shown, the court may extend
the time of any installment, provided that the
last installment is paid not later than 180 days
after filing the petition. Id. The debtor may
also pay the $39 administrative fee and the
$15 trustee surcharge in installments. If a joint
petition is filed, only one filing fee, one
administrative fee, and one trustee surcharge
are charged. Debtors should be aware that
failure to pay these fees may result in
dismissal of the case. 11 U.S.C. § 707(a).
If the debtor's income is less than 150% of the
poverty level (as defined in the Bankruptcy
Code), and the debtor is unable to pay the
chapter 7 fees even in installments, the court
may waive the requirement that the fees be
paid. 28 U.S.C. § 1930(f).
In order to complete the Official Bankruptcy
Forms that make up the petition, statement of
financial affairs, and schedules, the debtor
must provide the following information:
1. A list of all creditors and the amount and
nature of their claims;
2. The source, amount, and frequency of the
debtor's income;
3. A list of all of the debtor's property; and
4. A detailed list of the debtor's monthly
living expenses, i.e., food, clothing, shelter,
utilities, taxes, transportation, medicine, etc.
Married individuals must gather this
information for their spouse regardless of
whether they are filing a joint petition,
separate individual petitions, or even if only
one spouse is filing. In a situation where only
one spouse files, the income and expenses of
the non-filing spouse is required so that the
court, the trustee and creditors can evaluate
the household's financial position.
Among the schedules that an individual debtor
will file is a schedule of "exempt" property.
The Bankruptcy Code allows an individual
debtor4 to protect some property from the
claims of creditors because it is exempt under
federal bankruptcy law or under the laws of
the debtor's home state. 11 U.S.C. § 522(b).
Many states have taken advantage of a
provision in the Bankruptcy Code that permits
each state to adopt its own exemption law in
place of the federal exemptions. In other
jurisdictions, the individual debtor has the
option of choosing between a federal package
of exemptions or the exemptions available
under state law. Thus, whether certain
property is exempt and may be kept by the
debtor is often a question of state law. The
debtor should consult an attorney to determine
the exemptions available in the state where
the debtor lives.
Filing a petition under chapter 7
"automatically stays" (stops) most collection
actions against the debtor or the debtor's
property. 11 U.S.C. § 362. But filing the
petition does not stay certain types of actions
listed under 11 U.S.C. § 362(b), and the stay
may be effective only for a short time in some
situations. The stay arises by operation of law
and requires no judicial action. As long as the
stay is in effect, creditors generally may not
initiate or continue lawsuits, wage
garnishments, or even telephone calls
demanding payments. The bankruptcy clerk
gives notice of the bankruptcy case to all
creditors whose names and addresses are
provided by the debtor.
Between 20 and 40 days after the petition is
filed, the case trustee (described below) will
hold a meeting of creditors. If the U.S. trustee
or bankruptcy administrator5 schedules the
meeting at a place that does not have regular
U.S. trustee or bankruptcy administrator
staffing, the meeting may be held no more
than 60 days after the order for relief. Fed. R.
Bankr. P. 2003(a). During this meeting, the
trustee puts the debtor under oath, and both
the trustee and creditors may ask questions.
The debtor must attend the meeting and
answer questions regarding the debtor's
financial affairs and property. 11 U.S.C.
§ 343. If a husband and wife have filed a joint
petition, they both must attend the creditors'
meeting and answer questions. Within 10 days
of the creditors' meeting, the U.S. trustee will
report to the court whether the case should be
presumed to be an abuse under the means test
described in 11 U.S.C. § 704(b).
It is important for the debtor to cooperate with
the trustee and to provide any financial
records or documents that the trustee requests.
The Bankruptcy Code requires the trustee to
ask the debtor questions at the meeting of
creditors to ensure that the debtor is aware of
the potential consequences of seeking a
discharge in bankruptcy such as the effect on
credit history, the ability to file a petition
under a different chapter, the effect of
receiving a discharge, and the effect of
reaffirming a debt. Some trustees provide
written information on these topics at or
before the meeting to ensure that the debtor is
aware of this information. In order to preserve
their independent judgment, bankruptcy
judges are prohibited from attending the
meeting of creditors. 11 U.S.C. § 341(c).
In order to accord the debtor complete relief,
the Bankruptcy Code allows the debtor to
convert a chapter 7 case to case under chapter
11, 12 or 136 as long as the debtor is eligible
to be a debtor under the new chapter.
However, a condition of the debtor's
voluntary conversion is that the case has not
previously been converted to chapter 7 from
another chapter. 11 U.S.C. § 706(a). Thus, the
debtor will not be permitted to convert the
case repeatedly from one chapter to another.

When a chapter 7 petition is filed, the U.S.
trustee (or the bankruptcy court in Alabama
and North Carolina) appoints an impartial
case trustee to administer the case and
liquidate the debtor's nonexempt assets. 11
U.S.C. §§ 701, 704. If all the debtor's assets
are exempt or subject to valid liens, the trustee
will normally file a "no asset" report with the
court, and there will be no distribution to
unsecured creditors. Most chapter 7 cases
involving individual debtors are no asset
cases. But if the case appears to be an "asset"
case at the outset, unsecured creditors7 must
file their claims with the court within 90 days
after the first date set for the meeting of
creditors. Fed. R. Bankr. P. 3002(c). A
governmental unit, however, has 180 days
from the date the case is filed to file a claim.
11 U.S.C. § 502(b)(9). In the typical no asset
chapter 7 case, there is no need for creditors to
file proofs of claim because there will be no
distribution. If the trustee later recovers assets
for distribution to unsecured creditors, the
Bankruptcy Court will provide notice to
creditors and will allow additional time to file
proofs of claim. Although a secured creditor
does not need to file a proof of claim in a
chapter 7 case to preserve its security interest
or lien, there may be other reasons to file a
claim. A creditor in a chapter 7 case who has
a lien on the debtor's property should consult
an attorney for advice.
Commencement of a bankruptcy case creates
an "estate." The estate technically becomes
the temporary legal owner of all the debtor's
property. It consists of all legal or equitable
interests of the debtor in property as of the
commencement of the case, including
property owned or held by another person if
the debtor has an interest in the property.
Generally speaking, the debtor's creditors are
paid from nonexempt property of the estate.
The primary role of a chapter 7 trustee in an
asset case is to liquidate the debtor's
nonexempt assets in a manner that maximizes
the return to the debtor's unsecured creditors.
The trustee accomplishes this by selling the
debtor's property if it is free and clear of liens
(as long as the property is not exempt) or if it
is worth more than any security interest or lien
attached to the property and any exemption
that the debtor holds in the property. The
trustee may also attempt to recover money or
property under the trustee's "avoiding
powers." The trustee's avoiding powers
include the power to: set aside preferential
transfers made to creditors within 90 days
before the petition; undo security interests and
other pre-petition transfers of property that
were not properly perfected under
non-bankruptcy law at the time of the petition;
and pursue non-bankruptcy claims such as
fraudulent conveyance and bulk transfer
remedies available under state law. In
addition, if the debtor is a business, the
bankruptcy court may authorize the trustee to
operate the business for a limited period of
time, if such operation will benefit creditors
and enhance the liquidation of the estate. 11
U.S.C. § 721.
Section 726 of the Bankruptcy Code governs
the distribution of the property of the estate.
Under § 726, there are six classes of claims;
and each class must be paid in full before the
next lower class is paid anything. The debtor
is only paid if all other classes of claims have
been paid in full. Accordingly, the debtor is
not particularly interested in the trustee's
disposition of the estate assets, except with
respect to the payment of those debts which
for some reason are not dischargeable in the
bankruptcy case. The individual debtor's
primary concerns in a chapter 7 case are to
retain exempt property and to receive a
discharge that covers as many debts as
possible.

A discharge releases individual debtors from
personal liability for most debts and prevents
the creditors owed those debts from taking
any collection actions against the debtor.
Because a chapter 7 discharge is subject to
many exceptions, though, debtors should
consult competent legal counsel before filing
to discuss the scope of the discharge.
Generally, excluding cases that are dismissed
or converted, individual debtors receive a
discharge in more than 99 percent of chapter
7 cases. In most cases, unless a party in
interest files a complaint objecting to the
discharge or a motion to extend the time to
object, the bankruptcy court will issue a
discharge order relatively early in the case -
generally, 60 to 90 days after the date first set
for the meeting of creditors. Fed. R. Bankr. P.
4004(c).
The grounds for denying an individual debtor
a discharge in a chapter 7 case are narrow and
are construed against the moving party.
Among other reasons, the court may deny the
debtor a discharge if it finds that the debtor:
failed to keep or produce adequate books or
financial records; failed to explain
satisfactorily any loss of assets; committed a
bankruptcy crime such as perjury; failed to
obey a lawful order of the bankruptcy court;
fraudulently transferred, concealed, or
destroyed property that would have become
property of the estate; or failed to complete an
approved instructional course concerning
financial management. 11 U.S.C. § 727; Fed.
R. Bankr. P. 4005.
Secured creditors may retain some rights to
seize property securing an underlying debt
even after a discharge is granted. Depending
on individual circumstances, if a debtor
wishes to keep certain secured property (such
as an automobile), he or she may decide to
"reaffirm" the debt. A reaffirmation is an
agreement between the debtor and the creditor
that the debtor will remain liable and will pay
all or a portion of the money owed, even
though the debt would otherwise be
discharged in the bankruptcy. In return, the
creditor promises that it will not repossess or
take back the automobile or other property so
long as the debtor continues to pay the debt.
If the debtor decides to reaffirm a debt, he or
she must do so before the discharge is entered.
The debtor must sign a written reaffirmation
agreement and file it with the court. 11 U.S.C.
§ 524(c). The Bankruptcy Code requires that
reaffirmation agreements contain an extensive
set of disclosures described in 11 U.S.C. §
524(k). Among other things, the disclosures
must advise the debtor of the amount of the
debt being reaffirmed and how it is calculated
and that reaffirmation means that the debtor's
personal liability for that debt will not be
discharged in the bankruptcy. The disclosures
also require the debtor to sign and file a
statement of his or her current income and
expenses which shows that the balance of
income paying expenses is sufficient to pay
the reaffirmed debt. If the balance is not
enough to pay the debt to be reaffirmed, there
is a presumption of undue hardship, and the
court may decide not to approve the
reaffirmation agreement. Unless the debtor is
represented by an attorney, the bankruptcy
judge must approve the reaffirmation
agreement.
If the debtor was represented by an attorney in
connection with the reaffirmation agreement,
the attorney must certify in writing that he or
she advised the debtor of the legal effect and
consequences of the agreement, including a
default under the agreement. The attorney
must also certify that the debtor was fully
informed and voluntarily made the agreement
and that reaffirmation of the debt will not
create an undue hardship for the debtor or the
debtor's dependants. 11 U.S.C. § 524(k). The
Bankruptcy Code requires a reaffirmation
hearing if the debtor has not been represented
by an attorney during the negotiating of the
agreement, or if the court disapproves the
reaffirmation agreement.11 U.S.C. § 524(d)
and (m). The debtor may repay any debt
voluntarily, however, whether or not a
reaffirmation agreement exists. 11 U.S.C.
§ 524(f).
An individual receives a discharge for most of
his or her debts in a chapter 7 bankruptcy
case. A creditor may no longer initiate or
continue any legal or other action against the
debtor to collect a discharged debt. But not all
of an individual's debts are discharged in
chapter 7. Debts not discharged include debts
for alimony and child support, certain taxes,
debts for certain educational benefit
overpayments or loans made or guaranteed by
a governmental unit, debts for willful and
malicious injury by the debtor to another
entity or to the property of another entity,
debts for death or personal injury caused by
the debtor's operation of a motor vehicle
while the debtor was intoxicated from alcohol
or other substances, and debts for certain
criminal restitution orders.11 U.S.C. § 523(a).
The debtor will continue to be liable for these
types of debts to the extent that they are not
paid in the chapter 7 case. Debts for money or
property obtained by false pretenses, debts for
fraud or defalcation while acting in a fiduciary
capacity, and debts for willful and malicious
injury by the debtor to another entity or to the
property of another entity will be discharged
unless a creditor timely files and prevails in an
action to have such debts declared
nondischargeable. 11 U.S.C. § 523(c); Fed. R.
Bankr. P. 4007(c).
The court may revoke a chapter 7 discharge
on the request of the trustee, a creditor, or the
U.S. trustee if the discharge was obtained
through fraud by the debtor, if the debtor
acquired property that is property of the estate
and knowingly and fraudulently failed to
report the acquisition of such property or to
surrender the property to the trustee, or if the
debtor (without a satisfactory explanation)
makes a material misstatement or fails to
provide documents or other information in
connection with an audit of the debtor's case.
11 U.S.C. § 727(d).
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