All,
I met with my third attorney today. He was a little more expensive than the rest, but I like him a lot! Several times during the appointment, he said "I work for the debtor, not the US Trustee."
He seems to treat the means test a little different than everyone else. On the six month lookback for income, he's the same. Everything else on the form, he feels should be a representation of you "current" expenses. Since I'm getting divorced, he would take a current paycheck, calculate the total percentage of the check going to taxes, and then apply that percentage to the six months income.
In my divorce, I am going to be paying $200 a month for the next year. He said that amount would go on Line 28 even though I start paying it next month.
He pointed out that the B22A only talks about being a six month lookback in the Income section. The rest of it only asks you "How much you actually pay." In his opinion, that means currently, and in the future.
Does this seem to make sense?
Thanks,
John
I met with my third attorney today. He was a little more expensive than the rest, but I like him a lot! Several times during the appointment, he said "I work for the debtor, not the US Trustee."
He seems to treat the means test a little different than everyone else. On the six month lookback for income, he's the same. Everything else on the form, he feels should be a representation of you "current" expenses. Since I'm getting divorced, he would take a current paycheck, calculate the total percentage of the check going to taxes, and then apply that percentage to the six months income.
In my divorce, I am going to be paying $200 a month for the next year. He said that amount would go on Line 28 even though I start paying it next month.
He pointed out that the B22A only talks about being a six month lookback in the Income section. The rest of it only asks you "How much you actually pay." In his opinion, that means currently, and in the future.
Does this seem to make sense?
Thanks,
John

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