Hello,
I've discovered this forum a few days ago and find it very informative and helpful. Thank you all for your great contribution.
I will soon have to shop around for an attorney but for now, still in the information gathering phase. Any recommendations or insights you could share would be greatly appreciated.
So, here's the situation for me and my wife (no kids).
Income:
gross 8000
taxes 1500
living expenses 2000
child support 1500
1st mortgage+tax+insurance 3000
HELOC 500
credit card minimum payment 2000
auto loan 500
monthly shortfall 3000
Debt:
1st mortgage 400k
HELOC 50k
credit card 85k
auto loan 15k
This is southern california.
With the inclusion of mortgage I can easily pass the means test. Without it, there's no way.
My questions are.
1. Will I be forced to file chapter 13? After BK discharge and surrendering the house, I'm looking to rent a place for 2k/month near my work. This would leave me 1k/month surplus. I'm not certain if this would suggest a lower chance of success if I tried chapter 7.
2. If I will have to file chapter 13, will I be forced to keep the 1st mortgage? I've heard of Chapter 13 of Title 11 in which whatever monthly surplus after the 1st mortgage payment goes to HELOC and unsecured debt for 3 years and they get wiped out after that. In my case, if I keep the house and the 1st mortgage, there will be nothing left for HELOC and unsecured. I can't complain if I can get that but in this real estate crisis, it would be far better for me to just surrender the house and avoid the 1st mortgage all together. I think my house is worth something like 350k realistically and who knows how far it will go down further. So, how do I surrender the house in chapter 13? How will it affect the chapter 13 payment? I know that in chapter 7, "debt forgiveness" tax is not an issue. Is it treated any differently in chapter 13?
3. I think the general advise is to stop paying all creditors 3 months prior to the filing date. In my case, it's 3k/month surplus every month in my case. What do I do with all that money? I hear I need to spend on anything I can think of, like dental work, new furniture, auto repair, or even family trip. Well, I have two concerns. First of all, some of these expenditures might be construed as abuse and jeopardize my case. Secondly, I really can't think of anything to spend that extra money on. There's no way I can buy 3k worth of stuff every month for 3 months and, I suppose, also for the entire duration of the bankruptcy proceeding. What happens if I just keep the money in the checking account in chapter 13? Will they be automatically distributed to creditors by trustee?
4. I hear, due to soaring foreclosure, it can take a year or more until you actually hear from the bank to vacate the house in a bankruptcy where you surrender the house. What happens between the time you get discharge and the bank actually takes possession of the property? Am I accruing new debt? I am, in reality, renting the house (since I no longer own it) from the bank without paying rent. Can the bank come after me for it later on? Is it better to just walk away right after the discharge?
Thanks!
I've discovered this forum a few days ago and find it very informative and helpful. Thank you all for your great contribution.
I will soon have to shop around for an attorney but for now, still in the information gathering phase. Any recommendations or insights you could share would be greatly appreciated.
So, here's the situation for me and my wife (no kids).
Income:
gross 8000
taxes 1500
living expenses 2000
child support 1500
1st mortgage+tax+insurance 3000
HELOC 500
credit card minimum payment 2000
auto loan 500
monthly shortfall 3000
Debt:
1st mortgage 400k
HELOC 50k
credit card 85k
auto loan 15k
This is southern california.
With the inclusion of mortgage I can easily pass the means test. Without it, there's no way.
My questions are.
1. Will I be forced to file chapter 13? After BK discharge and surrendering the house, I'm looking to rent a place for 2k/month near my work. This would leave me 1k/month surplus. I'm not certain if this would suggest a lower chance of success if I tried chapter 7.
2. If I will have to file chapter 13, will I be forced to keep the 1st mortgage? I've heard of Chapter 13 of Title 11 in which whatever monthly surplus after the 1st mortgage payment goes to HELOC and unsecured debt for 3 years and they get wiped out after that. In my case, if I keep the house and the 1st mortgage, there will be nothing left for HELOC and unsecured. I can't complain if I can get that but in this real estate crisis, it would be far better for me to just surrender the house and avoid the 1st mortgage all together. I think my house is worth something like 350k realistically and who knows how far it will go down further. So, how do I surrender the house in chapter 13? How will it affect the chapter 13 payment? I know that in chapter 7, "debt forgiveness" tax is not an issue. Is it treated any differently in chapter 13?
3. I think the general advise is to stop paying all creditors 3 months prior to the filing date. In my case, it's 3k/month surplus every month in my case. What do I do with all that money? I hear I need to spend on anything I can think of, like dental work, new furniture, auto repair, or even family trip. Well, I have two concerns. First of all, some of these expenditures might be construed as abuse and jeopardize my case. Secondly, I really can't think of anything to spend that extra money on. There's no way I can buy 3k worth of stuff every month for 3 months and, I suppose, also for the entire duration of the bankruptcy proceeding. What happens if I just keep the money in the checking account in chapter 13? Will they be automatically distributed to creditors by trustee?
4. I hear, due to soaring foreclosure, it can take a year or more until you actually hear from the bank to vacate the house in a bankruptcy where you surrender the house. What happens between the time you get discharge and the bank actually takes possession of the property? Am I accruing new debt? I am, in reality, renting the house (since I no longer own it) from the bank without paying rent. Can the bank come after me for it later on? Is it better to just walk away right after the discharge?
Thanks!
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