Thanks to everyone on these boards. I have been searching threads and came upon some information. I am wondering if I just found something that will help me.
Right now, we are filing jointly. Although, the main reason we are filing is because of a house that was in my husbands name that was foreclosed on (I was not on the loan).
He has one credit card only in his name and I have a couple of credit cards and some medical bills, but nothing astronomical (We just can't afford to pay the 52K judgment from the mortgage company back in a lump sum because they refuse to settle!)
The issue with filing jointly is that I have to include my SSDI and my children's SSDI income and it is showing a disposable income on the schedule I that could get a chapter 7 case thrown out (even though we qualify under the means test), and make for a hefty repayment plan.
I just saw a thread where someone brought up line 17 on the means test:
If you are married, living together, but filing singly:
Enter the portion of your spouse's income that was NOT used for your support
or the support of your dependents:
Luckily, I keep my SSDI completely separate from his finances (I also keep the childrens SSDI separate). I could potentially claim most of it or all. This would qualify him again under the means test, but what it would also do is make it so we could list my credit card and medical bills as expenses, where we are not able to right now because we are filing joint. This would decrease a repayment plan, substantially.
Also, because SSDI is not garnishable, I could (theoretically) not pay my debt and not have to worry about judgments or garnishes from it. (not saying I will)
The issue that I see is IF he is granted a 7, he has one car solely in his name and our van is in both of our names. Both are paid off and both are worth about the exemption amount that Utah allows for a vehicle. Filing jointly, they would both probably be safe (Utah allows you to double the exemption for joint cases). But, if he files - what does that do to our van (which is the vehicle that I drive and use for the kids)? That could make him over the exemption amount by about $1,000-$1,500 (subtracting 1/2 of the vans value that I would still "have")
Right now, we are filing jointly. Although, the main reason we are filing is because of a house that was in my husbands name that was foreclosed on (I was not on the loan).
He has one credit card only in his name and I have a couple of credit cards and some medical bills, but nothing astronomical (We just can't afford to pay the 52K judgment from the mortgage company back in a lump sum because they refuse to settle!)
The issue with filing jointly is that I have to include my SSDI and my children's SSDI income and it is showing a disposable income on the schedule I that could get a chapter 7 case thrown out (even though we qualify under the means test), and make for a hefty repayment plan.
I just saw a thread where someone brought up line 17 on the means test:
If you are married, living together, but filing singly:
Enter the portion of your spouse's income that was NOT used for your support
or the support of your dependents:
Luckily, I keep my SSDI completely separate from his finances (I also keep the childrens SSDI separate). I could potentially claim most of it or all. This would qualify him again under the means test, but what it would also do is make it so we could list my credit card and medical bills as expenses, where we are not able to right now because we are filing joint. This would decrease a repayment plan, substantially.
Also, because SSDI is not garnishable, I could (theoretically) not pay my debt and not have to worry about judgments or garnishes from it. (not saying I will)
The issue that I see is IF he is granted a 7, he has one car solely in his name and our van is in both of our names. Both are paid off and both are worth about the exemption amount that Utah allows for a vehicle. Filing jointly, they would both probably be safe (Utah allows you to double the exemption for joint cases). But, if he files - what does that do to our van (which is the vehicle that I drive and use for the kids)? That could make him over the exemption amount by about $1,000-$1,500 (subtracting 1/2 of the vans value that I would still "have")
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