As I head down this path of who to pay and who not to pay, I was recently served with a small claims paper. There is no doubt that I will receive a default judgment and will probably see my wages garnished. I can live with a 25% garnishment of wages for a while. My question related to whether or not it looks bad if I need to bite the bullet and file in 6-7 months if I have a dozen judgments against me.
Many posters have stated "just go and file." As I've posted elsewhere on this board, if I file within the next 6 months, I will be on a very high monthly payment that will have to be modified once a "rolling" six month average shows a decrease in "annual salary." By September or October, my six-month average salary will decrease from the current $5500 to approximately $4000. My monthly schedule I expenses are approxmately $3000.00 and I have no assests. I will figuratively "starve to death" if I file BK 13 now at a payback of $2500 and have to do this for several months while earning only $4000. My research on the local trustee, while very kind to debtors, is that he will not consider a modified plan until six-months show my decreased income. This is a dilemma. The good thing is that if I file in 6 months, my payback will be about $1000 - $1200 per month. I am in a salaried position with "overload," and if I stopped accepting the "overload" work at this time, I could lose my job. I've already accepted overload assignments for the next several months and I see no purpose in losing my job.
So, my question is, "Should I just let judgments slowly build up over the next 6 months?" I can live through an occasional garnishment. Will this look as if I acted in bad faith and didn't "file" when I should have? Is there any civic obligation to file for BK 13 when you know there is probably no other option?All legal counsel I've met with are reluctant to suggest one way or the other. They do claim that all judgments can be addressed in a BK 13. Does anyone have any suggestions?
I am paying all secured creditors, and living expenses (rent, utility, etc). My student loan company gave me another 3 months of "forebearance." Does it look bad to pay only the secured and leave the unsecured to do what they want, file claims, send to debt collectors, seek garnishment of wages, etc?
Many posters have stated "just go and file." As I've posted elsewhere on this board, if I file within the next 6 months, I will be on a very high monthly payment that will have to be modified once a "rolling" six month average shows a decrease in "annual salary." By September or October, my six-month average salary will decrease from the current $5500 to approximately $4000. My monthly schedule I expenses are approxmately $3000.00 and I have no assests. I will figuratively "starve to death" if I file BK 13 now at a payback of $2500 and have to do this for several months while earning only $4000. My research on the local trustee, while very kind to debtors, is that he will not consider a modified plan until six-months show my decreased income. This is a dilemma. The good thing is that if I file in 6 months, my payback will be about $1000 - $1200 per month. I am in a salaried position with "overload," and if I stopped accepting the "overload" work at this time, I could lose my job. I've already accepted overload assignments for the next several months and I see no purpose in losing my job.
So, my question is, "Should I just let judgments slowly build up over the next 6 months?" I can live through an occasional garnishment. Will this look as if I acted in bad faith and didn't "file" when I should have? Is there any civic obligation to file for BK 13 when you know there is probably no other option?All legal counsel I've met with are reluctant to suggest one way or the other. They do claim that all judgments can be addressed in a BK 13. Does anyone have any suggestions?
I am paying all secured creditors, and living expenses (rent, utility, etc). My student loan company gave me another 3 months of "forebearance." Does it look bad to pay only the secured and leave the unsecured to do what they want, file claims, send to debt collectors, seek garnishment of wages, etc?
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