|
Edward Stone
Attorney at Law
Phone:
435.658.3366
Toll Free:
866.931.3111
|
 |
Chapter 13
Please select from below for applicable statutes and explanations:
* This is by no means intended to be a complete description
of bankruptcy rights in the State of Utah. This page is
intended to give a litigant an idea of the bankruptcy process. A complete description
of rights can be found in the Utah Code and the US Code.
Do not rely on this page alone for guidance; consult with
an attorney. This page does not create an attorney-client
relationship.
Please contact Edward Stone for more information.
|
|
A
Chapter 13 bankruptcy is also
called a wage earner's plan. It enables individuals
with regular income to develop a plan to repay all
or part of their debts. Under this chapter, debtors
propose a repayment plan to make installments to
creditors over three to five years. If the debtor's
current monthly income is less than the applicable
state median, the plan will be for three years
unless the court approves a longer period "for
cause." If the debtor's current monthly income is
greater than the applicable state median, the plan
generally must be for five years. In no case may a
plan provide for payments over a period longer than
five years. During this time the law forbids
creditors from starting or continuing collection
efforts.
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 13 offers individuals a
number of advantages over liquidation under chapter
7. Perhaps most significantly, chapter 13 offers
individuals an opportunity to save their homes from
foreclosure. By filing under this chapter,
individuals can stop foreclosure proceedings and may
cure delinquent mortgage payments over time.
Nevertheless, they must still make all mortgage
payments that come due during the chapter 13 plan on
time. Another advantage of chapter 13 is that it
allows individuals to reschedule secured debts,
other than a mortgage for their primary residence,
and extend them over the life of the chapter 13
plan. Chapter 13 acts like a consolidation loan
under which the individual makes the plan payments
to a chapter 13 trustee who then distributes
payments to creditors. Individuals will have no
direct contact with creditors while under chapter 13
protection.
|
|
|
|
|
Any individual, including those
who are self-employed, is eligible for chapter 13
relief as long as the individual's unsecured debts
are less than $307,675 and secured debts are less
than $922,975. These amounts are adjusted
periodically to reflect changes in the consumer
price index. A corporation or partnership may not be
a chapter 13 debtor.
An individual cannot file under
chapter 13 or any other chapter 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 was voluntarily dismissed 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 13 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.
|
|
|
|
|
A chapter 13 case begins by filing
a petition with the bankruptcy court where the
debtor has a domicile or residence. Unless the court
orders otherwise, the debtor must also file with the
court: (1) schedules of assets and liabilities; (2)
a schedule of current income and expenditures; (3) a
schedule of executory contracts and unexpired
leases; and (4) a statement of financial affairs.
The debtor must also 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. The debtor must provide the chapter 13
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). A husband and wife may file a joint
petition or individual petitions.
The Bankruptcy Court charges a
$235 case filing fee and a $39 miscellaneous
administrative fee.
In order to complete the forms
that make up the petition, statement of financial
affairs, and schedules, the debtor must compile the
following information:
- 1. A list of all creditors and the amounts
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
the information not only as it applies to
themselves, but also their spouse when 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.
When an individual files a chapter
13 petition, an impartial trustee is appointed to
administer the case. The chapter 13 trustee both
evaluates the case and serves as a disbursing agent,
collecting payments from the debtor and making
distributions to creditors. 11 U.S.C. § 1302(b).
Filing the petition under chapter
13 "automatically stays" (stops) most collection
actions against the debtor or the debtor's property.
Filing the petition does not, however, stay certain
types of actions, 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 make 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.
Chapter 13 also contains a special
automatic stay provision that protects co-debtors.
Unless the bankruptcy court authorizes otherwise, a
creditor may not seek to collect a "consumer debt"
from any individual who is liable along with the
debtor. Consumer debts are those incurred by an
individual primarily for a personal, family, or
household purpose.
Individuals may use a chapter 13
proceeding to save their home from foreclosure. The
automatic stay stops the foreclosure proceeding as
soon as the individual files the chapter 13
petition. The individual may then bring the past-due
payments current over a reasonable period of time.
Nevertheless, the debtor may still lose the home if
the mortgage company completes the foreclosure sale
under state law before the debtor files the
petition. The debtor may also lose the home if he or
she fails to make the regular mortgage payments that
come due after the chapter 13 filing.
Between 20 and 50 days after the
debtor files the chapter 13 petition, the chapter 13
trustee will hold a meeting of creditors. During
this meeting, the trustee places the debtor under
oath, and both the trustee and creditors may ask
questions. The debtor must attend the meeting and
answer questions regarding his or her financial
affairs and the proposed terms of the plan. If a
husband and wife file a joint petition, they both
must attend the creditors' meeting and answer
questions. The parties typically resolve problems
with the plan either during or shortly after the
creditors' meeting. Generally, the debtor can avoid
problems by making sure that the petition and plan
are complete and accurate, and by consulting with
the trustee prior to the meeting.
In a chapter 13 case, to
participate in distributions from the bankruptcy
estate, unsecured creditors must file their claims
with the court within 90 days after the first date
set for the meeting of creditors.
After the meeting of creditors,
the debtor, the chapter 13 trustee, and those
creditors who wish to attend will come to court for
a hearing on the debtor's chapter 13 repayment plan.
|
|
|
|
Unless the court grants an
extension, the debtor must file a repayment plan
with the petition or within 15 days after the
petition is filed. A plan must be submitted for
court approval and must provide for payments of
fixed amounts to the trustee on a regular basis,
typically biweekly or monthly. The trustee then
distributes the funds to creditors according to the
terms of the plan, which may offer creditors less
than full payment on their claims.
There are three types of claims:
priority, secured, and unsecured. Priority claims
are those granted special status by the bankruptcy
law, such as most taxes and the costs of bankruptcy
proceeding. Secured
claims are those for which the creditor has the
right take back certain property (i.e., the
collateral) if the debtor does not pay the
underlying debt. In contrast to secured claims,
unsecured claims are generally those for which the
creditor has no special rights to collect against
particular property owned by the debtor.
The plan must pay priority claims
in full unless a particular priority creditor agrees
to different treatment of the claim or, in the case
of a domestic support obligation, unless the debtor
contributes all "disposable income" - discussed
below - to a five-year plan.
If the debtor wants to keep the
collateral securing a particular claim, the plan
must provide that the holder of the secured claim
receive at least the value of the collateral. If the
obligation underlying the secured claim was used the
buy the collateral (e.g., a car loan), and the debt
was incurred within certain time frames before the
bankruptcy filing, the plan must provide for full
payment of the debt, not just the value of the
collateral (which may be less due to depreciation).
Payments to certain secured creditors (i.e.,
the home mortgage lender), may be made over the
original loan repayment schedule (which may be
longer than the plan) so long as any arrearage is
made up during the plan. The debtor should consult
an attorney to determine the proper treatment of
secured claims in the plan.
The plan need not pay unsecured
claims in full as long it provides that the debtor
will pay all projected "disposable income" over an
"applicable commitment period," and as long as
unsecured creditors receive at least as much under
the plan as they would receive if the debtor's
assets were liquidated under chapter 7. In chapter
13, "disposable income" is income (other than child
support payments received by the debtor) less
amounts reasonably necessary for the maintenance or
support of the debtor or dependents and less
charitable contributions up to 15% of the debtor's
gross income. If the debtor operates a business, the
definition of disposable income excludes those
amounts which are necessary for ordinary operating
expenses. The "applicable commitment period" depends
on the debtor's current monthly income. The
applicable commitment period must be three years if
current monthly income is less than the state median
for a family of the same size - and five years if
the current monthly income is greater than a family
of the same size. The plan may be less than the
applicable commitment period (three or five years)
only if unsecured debt is paid in full over a
shorter period.
Within 30 days after filing the
bankruptcy case, even if the plan has not yet been
approved by the court, the debtor must start making
plan payments to the trustee. If any secured
loan payments or lease payments come due before the
debtor's plan is confirmed (typically home and
automobile payments), the debtor must make adequate
protection payments directly to the secured lender
or lessor - deducting the amount paid from the
amount that would otherwise be paid to the trustee.
No later than 45 days after the
meeting of creditors, the bankruptcy judge must hold
a confirmation hearing and decide whether the plan
is feasible and meets the standards for confirmation
set forth in the Bankruptcy Code. Creditors will
receive 25 days' notice of the hearing and may
object to confirmation. While a variety of
objections may be made, the most frequent ones are
that payments offered under the plan are less than
creditors would receive if the debtor's assets were
liquidated or that the debtor's plan does not commit
all of the debtor's projected disposable income for
the three or five year applicable commitment period.
If the court confirms the plan,
the chapter 13 trustee will distribute funds
received under the plan "as soon as is practicable."
If the court declines to confirm the plan, the
debtor may file a modified plan. The debtor may also
convert the case to a liquidation case under chapter
7. If the court declines to confirm the plan
or the modified plan and instead dismisses the case,
the court may authorize the trustee to keep some
funds for costs, but the trustee must return all
remaining funds to the debtor (other than funds
already disbursed or due to creditors).
Occasionally, a change in
circumstances may compromise the debtor's ability to
make plan payments. For example, a creditor may
object or threaten to object to a plan, or the
debtor may inadvertently have failed to list all
creditors. In such instances, the plan may be
modified either before or after confirmation.
Modification after confirmation is not limited to an
initiative by the debtor, but may be at the request
of the trustee or an unsecured creditor.
|
|
|
The provisions of a confirmed plan
bind the debtor and each creditor. Once the court
confirms the plan, the debtor must make the plan
succeed. The debtor must make regular payments to
the trustee either directly or through payroll
deduction, which will require adjustment to living
on a fixed budget for a prolonged period.
Furthermore, while confirmation of the plan entitles
the debtor to retain property as long as payments
are made, the debtor may not incur new debt without
consulting the trustee, because additional debt may
compromise the debtor's ability to complete the
plan.
A debtor may make plan payments
through payroll deductions. This practice increases
the likelihood that payments will be made on time
and that the debtor will complete the plan. In any
event, if the debtor fails to make the payments due
under the confirmed plan, the court may dismiss the
case or convert it to a liquidation case under
chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code. The court may also
dismiss or convert the debtor's case if the debtor
fails to pay any post-filing domestic support
obligations (i.e., child support, alimony),
or fails to make required tax filings during the
case.
The bankruptcy law regarding the
scope of the chapter 13 discharge is complex and has
recently undergone major changes. Therefore, debtors
should consult competent legal counsel prior to
filing regarding the scope of the chapter 13
discharge.
A chapter 13 debtor is entitled to
a discharge upon completion of all payments under
the chapter 13 plan so long as the debtor: (1)
certifies (if applicable) that all domestic support
obligations that came due prior to making such
certification have been paid; (2) has not received a
discharge in a prior case filed within a certain
time frame (two years for prior chapter 13 cases and
four years for prior chapter 7, 11 and 12 cases);
and (3) has completed an approved course in
financial management (if the U.S. trustee or
bankruptcy administrator for the debtor's district
has determined that such courses are available to
the debtor). The court will not enter the discharge,
however, until it determines, after notice and a
hearing, that there is no reason to believe there is
any pending proceeding that might give rise to a
limitation on the debtor's homestead exemption.
The discharge releases the debtor
from all debts provided for by the plan or
disallowed (under section 502), with limited
exceptions. Creditors provided for in full or in
part under the chapter 13 plan may no longer
initiate or continue any legal or other action
against the debtor to collect the discharged
obligations.
As a general rule, the discharge
releases the debtor from all debts provided for by
the plan or disallowed, with the exception of
certain debts. Debts not discharged in chapter 13
include certain long term obligations (such as a
home mortgage), debts for alimony or child support,
certain taxes, debts for most government funded or
guaranteed educational loans or benefit
overpayments, debts arising from death or personal
injury caused by driving while intoxicated or under
the influence of drugs, and debts for restitution or
a criminal fine included in a sentence on the
debtor's conviction of a crime. To the extent that
they are not fully paid under the chapter 13 plan,
the debtor will still be responsible for these debts
after the bankruptcy case has concluded. Debts for
money or property obtained by false pretenses, debts
for fraud or defalcation while acting in a fiduciary
capacity, and debts for restitution or damages
awarded in a civil case for willful or malicious
actions by the debtor that cause personal injury or
death to a person will be discharged unless a
creditor timely files and prevails in an action to
have such debts declared nondischargeable.
The discharge in a chapter 13 case
is somewhat broader than in a chapter 7 case. Debts
dischargeable in a chapter 13, but not in chapter 7,
include debts for willful and malicious injury to
property (as opposed to a person), debts incurred to
pay nondischargeable tax obligations, and debts
arising from property settlements in divorce or
separation proceedings.
After confirmation of a plan,
circumstances may arise that prevent the debtor from
completing the plan. In such situations, the debtor
may ask the court to grant a "hardship discharge."
Generally, such a discharge is available only if:
(1) the debtor's failure to complete plan payments
is due to circumstances beyond the debtor's control
and through no fault of the debtor; (2) creditors
have received at least as much as they would have
received in a chapter 7 liquidation case; and (3)
modification of the plan is not possible. Injury or
illness that precludes employment sufficient to fund
even a modified plan may serve as the basis for a
hardship discharge. The hardship discharge is more
limited than the discharge described above and does
not apply to any debts that are nondischargeable in
a chapter 7 case.
|
|
|
|