Paying Your Special Creditor After Filing Bankruptcy
If you file bankruptcy, it’s okay to voluntarily repay any debt. But there can be unexpected consequences.
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If you file bankruptcy, it’s okay to voluntarily repay any debt. But there can be unexpected consequences.
In bankruptcy it’s okay to FEEL differently towards some creditors than others. You can also sometimes ACT differently, but only if you very carefully follow the rules.
Yes, you have a moral obligation to pay your debts. But do you have higher moral obligations to release yourself from those debts?
If you are buying something on time and want to keep it, you often can do so for less money IF you bought it more than a year ago.
If you’re financially hurting this 4th of July, you may not exactly be feeling like this is a great country. But it is.
Even without mentioning the word “bankruptcy,” the most important court decision in years may still have a huge effect on future bankruptcies. How? Possibly by greatly reducing the need to file bankruptcies resulting from medical debts.
Bankruptcy saves your vehicle from immediate repossession. Whether you choose to file under Chapter 7 or 13 depends in part on how strong of a medicine you need for dealing with the back payments.
Under Chapter 7, you can pay your vehicle loan mostly by getting rid of all or most of your other debts. Under Chapter 13, you can pay your vehicle loan ahead of most of your other creditors.
In bankruptcy, are you allowed to favor: 1) creditors with collateral, so that you can keep the collateral; 2) creditors toward whom you have special loyalty; and 3) creditors who have extraordinary leverage against you?
Three ways bankruptcy can help: 1) write off debts to focus on defense costs, 2) pay only the most important debts and expenses, and 3) reduce chance of related civil liability.
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