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In most Chapter 7 “straight bankruptcy” cases most debts are written off, so what happens to them in a Chapter 13 “adjustment of debts”?

 

The Advantages and Disadvantages of Chapter 13

Chapter 13 comes with many, many tools not available under Chapter 7. Many of these tools are helpful particularly if you have special debts or issues not deal with well in a Chapter 7 case—if you are behind on your mortgage, vehicle loan, or child support, if you owe income or property taxes, or if you have non-exempt (unprotected) assets you want to keep.

But these advantages come with what can be a significant disadvantage: you would usually have to pay something on your “general unsecured” debts—your run-of-the-mill ones without any collateral. That’s instead of paying nothing, as you likely would in a Chapter 7 case.

In some rare Chapter 13 cases you have to pay your “general unsecured” creditors in full—a so-called 100% plan. But on the other extreme, you may not have to pay those creditors anything—a 0% plan. Most of the time you have to pay them something, but often very little—only a few cents on the dollar.

How Much Do You Need to Pay Your “General Unsecured” Debts?

You must pay these debts whatever money is left over and available based on your budget after paying certain secured debts (home mortgage and vehicle arrearage, for example) and “priority” debts (recent income taxes, for example). So how much you have to pay on the debts that in a Chapter 7 case would be just discharged (written off without any payment) depends on your income, allowed expenses, and other debts, and sometimes also on the value of assets that you are trying to protect.

Here is a list of considerations in greater detail about how this works under Chapter 13.

1. Debts that are legally the same are treated the same. So, in a Chapter 13 plan all “general unsecured” debts are paid the same percent of the debt as are other “general unsecured” debts.

2. For any creditor to get paid anything out of what you are paying into a Chapter 13 plan, it has to file a “proof of claim”—stating the amount and nature of the debt—with the bankruptcy court, and do so by the stated deadline. If a creditor with a “general unsecured” debt does not file a “proof of claim” it will receive nothing through the plan. The debt will then be discharged at the end of the completed case.

3. If, as is often the case, other creditors do not file proofs of claim that usually, but not always, means more money available for the other creditors.

4. “0% plans” are those in which all of the money paid by the debtor into the plan is earmarked to pay secured and “priority” debts, plus trustee and attorney fees, leaving nothing for the “general unsecured” ones. Some bankruptcy courts frown on “0% plans,” either in general or especially when there does not seem to be good reason to be in a Chapter 13 case instead of a Chapter 7 one.

5. “100% plans” are those in which all of the “general unsecured” debts are paid in full through the plan. These happen mostly for two reasons. The debtors:

a. have enough disposable income (income minus allowed expenses) over the course of the case to pay off their debts in full; or

b. own more non-exempt assets which they are protecting through their Chapter 13 case than they have debts, requiring them to pay off their debts in full in order to keep those assets.

6. How much “general unsecured” debts are paid depends in part on how long the debtors are required to pay into their Chapter 13 case. Generally, if debtors’ pre-filing income is less than the published “median income” for their applicable state and family size, then they pay for 3 years into their plan. If their income is more than that amount, they must pay for 5 years instead.

7. Payments on “general unsecured” debts can also be affected by changes that happen during the case, such as income increases or decreases affecting the monthly plan payment amount, and unexpected tax refunds and employee bonuses paid into the plan.

8. Once the “general unsecured” debts are paid whatever the Chapter 13 plan provides for them (and the rest of the plan requirements are met), the remaining balances of those debts are discharged.

 

Powerful Chapter 13 gives you tools to solve your mortgage and other home lien problems from a number of different angles. 

 

The Limits of Chapter 7 “Straight Bankruptcy”

In my last blog I described how a Chapter 7 case can under certain circumstances help you enough to save your home. Or in other situations it can at least help you delay a foreclosure for as long as you need.  But Chapter 7 can only give limited help, maybe enough if you aren’t too far behind on your mortgage circumstances, or you don’t have other kinds of lienholders causing problems.

The Extraordinary Tools of Chapter 13

Chapter 13, on the other hand, provides you a range of much more powerful and flexible tools for solving many, many debt issues so that you can keep your home.

Here are the first five of ten significant ways that Chapter 13 can save your home (with the other five to come in my next blog).

Under Chapter 13 case you can:

1.  stretch out the amount of time for catching up on back mortgage payments for as long as 5 years. This is in contrast to the one year or so that most mortgage lenders will give you to catch up if you do a Chapter 7 case instead. This longer period can greatly lower your monthly catch-up payments, making more likely that you would succeed in actually catching up and keeping your home. Very importantly, throughout this catch-up period your home is protected from foreclosure as long as you stay with the payment plan, one that you propose. Within limits you can later modify that plan if your circumstances change.

2. slash your other debt obligations so that you can afford your mortgage payments. The mortgage debt—especially your first mortgage—can’t be significantly changed under Chapter 13. So you are usually required to pay your full monthly mortgage payment, and to catch up any arrearage, but to accomplish this you are allowed to pay to most of your other debts.

3.  permanently prevent income tax liens, and child and spousal support liens, and such from attaching to your home. The “automatic stay” preventing such liens under Chapter 7 last usually only about 3 months, and there’s no mechanism for dealing with these kinds of debts. Instead under Chapter 13, these liens are prevented throughout the three-to-five-year length of the case.

4.  have the time to pay debts that can’t be discharged (legally written off) in bankruptcy, all the while being protected from those creditors attacking your home. So even if a tax or support lien is already in place before you file, you are given the opportunity to pay the debt while under the protection of the bankruptcy laws. That undercuts the leverage of those liens against your home. Then by the end of your case, the debts are paid and those liens are released.

5.  discharge (write off) debts owed to creditors which could otherwise attack your home. For example, certain (generally older) income taxes can be discharged, leaving you owing nothing. But had you not filed the Chapter 13 case, or delayed doing so, a tax lien could have been recorded, which would have required you to pay some or all of the balance to free your home from that lien. Even most standard debts can turn into judgment liens against your house once you are sued and a judgment is entered. Depending on the facts, a judgment liens may or may not be able to be gotten rid of in bankruptcy.  If instead you file a Chapter 13 case to prevent these liens from happening, at the end of your case the debt is gone, and no such liens attach to your home.

See my next blog post for the other five house-saving tools of Chapter 13.

 

Eligibility depends on 1) the kind of debtor, 2) the kinds and amounts of debts, 3) the amount of income and 4) of expenses.

 

1) The Kind of Debtor

If you are a human person, you may be eligible for either a Chapter 7 “straight bankruptcy” or a Chapter 13 “adjustment of debts” case. You and your spouse may also be eligible to file one or the other of these together in a joint case.

However, if you are the owner or part-owner of a business partnership, corporation, limited liability company or other similar business entity, that business entity could not file its own Chapter 13 case. But it could file a Chapter 7 one. Regardless what your business entity itself could file, you could individually file either a Chapter 7 or 13 case, to address your own personal liabilities (beyond whatever liability for which the business itself would be responsible).

2) The Kinds and Amounts of Debts

If your debts are “primarily consumer debts” (more than 50% by dollar amount), then to be able to file a successful Chapter 7 case you have to pass the “means test.” That’s a test related to your income and expenses (discussed more below.)  If 50% or more of your debts are not consumer debts, than you can skip the “means test.”

Chapter 7 does not limit the amount of debt you can have to be eligible to file a case. However, you cannot file a Chapter 13 case if your debts exceed the maximums of $383,175 in unsecured debts and $1,149,525 in secured debts (or if you do file a case it will very likely be “dismissed” (thrown  out)).

3) Amount of Income

You can quickly and easily satisfy the “means test” and be eligible for a Chapter 7 case if your income is no more than the regularly adjusted and published “median income” for your family size and state.

To be eligible for Chapter 13 you must have “regular income.” That is defined not very helpfully as income “sufficiently stable and regular” to enable you to “make payments under a [Chapter 13] plan.”

Also for Chapter 13, if your income is less than the “median income” for your family size and state of residence, then the plan generally must last a minimum of three years (but in many situations it can last longer, especially if you need it to, but for no longer than five years). If your income is at or above the applicable “median income” amount, the plan must almost always last five years.

4) The Amount of Expenses

In Chapter 7, if your income is NOT less than “median income” for your family size and state of residence, then you may still pass the “means test” and be eligible for filing a Chapter 7 case IF, after accounting for all your allowed expenses, you don’t have enough money left over to pay a meaningful amount to your creditors.

In Chapter 13, a similar accounting of your allowed expenses determines the amount of your “disposable income,” the amount you must pay into your plan each month.

Summary

Once you recognize that you need relief from your creditors, choosing between Chapter 7 and 13 is often not difficult. But because there are many, many differences between them, the choice can sometimes turn into a delicate balancing act between the advantages and disadvantages of those two options. That’s why when you have your initial meeting with your bankruptcy attorney, it’s smart to be aware of and communicate your goals, but also be open-minded about how best to accomplish them.

 

The most common reason for a Chapter 13 “adjustment of debts” is if you have debts that can’t be written off in a “straight” Chapter 7 case.

 

When Chapter 7 Does Not Discharge Your Debts

My last blog post was about the discharge (legal write-off) of debts under Chapter 7. I concluded with the comment that if you have debts that Chapter 7 doesn’t discharge, Chapter 13 may be the way to go. It provides what is often the safest and most convenient method to deal with debts that you have to pay, while also discharging those debts that would be discharged under Chapter 7. The much longer time that Chapter 13 takes—3 to 5 years instead of as short as 3 to 4 months for most Chapter 7 cases—can be highly worthwhile under the right circumstances.

An Example

Let’s show you one example of the right circumstances. Imagine someone owing $7,000 in IRS debt for 2011 and 2012, $3,000 in back child support, $20,000 in credit cards, and $5,000 in medical bills. The person lost his or her job in late 2010 and used the situation to try to run a one-person business during 2011 and 2012. It made a little money but only barely enough to pay living expenses. There was absolutely no money available to set aside for income taxes. During that period the person also fell behind on child support payments. Then this person found a new job a few months ago that pays less than the one lost in 2010, but at least enough to pay ongoing taxes and support, in addition to living expenses. But the person’s budget leaves only about $400 to pay ALL debts, not nearly enough to pay the minimum amounts on the credit cards, much less anything towards the rest of the debts including the taxes and back support.

What Chapter 7 Would and Would NOT Accomplish

A regular Chapter 7 case would likely discharge the $20,000 in credit cards and the $5,000 in medical bills, but would leave owing the $7,000 to the IRS and the $3,000 in back support. Although discharging $25,000, the person would come out of bankruptcy still $10,000 in debt, owed to two creditors who can be extremely aggressive—the IRS and your ex-spouse or the local support enforcement agency.

Although the IRS might be willing to accept payments of $400 per month, there’s a good chance that your ex-spouse or the support enforcement agency would be able to garnish your wages for the back support, and that would negate any possible arrangement with the IRS. Plus the last thing this person would want at his or her new job is for the payroll office to get a garnishment order for back child support. A previously filed Chapter 7 case would have no power to stop that kind of garnishment.

What Chapter 13 Would Accomplish

In contrast Chapter 13 would be able to stop your ex-spouse or support agency from garnishing for back support—as well as from any action the IRS or any state taxing entity, or virtually any other creditor, could take.

So the person in our example would file a Chapter 13 case, start or continue paying any ongoing monthly child support payments, and would also be sure to have withheld an adequate amount for ongoing income taxes. Then his or her attorney would put together a plan to pay the Chapter 13 trustee $400 per month (based on what is available in his or her budget) for 36 months.

During that period of time neither the IRS, nor the support agency or ex-spouse, nor any other creditors would be able to take any action against the person or any of his or her assets as long as he or she complied with the Chapter 13 plan. That means that he or she kept up the $400 plan payments, and kept current on ongoing tax and support obligations (as provided for in the budget).

Over those three years the trustee would be paid $14,400 ($400 X 36 months), which would pay all the $3,000 in back support and the $7,000 in taxes—usually without any additional interest or penalties from the date of the filing of the Chapter 13 case. The Chapter 13 trustee would also get paid, usually about 5-to-10% of what is being paid into the plan, as would any attorney fees that weren’t paid to the attorney at the beginning of your case.  If there would be any money left over (little or none in this example), that would be divided pro rata among the credit card and medical debts. After the 36 months of payments, any remaining balances on those debts would be discharged. That would leave the person at the end of the Chapter 13 case owing nothing to anyone. The back taxes and support would have been paid off, and he or she would be current on any ongoing income taxes and child support.

So that’s what a simple Chapter 13 case would accomplish and would look like. 

 

Bankruptcy doesn’t just clean up after the failure of a business. Bankruptcy can also prevent that failure in the first place.

 

General Motors: 2009 vs. 2013

When General Motors filed bankruptcy in 2009, it was insolvent: it owed about $173 billion and had assets of less than half that, about $82 billion. It was not able to pay its bills when they became due.

Through bankruptcy the business shed a significant amount of its debts, reduced its U.S. plants from 47 to 34 and its U.S. employees from 91,000 to 68,500.  It sold or closed the following vehicle brands: Hummer, Pontiac, Saturn, and Saab. In return for a $50 billion loan from the U.S. government, the nation’s taxpayers became 60.8% owners of G.M.

Now, four years later G.M. is profitable again. By the end of 2013 the government is expected to sell the last of its common stock in the company. According to the Center for Automotive Research, the rescue of the U.S. auto industry—including G.M.—saved 1.14 million jobs at automakers and other companies that rely on them.

If you own and operate a small business, maybe a bankruptcy could save that business, and your job in that business.

Your Business as a Sole Proprietorship

Practically speaking, your business is operated as a sole proprietorship if you did not create a corporation, limited liability (LLC), partnership, or any other kind of formal legal entity when you set up that business. You own and operate your business by yourself for yourself, although the business may have a formal or informal “assumed business name” or “DBA” (“doing business as”).

There are various advantages and disadvantages of operating your business this way. For our immediate purposes what’s important is that you and your business are legally treated as a single economic entity. That’s different than if your business operated as a corporation which would legally own its own assets and owe its own debts, distinct from you and any other shareholder(s). This blog post, and the next few on this broad topic of business bankruptcies, assumes that you operate your business as a sole proprietorship.

Chapter 7

Chapter 7, “straight bankruptcy,” or “liquidating bankruptcy,” allows you to “discharge” (legally write off) your debts in return for liquidation—surrendering your assets to the bankruptcy trustee in order to be sold and the proceeds distributed to your creditors. In most Chapter 7 cases you receive a discharge of your debts even though none of your assets are surrendered and liquidated, because everything you own is protected–“exempt.”

But if you own an ongoing business—again, a sole proprietorship—which you intend to keep operating, Chapter 7 may be a risky option. You and your attorney would need to determine if all your business’ assets would be exempt under the laws applicable to your state. Certain crucial assets of your business—perhaps its accounts receivable, customer list, business name, or favorable premises lease—may not be exempt, and thus subject to being taken by the trustee. Proceed very carefully to avoid having your business effectively shut down in this way.

Chapter 13

The Chapter 13 “adjustment of debts” bankruptcy option is generally better designed than Chapter 7 for ongoing sole proprietorship businesses. It provides much better mechanisms for retaining your personal and business assets. Even business (and personal) assets that are not “exempt” can usually be protected through a Chapter 13 plan.

You and your business get immediate relief from your creditors, usually along with a significant reduction in the amount of debt to be repaid.  So Chapter 13 helps both your immediate cash flow and the long-term prospects for the business. It is also an excellent way to deal with tax debts, often a major issue for struggling businesses. Overall, it allows you to continue operating your business while taking care of a streamlined set of debts.

Next…

In the next few blogs we will focus on some of the most important benefits of filing a business Chapter 13 case.

 

If you owe a few years of income taxes, Chapter 13 lets you write off those that can be, while giving you time to pay those that must be.

 

Our Example

The last blog post introduced an example of how Chapter 13 can be a particularly good way to handle income tax debts when you owe multiple years of taxes. In that example:

  • Without a bankruptcy, a couple would have to pay about $30,000 to the IRS for back taxes, plus about another $45,000 in medical bills and credit cards, a total of about $75,000. Given their modest income and resulting ability to pay these obligations only very slowly, this couple would almost certainly be subject to many years of collection efforts, lawsuits and garnishments until the obligations were paid off.
  • Under Chapter 13, this same couple would pay only about $18,000—36 months of $500 payments. That’s less than 1/4th of the above $75,000 amount—and substantially less than the taxes alone!. Furthermore, the couple’s monthly payments would be based on their ability to pay. During this payment period their creditors—including the IRS—would be prevented from taking any collection action against them.

How Does Chapter 13 Work to Save So Much on Taxes and Other Debts?

  • Tax debts that are old enough are grouped with the “general unsecured” debts—such as medical bills and credit cards. These are paid usually based on how much money there is left over after paying other more important debts. This means that often these older taxes are paid either nothing or only a few pennies on the dollar.
  • The more recent “priority” taxes DO have to be paid in full in a Chapter 13 case, along with interest accrued until the filing of the case. However: 1) penalties—which can be a significant portion of the debt—are treated like “general unsecured” debts and thus paid little or nothing, and 2) usually interest or penalties stop when the Chapter 13 is filed. These can significantly reduce the total amount that has to be paid.
  • “Priority” taxes—those more recent ones that do have to be paid in full—are all paid before anything is paid to the “general unsecured” debts—the medical bills, credit cards, older income taxes and such. In many cases this means that having these “priority” taxes to pay simply reduces the amount of money which would otherwise have been paid to those “general unsecured” creditors. As a result, in these situations having tax debt does not increase the amount that would have to be paid in a Chapter 13 case, which is after all based on what the debtors can afford. In our example, the couple pays $500 per month because that is what their budget allows. That’s the same amount they would have to pay even if they owed nothing to the IRS! The couple meets their obligations under Chapter 13 by having most of their plan payments go to the IRS recent tax debts, and likely nothing to their other creditors or older IRS debts.
  • The bankruptcy law that stops creditors from trying to collect their debts while a bankruptcy case is active—the “automatic stay”—is as effective stopping the IRS as any other creditor. The IRS can continue to do some very limited and sensible things like demand the filing of a tax return or conduct an audit, but it can’t use the aggressive collection tools that the law otherwise grants to it. Gaining relief from collection pressure from the IRS AND all the rest of the creditors is one of the biggest benefits of Chapter 13.

Deciding Between Chapter 7 and 13 for Income Taxes

If, unlike the example, all of the taxes were old enough to meet the conditions for discharging them under Chapter 7, there would be no need for a Chapter 13 case. On the other hand if more “priority” tax debts had to be paid than in the example, the debtors would have to pay more into their Chapter 13 plan, either through larger monthly payments or for a longer period of time.

There are definitely situations where it is a close call choosing between Chapter 7 or Chapter 13. And sometimes preparing an offer in compromise with the IRS—either instead of or together with a bankruptcy filing—is the best route. To decide which of these is best for you, you need the advice of an experienced bankruptcy attorney to help you make an informed decision and then to execute on it.