Welcome to Bankruptcy Guide
Bankruptcy Filing Article
. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.
Understanding the New Bankruptcy Law
from:On October 17, 2005, a new bankruptcy law went into effect. The purpose of the bankruptcy was to restore some fairness into the bankruptcy law in terms of who could qualify. Congress had become convinced that many people were taking advantage of the system under the old law in order to get out of paying debts they could afford to repay. The new law makes it more difficult to qualify for a bankruptcy, but it also places a heavier responsibility on the bankruptcy attorney.
The new bankruptcy law changed the old law in several important areas. For one thing, the new law resulted in more people qualifying for a chapter 13 filing rather than a chapter 7 filing. Under the chapter 7 filing, all of the debtor assets are liquidated and used to repay the creditors. In many cases, debtors have no assets except their house or car and so the creditor gets very little or nothing. A chapter 13 filing is a repayment plan which forces the debtor to repay as much debt as possible between 3 to 5 years.
The new bankruptcy law also established new calculation rules and made it more difficult to use the homestead exemption. The new calculation rule uses the IRS standard of living numbers to determine your net income figure. The IRS living standard amounts usually are often lower than what you actually spend. The homestead exemption refers to the fact the new law has placed greater restrictions on which state exemption you can use as determined by your length of residence. A bankruptcy attorney will carefully determine the status of your homestead exemption during the filing process.
Another addition to the new bankruptcy law is the requirement that debtors take a money management course and get 90 minutes of credit counseling. This process has been streamlined in that there are many ways to fulfill these requirements online.
One of the major changes in the new bankruptcy law is the establishment of an income means test. The means test is how the courts will determine if you should be allowed to file a chapter 7. Under the means test, your income will be compared to the state median income in the state in which you live. Then your income will also be used in a formula that will determine if you can pay at least 25% of your net income to pay off unsecured debt. If you can, and your income is over the median, then the court will probably make you file a chapter 13 unless you can prove you have unusual circumstances.
This is just a quick snapshot of the new bankruptcy law changes effective October 2005. Of course, there are many other complex aspects to the law that only an attorney is qualified to interpret. Though the new law is more stringent than the old, it still gives millions of people a fresh start.
Bankruptcy Filing News
Dewey to consider bankruptcy filing: source
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Ailing law firm Dewey & LeBoeuf is considering a bankruptcy filing as new debtholders take a more aggressive track, shifting away from earlier attempts at an out-of-court liquidation, a person familiar with the matter said on Friday. The majority of Dewey's partners have quit as a result of concerns about compensation, and $225 million in bank loans and bond debt. ...
Read more...Dewey & LeBoeuf Readies Bankruptcy Filing
New York law firm Dewey & LeBoeuf LLP is readying a possible bankruptcy-protection filing for sometime in the next several weeks, said people familiar with the matter, a move that would initiate official liquidation of the beleaguered institution.
Read more...Ally Financial's mortgage unit nears bankruptcy: sources
Ally Financial Inc's Residential Capital unit is nearing a bankruptcy filing, sources familiar with the situation said on Sunday, in a move that could help the taxpayer-owned auto lender to shed its troubled ...
Read more...REFILE-Dewey to consider bankruptcy filing - source
(Corrects month in which Dewey partner said no plans forbankruptcy to May from March in paragraph 13 of story publishedMay 18) * New crop of creditors pressuring Dewey to seek bankruptcy- source * Creditors ...
Read more...Alex Hotel, Flatotel Owners File for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy
205 East 45 LLC, the owner of east midtown Manhattan- located Alex Hotel, has $123 million in outstanding liabilities with the lenders group, according to a filing today in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan.
Read more...5 Bankruptcy Myths Debunked
Nadya Suleman (known to gossip magazines as "Octomom") recently filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy after accumulating roughly $1 million in debt. Tabloids and gossip blogs have criticized Suleman's spending and lifestyle, but she's far from alone in her financial woes. Legal technology provider Epiq Systems estimates that 1.21 to 1.25 million Americans will file for bankruptcy this year, down from 1 ...
Read more...LightSquared edges closer to bankruptcy filing: sources
(Reuters) - Philip Falcone's telecom start-up LightSquared edged closer to a bankruptcy filing on Sunday as the hedge fund manager was far from an agreement with creditors, sources familiar with the matter said. Falcone has until Monday at 5 p.m. EDT (2100 GMT) to reach an agreement or face a default on a $1.6 billion loan, sources said. Creditors have been negotiating to restructure ...
Read more...LightSquared pledges to push forward after bankruptcy filing
LightSquared said in its bankruptcy filing Monday, it will continue to try to win over the Federal Communications Commission to get its satellite venture up and running — a process that can take up to two years. Read full article >>
Read more...


