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Behm Law Group, Bankruptcy Attorneys

Bankruptcy News & Recent Cases

How a New Job Affects Chapter 7 Bankruptcy in Mankato, MN

April 3rd, 2018 · No Comments

If you’ve been struggling with extreme financial difficulties, bankruptcy is a way to find relief and recovery. If you have a low income or are unemployed, Chapter 7 bankruptcy is designed to help your situation. For individuals, Chapter 7 is the most common type of bankruptcy. It’s applicable to most situations for unemployed filers, low income filers, and high debt filers. Behm Law Group, Ltd. provides expert counsel if you’re considering Chapter 7 bankruptcy in Mankato, MN.

The most important thing to be aware of when filing for bankruptcy is that honesty counts in every aspect of your case. The U.S. Bankruptcy Courts and bankruptcy trustees are highly experienced and trained in examining bankruptcy cases and detecting mistakes and fraudulent behavior. With the guidance of a bankruptcy attorney, you can more effectively lay out your financial circumstances establishing your need for Chapter 7 relief.

Qualifying for Chapter 7 bankruptcy requires you to pass the Means Test to determine if your income is too low to make debt repayments possible. If you pass this test, your income is either lower than the state median income of a similar household size or the total amount of your debt is exceedingly high.

After you’ve passed the Means Test and qualified for Chapter 7 bankruptcy relief, you’ll begin to work through the process of discharging certain debts, exempting certain properties, and figuring out the details of your bankruptcy estate. In most cases, a filer’s job status doesn’t change during the bankruptcy process. However, there are some times during the pendency of a case when some filers have employment or other income changes.

New Income

If you have a change in employment during the pendency of your bankruptcy case, it’s likely that your income will change as well. If this happens, the best thing to do is to immediately notify your attorney. This change in income may significantly alter your case.  New income can affect your case in several ways:

  1. Your case can be converted to a Chapter 13 bankruptcy case, and you could enter a restructured debt repayment plan that could last three to five years.
  2. If you receive income from lawsuit settlements, lottery winnings, divorce settlements or if you inherit any money or property within 180 days after your case is filed, such income could be used by the bankruptcy trustee administering your case to pay your creditors.
  3. Your case may be dismissed because of your lack of disclosure of any income changes or for other fraudulent behavior.

Other sources causing an income change are also taken into account in a Chapter 7 case, and you should be open and honest about all alterations to your financial situation. For more information about filing for Chapter 7 bankruptcy in Mankato, MN, contact Behm Law Group, Ltd. at (507) 387-7200 today.

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Limitations of the Automatic Stay When You File for Bankruptcy in Windom, MN

February 21st, 2018 · No Comments

Whether you file for Chapter 7 liquidation bankruptcy or Chapter 13 debt reorganization bankruptcy, you benefit from the immediate action of the automatic stay as soon as your bankruptcy petition is filed. The automatic stay is a wonderful tool designed to prevent creditors from collecting on debts that may be discharged or restructured during the bankruptcy process. It also prevents collections and blocks harassment from your creditors during the period of your bankruptcy case. If you’re struggling financially, the short-term effects of the automatic stay and the long-term effects of bankruptcy as a whole might be a viable option for recovery. Behm Law Group, Ltd. offers legal advice and assistance when you file for bankruptcy in Windom, MN.

The automatic stay provides a wide range of advantages (link to blog post “The Power of Automatic Stay When You File Bankruptcy in Fairmont, MN”) along with its ability to prevent your creditors from collecting debt payments during the stay period. In addition to the many ways the automatic stay can help you, however, there are some things it cannot do, including:

1. Halting certain lawsuits.

Lawsuits that affect minors (i.e. children of the parties involved) are protected against most financial proceedings, including bankruptcy. For example, the automatic stay cannot stop a lawsuit that involves paternity or child custody tests, nor can it stop a lawsuit that attempts to modify, collect, or confirm child support payments.

2. Halting certain tax requirements.

The automatic stay can’t alter or prevent IRS tax audits or issues regarding tax deficiency. Additionally, the automatic stay cannot prevent the IRS from demanding your tax returns and demanding payment for taxes owed.

3. Halting wage garnishment for pension loan repayment.

If you took out a loan from your retirement pension, the automatic stay doesn’t stop the garnishment of your income (including wages, salary, commissions, bonuses, and any other sources of income) for the repayment of that loan. This is the only condition where the automatic stay is not effective in preventing wage garnishment.

4. Halting criminal sentence proceedings.

If you’re in the process of undergoing criminal proceedings involving debt, or otherwise, the automatic stay is only able to impact the conditions of your sentence that involve debt repayment. The automatic stay does not change the parts of your sentence that involve community service, therapy, jail time, or other requirements.

Despite the many advantages of the automatic stay, these situations remain unchanged during the stay period when you file for bankruptcy. Additionally, if you’ve filed for bankruptcy the previous year, the automatic stay period will end after 30 days, unless you can prove the need for an extension.

If you’re considering filing for bankruptcy in Windom, MN, and want to learn more about how the automatic stay can apply to your situation, contact Behm Law Group, Ltd., at (507) 387-7200 today for more information.

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The Power of Automatic Stay When You File Bankruptcy in Fairmont, MN

February 20th, 2018 · No Comments

Most Americans over 30 have around $150,000 in various debts including mortgages, car loans, credit cards, medical bills, taxes, and other accumulated debts. This debt can often begin to cripple the quality of life for individuals and families who cannot maintain regular debt payments and still meet standards for necessary expenses. If your financial obligations become overwhelming, the advice of a bankruptcy lawyer can set you on the right path to debt relief and a fresh beginning. Behm Law Group, Ltd. offers legal support from start to finish when you file for bankruptcy in Fairmont, MN.

When you declare bankruptcy, the automatic stay is immediately set in motion. The automatic stay prevents your creditors from collecting debt payments, harassing you over missed payments, or filing lawsuits against you. It works, essentially, to prevent your creditors from doing anything to collect their debts.

In many cases, automatic stay has the power to alter your financial situation in several ways. This includes:

  1. Halting garnishment of your wages from all parties until the stay is lifted. This prevents any garnishment from all your sources of income including salaries, wages, pensions, commissions, bonuses, and retirement funds.
  2. Halting an eviction process until the stay is lifted. Your landlord cannot evict you based on failure to pay rent during the period of your automatic stay. If your landlord obtained a court order against you for eviction or wrongful possession before you filed for bankruptcy, however, the automatic stay does not stall the process. Additionally, in the case where you’re in poor favor with your landlord for misuse of property, going against lease terms, endangering other tenants, or selling illegal items on the property, the court will side with your landlord, and the automatic stay will only be in effect for a short time.
  3. Halting a foreclosure until the stay is lifted or bankruptcy discharges your mortgage or establishes a new payment plan. If you are delinquent with your mortgage payments and you plan to keep your house, you could pay those past due mortgage payments back in a chapter 13 plan and cure or bring current your mortgage obligation. If you want to simply surrender your house and discharge your mortgage debt, Chapter 7 will allow you to do that. The mortgage creditor would foreclose on your house and any debt you owe on the house would be discharged.
  4. Halting utility shut-off until the stay is lifted. For at least 20 days from the start of your bankruptcy petition the automatic stay prevents your water, gas, and electricity providers from shutting off your utilities. This period could be extended throughout your bankruptcy case during the winter months.

For more information about the legal assistance Behm Law Group, Ltd. can provide when you file for bankruptcy in Fairmont, MN, contact us at (507) 387-7200 today.

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Treatment of Your Annuity When You File for Bankruptcy in Mankato, MN

January 16th, 2018 · No Comments

When you file for bankruptcy, every aspect of your financial situation and all of your income and all of your debts are subject to review. Behm Law Group, Ltd. offers legal assistance and counsel in navigating the bankruptcy code for our community’s individuals and small businesses filing for bankruptcy in Mankato, MN.

Changes to the bankruptcy law in 2005 with the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act (“BAPCPA”) made a big difference in how a bankruptcy filer’s monthly income sources, monthly living expenses, debts and assets are analyzed in both Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 bankruptcy cases. If you are considering filing for bankruptcy, the current law requires that all of these aspects be accurately determined before a case is filed. When it comes to annuities, pensions, and retirement plans, the 2005 BAPCPA changes may help one determine one’s long-term options for one’s financial future after bankruptcy.

Understanding Annuities

Even if you own an annuity, it may not be fully clear how that account works or what type of annuity it is or what taxation rules apply to it. Annuities are investment accounts that regularly pay specified amounts to the owner from the total lump sum of money originally deposited in the account. The installments from an annuity are commonly scheduled to be paid out on a monthly basis, but they can also be paid out on a weekly or yearly basis.

Annuities are designed to help manage large amounts of money, safely containing the sum and providing a fixed income stream to the beneficiary of the annuity account. Common annuity accounts contain retirement funds, proceeds from insurance claims, proceeds from lawsuit settlements, and lottery winnings. The payments of an annuity can be made immediately upon the setup of the account or they can be deferred to start after a set period of time.

Annuity Exemptions in Bankruptcy

If you file for bankruptcy and you own an annuity, the annuity may or may not be protected by the bankruptcy exemptions.  Depending on the type of annuity involved and depending on the rules of taxation that apply to it, the following could apply:

  1. First, your annuity may qualify for exemption from the case. Because an annuity is a source of income, it becomes an asset in a Chapter 7 case. If your annuity is exempt, you may keep that account and protect the value from liquidation to repay creditors. If you file for Chapter 13 and can exempt your annuity, the value of that account may not factor in calculating the amount you will pay back to unsecured creditors in your repayment plan.
  2. Second, your annuity may not qualify for exemption from the case. This means the value of the account will be used to repay creditors in a Chapter 7 case, and in a Chapter 13 case, the account value will play a part in determining how much you will have to pay back to your unsecured creditors in your repayment plan.

Federal exemption laws allow the immediate exemption of tax qualified retirement plans and offer a Wildcard Exemption of potentially up to $13,200.

Whether your annuity qualifies for exemption when you file for bankruptcy in Mankato, MN, depends on a number of factors. To learn more about how your annuity will be handled in bankruptcy, contact Behm Law Group, Ltd. at (507) 387-7200 today.

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Judgment Creditors and Your Assets with Chapter 7 Bankruptcy in Mankato, MN

August 7th, 2017 · No Comments

If your debts and financial obligations put you in a position where you may qualify for Chapter 7 bankruptcy, it’s important to consider that option before one or more of your creditors place a judgment against you in court. If you stall in meeting debts payments but refuse to use bankruptcy options to recover from heavy financial obligations, your creditors have options to take matters to court. At Behm Law Group, Ltd., we encourage you to use the system set in place by the United States Congress to your advantage and file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy in Mankato, MN, if you qualify before your debt obligations lead to a more drastic situation.

Bankruptcy is a complex system of laws in place designed to protect debtors from being unable to resurface from drowning debts. However, that system is also designed to protect creditors, and it offers them several ways of regaining debts owed to them from debtors who do not or cannot meet scheduled payments. One of those options is by acting as a judgment creditor to use the courts approval in regaining what is owed to them.

What is a judgment creditor?  

If your creditor files a successful lawsuit against you and receives a money judgment, that creditor becomes a judgment creditor. Creditors cannot place judgment against secured debts, but any unsecured debts and nonpriority debts are susceptible to a judgment creditor. That title allows a creditor to find information about your assets and offers them more collection techniques than a normal creditor. A judgment creditor can forcibly take up to 25% of your net wages, collect from your bank account and other deposits, repossess certain items such as motor vehicles, and place liens against your properties and assets.

How do they gain information about your assets?

If your creditor has kept records of your debt to them over time, it can often be simple for them to find out what assets and properties you hold. Loan applications to your creditor, for example, give information about your name, address, employer, and certain asset information. The DMV can also provide information to judgment creditors about your registered vehicles including boats, cars, and recreational vehicles. Any real estate you own can also be easily searched on public online records.

If you’re struggling with multiple debts, it may be just a matter of time before your creditors file judgments against you. Filing for bankruptcy before then might save time and money and reduce the stress of legal action taken against you. For more information and to find out if you qualify for Chapter 7 bankruptcy in Mankato, MN, contact Behm Law Group, Ltd. at (507) 387-7200 today.

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When Things Aren’t Straightforward During a Petition for Bankruptcy in Luverne, MN

July 31st, 2017 · No Comments

Preparing for bankruptcy requires a significant amount of paperwork for the filer. The forms, schedules, and other paperwork involved in a bankruptcy petition are necessary to determine how your case will be handled. Filling out any of this information about your financial situation incorrectly can drastically impact how well a bankruptcy case can go. Behm Law Group, Ltd. provides important legal advice and assistance for those struggling financially. If you’re considering filing for bankruptcy in Luverne, MN, our bankruptcy lawyers might be your key to a successful case.

When you file for bankruptcy, you must list all of your debts in your bankruptcy paperwork. This includes mortgage debts, vehicle loans, tax debts, student loans, old utility bills, debts to friends and relatives, among others.  These claims of debt are often straightforward for individual consumer bankruptcy cases, but in some cases, claims can be more complicated. If your debts depend on several past actions or disagreements, they may fall into the categories of contingent, unliquidated, or disputed. 

Contingent Claims: When the amount of your claim depends on a pending event or decision, it is considered contingent. Cosigners on secured loans often face contingent claims when filing for bankruptcy because the principal signer is responsible for the debt until that signer defaults their claim.

Unliquidated Claims: In cases of unliquidated debts, a claim exists on paper, but its amount has yet to be determined. This often includes claims involved in pending legal cases such as lawsuits and insurance claims. Debts owed to your lawyer involved in pending cases are also considered unliquidated claims.

Disputed Claims: Whenever you and your creditor disagree on the amount or even the existence of a debt, it is a disputed claim. This can include personal debts, mortgages, and car loans, but it can also include tax debts in dispute with the IRS.

Finalized claims can be resolved during your bankruptcy case, but the end result depends on a number different aspects of your financial situation. For example, liens, creditor decisions, and the determination of pending events will all affect how your claims are decided.

For more information about how your claims will be handled during your case, contact Behm Law Group, Ltd. at (507) 387-7200 today. Our experienced lawyers can be the key to helping you prepare for bankruptcy in Luverne, MN.

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Understanding Unsecured Debt and How It’s Treated During Bankruptcy in Windom, MN

July 26th, 2017 · No Comments

In most cases of consumer bankruptcy, the debts accumulated will be partially made up of unsecured debts. Whether this means the filer has a large amount of credit card debt or simply a significant amount of personal loans, if you’re struggling with your debts, unsecured or otherwise, bankruptcy might be the right option for you. Behm Law Group, Ltd. can help you understand how your unsecured and secured debts are treated differently when you file for bankruptcy in Windom, MN.

Unsecured debts are treated differently in both Chapter 7 bankruptcy and Chapter 13 bankruptcy. The type of bankruptcy case you file under will decide the outcome of how unsecured debts change the way your bankruptcy case is handled.

What is Unsecured Debt?

There are many kinds of debt that fall into the category of unsecured debt. The most common of these is credit card debt, but several other types of debt many people encounter in life are also considered unsecured. The fundamental definition of unsecured debt is any debt that doesn’t use a tangible property as collateral. Any debt that involves a property, such as a home or a motor vehicle, is considered secured debt and is treated differently in both Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 cases.

Some other examples of unsecured debt include:

  • student loans
  • utility bill debts
  • income tax debts
  • personal loans not involving property
  • medical bills
  • pending court judgments
  • and, of course, credit debts in all forms

How are Unsecured Debts Treated?

In a Chapter 7 case, your unsecured debts will most likely be entirely discharged. There are, however, exceptions to this. For example, student loans are not subject to the general discharge granted in Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 cases.  In order to get student loans discharged, one must start an actual lawsuit against the student loan creditors and ask the bankruptcy court to specifically discharge the student loans. In a Chapter 13 case, the way your unsecured debts are paid in your chapter 13 repayment plan and how much of those debts are paid depends on the amount of disposable income you have.

If you’re considering bankruptcy because of your accumulated unsecured debts, contact Behm Law Group, Ltd. for legal advice and assistance. For more information about filing for bankruptcy in Windom, MN, contact us today at (507) 387-7200.

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Understanding Non-Dischargeability Complaints When Filing for Chapter 7 Bankruptcy in Luverne, MN

April 27th, 2017 · No Comments

Filing for bankruptcy throws one’s debts into question in front of a Bankruptcy Court, one’s attorney, and one’s creditors. If one has passed the Means Test and is qualified to move forward with Chapter 7 bankruptcy, the dischargeability of one’s debts is generally not in dispute. Throughout the process of bankruptcy, however, questions and concerns are can arise from all parties involved. Behm Law Group, Ltd. provides legal advice and assistance to those filing for Chapter 7 bankruptcy in Luverne, MN.

In some chapter 7 bankruptcy cases, non-exempt assets (assets one is not able to protect with one’s bankruptcy exemptions) are liquidated and the sale proceeds are used to pay some dividend to one’s creditors.  The good news is that, in most cases, all of one’s debts are discharged, leaving one permanently free of many crushing financial obligations. However, sometimes creditors may have a legal basis to file a non-dischargeability complaint against a debtor under 11 U.S.C. §523.  This means that sometimes a creditor has a good reason to ask a bankruptcy court not to grant a debtor debt relief as to a particular debt.

Non-Dischargeability Complaints

A complaint filed about the legitimacy of the discharge of one’s debt is technically a lawsuit and it is labeled an “adversary proceeding”. If a creditor files a non-dischargeability compliant, one will be given a summons and the process will take place partially by mail and partially in the bankruptcy court. The complaint is served on the defendant and the defendant has the right to respond in his or her own defense (and with the help of an attorney).  Some examples of grounds justifying a non-dischargeability complaint are:  1.) One has incurred significant debt on a credit card within a short time before filing a bankruptcy; 2.) One has misrepresented one’s financial condition, either verbally or in writing, to a lender and the lender has made a loan relying on the misrepresentations; 3.) One has willfully and intentionally caused financial injury or physical injury to someone.

If a creditor has filed the complaint without proper legal standing, or if the complaint is unclear to one as a debtor, one may file a motion to dismiss the claim or force the creditor to provide a complaint with more specificity. Complaints filed against fraudulently incurred debts or other scenarios, as listed above, must be identified correctly and clearly or one may file a motion to dismiss the complaint.

Responding to a clearly defined complaint against the dischargeability of a debt requires an answer to each paragraph of the compliant provided by the creditor. The help of a bankruptcy attorney during this response time is crucial for one to have optimal access to legal information and to assert one’s rights as a defendant. If one does not respond to the complaint, the case will proceed by default, and the debt in question will be excepted from discharge.

For more information about a non-dischargeability complaint and why it’s important to take advantage of the help an attorney can provide during this time, contact Behm Law Group, Ltd. at (507) 387-7200. You can also count on us for advice and assistance if you are considering filing for Chapter 13 bankruptcy or Chapter 7 bankruptcy in Luverne, MN.

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Understanding the Role of the Bankruptcy Trustee in Your Petition for Bankruptcy in Owatonna, MN

April 10th, 2017 · No Comments

When you enter the process of filing for bankruptcy, you agree to follow the many stipulations of U.S. Bankruptcy Courts and U.S. Bankruptcy Code. These regulations play important roles in protecting you as a filer, protecting your creditors, and protecting others involved in your bankruptcy case. One such requirement involved in Chapter 13 and Chapter 7 bankruptcy cases is the appointment of a trustee to oversee the administration of the petition. Behm Law Group, Ltd. offers guidance throughout your own process of filing for bankruptcy in Owatonna, MN, and will work with your trustee to ensure optimal results.

Entering into a bankruptcy case means that you are automatically given a trustee to handle your petition. What a bankruptcy trustee actually does and who they actually are, however, may not be clear to filers.

Who are they?

In a nutshell, your bankruptcy trustee is a qualified individual the court will appoint to your bankruptcy case. Essentially, the trustee is a chaperone for your case. Your trustee is there to work through your case as a liaison between you and your attorney, your creditors, and the bankruptcy court. Bankruptcy trustees handle forms involved in virtually all kinds of cases, so they are well equipped to oversee your petition to the end.

What do they do?

The responsibility of a bankruptcy trustee is to administer your case. This includes the following:

  1. Examining your paperwork and all other information involved in your case
  2. Overseeing your confirmation hearing in a Chapter 13 case
  3. Overseeing your reaffirmation hearing in a Chapter 7 case
  4. Overseeing the meeting of the creditors
  5. Overseeing any other hearing involved (e.g. a hearing for a creditor’s motion for relief on an automatic stay)
  6. Identifying and selling all your nonexempt assets involved in a Chapter 7 case
  7. Evaluating your repayment plan in a Chapter 13 case to verify its fair treatment of you and your creditors
  8. Overseeing adversary proceedings if a lawsuit occurs during your bankruptcy process
  9. Overseeing the motion to dismiss your Chapter 13 case if you do not make repayment plan payments
  10. Ensuring legal accuracy throughout the process

Without bankruptcy trustees, the process of filing a petition and completing a case would be filled with confusion, unfair treatment of players involved, and probably a bit of foul play.

Our attorneys can also help you throughout the process of filing for bankruptcy in Owatonna, MN, with legal advice and assistance. For more information, contact us at (507) 387-7200.

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Guilt, Blame, and Shame: The Real Reasons Why Most People File for Bankruptcy in Mankato, MN

October 14th, 2016 · No Comments

The accumulation of debts is a widely varied process that can occur over the course of years or in an instant. Those struggling with overwhelming debts for whatever reason often experience situational guilt or shame. Creditors will frequently add to this negative mindset, placing the blame solely on the debtor and gaining an advantage over them by emphasizing their guilt. At Behm Law Group, we’re here to tell you that the guilt and shame you may be feeling about your debts is unwarranted, despite the blame-game your creditors play. If you are considering filing for bankruptcy in Mankato, MN, were here to help, starting with lifting the pressure on your conscience and beginning to think critically about the situation.

While your creditors would have you believe that your debts are all your fault and shame you into feeling guilty enough to place repaying them ahead of your health and your family, these claims are often baseless. In fact, the vast majority of debts leading to bankruptcy are due to unavoidable or unexpected circumstances.

Job loss is one of the most common reasons our clients have found the need to file for bankruptcy. Lay-offs and a poor job market make optimal conditions for people of all income brackets to gain debts.

Medical bills are a necessary debt for anyone who needs medical care to stay healthy and capable of caring for their families. Unfortunately, even those with insurance can land in a pit of soaring medical expenses.

Divorce rates grow each year and the emotional upset alone can be enough to damage the health and security of a household. The debts from lawyer fees, spousal lawsuits, and general divorce expenses can send anyone down a spiraling path to bankruptcy.

Credit misuse is a common occurrence for people of all ages and financial backgrounds. With late fees, interest rates, and general credit card misuse, credit debt can multiply right beneath your nose.

Accumulated expenses from a variety of sources can quickly land you in a world of debt. These expenses are often unexpected and unavoidable, such as home damage after a natural disaster or costs related to a brokendown car.

You may be in a rough financial situation, but know that the blame does not rest on your shoulders alone. If you are considering filing for bankruptcy in Mankato, MN, contact Behm Law Group for a consultation at (507) 387-7200.

 

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