
1.
Means Test for Chapter 7
Eligibility
2.
Mandatory Credit Counseling
3.
Limit on Auto Lien-stripping in Chapter 13
6.
Serial Filings (Chapter 20)
12.
Duration of Chapter 13 Plans
13.
Dismissal for Failure to file Documents
and Schedules
14.
Attorney Verification Required
15.
Disposable-income Test in Individual
Chapter 11 Case
16.
Debtor’s Statement of Intent
17.
Domestic Support Obligations
18.
Superdischarge in Chapter 13 Reduced
19.
Attorneys as “Debt Relief Agencies”
22.
Changes in Treatment of Taxes
25.
Nondischargeability of Student Loans
Expanded
The trustee or any creditor can
bring a motion to dismiss under §707(b) if the debtor’s income is greater than
the state median income. Abuse is presumed if the debtor’s current monthly
income (as determined by an average of the previous 6 months) less secured
payments divided by 60, less priority debts divided by 60, less the allowed
expenses permitted by the IRS, less certain other allowed expenses, is greater
than $100 per month of a Chapter 13 plan. Debtors who meet this new standard
would be shifted to 5-year repayment plan in Chapter 13.
If a debtor’s income falls below
the state median, the court may still find abuse but the creditors do not have
the standing to file the motion.
In determining whether the median
threshold has been reached, the law looks at the number of people in the
debtor’s household (which the census bureau defines to be all the people
occupying a dwelling unit) compared to census figures adjusted by the CPI.
The presumption of abuse may only
be rebutted by demonstrating “special circumstances that justify additional
expenses or adjustments of current monthly income.”
No individual may be a debtor
under title 11 unless they have, within 180 days prior to filing, received
credit counseling from an “approved nonprofit budget and credit counseling
agency”, either in an individual or group briefing. Said counseling agencies
are to be approved by the U.S. Trustee. (There are exceptions where there is an
emergency and the person could not receive counseling within five days, or where
the U.S. Trustee has determined that the approved agencies are not adequate to
provide the required counseling.) If a debt-management
plan is developed, it must be filed with the court.
A Chapter 13 plan must provide
that a secured creditor retain its lien until the payment of the entire debt,
not just the secured portion, where the creditor holds a security interest in a
motor vehicle purchased within 910 days of the filing.
The court may not grant a Chapter
13 discharge unless the debtor has completed an education course in personal
financial management as approved by the U.S. Trustee. A debtor can be denied
discharge under §727 if the debtor fails to complete the course.
Debts owed to a single creditor
totaling more than $500 for luxury goods incurred within 90 days of filing are
presumed nondischargeable; cash advances of $750 within 70 days are similarly
treated.
A discharge will not be granted
in Chapter 13 if the debtor obtained a discharge in Chapter 7, 11 or 12 within
the 4 years prior to the date of filing of the pending case, or in a Chapter 13
case filed within 2 years of the pending case. This provision, though, does not
prevent the debtor from filing a Chapter 13 case and receiving the benefits of
the stay, including the ability to cure arrearages on secured claims over a
period of time.
A Chapter 7 debtor cannot receive
a discharge if a prior discharge was received within 8 years (rather than 6) of
the new filing.
Debtors may elect state
exemptions in the state in which they have lived for the 730 days prior to the
bankruptcy. If they have moved during that 730-day period, the state exemptions
are those for the state in which they lived the majority of the time for the
180 days before the 730-day period. Regardless of the level of state
exemptions, the debtor may only exempt up to $125,000 of interest in a
homestead that was acquired within the 1,215-day period prior to the filing,
but the calculation of that amount does not include any equity that has been
rolled over during that period from one house to another within the same state.
For those who have violated securities laws or engaged in certain criminal
conduct, the cap is $125,000, notwithstanding a higher
State law allowance. To the extent the homestead was obtained through
fraudulent conversion of nonexempt assets during the 10-year period before the
filing, the exemption is reduced by the amount attributed to the fraud.
Section 524 now contains
extensive new disclosures detailing the rights that the debtor has and
specifying the amount of debt reaffirmed, rates of interest, when payments will
begin, filing requirements with the court, the right to rescind and a
certification that the agreement does not impose an undue hardship on the
debtor. Such agreements are presumed to create a hardship if the debtor’s
expenses, including the reaffirmed debt, exceed income. If there is such a
presumption, the debtor must explain to the court why it can nevertheless still
afford to satisfy the debt (but no such requirement applies if the reaffirmed
debt is owed to a credit union). The disclosure requirements are satisfied if
“given in good faith.” A creditor can accept payments under a noncompliant
reaffirmation as long as the creditor “believes in good faith” that the
agreement is effective.
The new law limits the
application of the stay or provides that it does not go into effect, in certain
circumstances, where there are serial filings under circumstances that would
indicate bad faith or abusive filings. The stay terminates after 30 days if
there is a filing by an individual in Chapter 7, 11 or 13 (but not Chapter 12)
within 1 year after the prior case (under any Chapter) was dismissed (except
for a case refiled in another chapter after a dismissal of a Chapter 7 case
based on the means test). A party in interest (including the debtor) may move
to extend the stay and show that the filing is in good faith. A case is
presumed to be in bad faith for this purpose if more than one case was pending
in Chapters 7, 11 or 13 (again, not in Chapter 12) and at least one such case
was dismissed for failure to file required documents without substantial
excuse, to provide adequate protection or to complete a plan, and there is no
showing that the debtor’s financial situation has changed so as to allow a
final discharge or completion of a plan. If two or more cases under any Chapter
were dismissed during the prior year, the automatic stay does not go into
effect at all until the court so orders after a hearing and a demonstration
that the filing was made in good faith. The same bad-faith factors noted above
are also applicable to this determination. The law also provides that the stay
will terminate if the debtor does not timely file (i.e., within 30 days after
the petition date) its statement of intent with respect to property subject to
a security interest and timely (i.e., within 30 days after the first date set
for the §341 meeting) complies with the stated intention. The court may extend
the stay upon the motion of the trustee if the property is of value to the
estate and adequate protection is afforded to the creditor.
Notice to be given by a debtor to
creditors must be to the address designated by the creditor, either in
communications to the debtor or by the creditor's preferred address as provided
to the court. Such notice to creditors must include account numbers.
If the Chapter 13 debtor’s income
is greater than the state median income, the plan proposed must be for 5 years.
On the anniversary date of a confirmed plan, a debtor must file a new statement
of income and expenses.
In addition to the list of
creditors, schedules of assets and liabilities, income and expenses, debtors
must provide:
a.
certificate of credit counseling
b.
evidence of payment from employers, if any, received
60 days before filing
c.
statement of monthly net income and any anticipated
increase in income of expenses after filing
d.
tax returns or transcripts for the most recent tax
year
e.
tax returns filed during the case including tax
returns for prior years that had not been filed when the cases began
f.
a photo ID,
among other items.
Failure to provide the documents
within 45 days after the petition has been filed (with a possibility of a
45-day extension) results in automatic dismissal of the case after the time
period has passed.
Attorneys must make “reasonable
inquiry to verify that the information contained” in petitions and schedules
are “well grounded in fact.” “The signature of an attorney on the petition
shall constitute a certification that the attorney has no knowledge after an
inquiry that the information in the schedules filed with such petitions is
incorrect”.
Under the newly-added §1115,
property of the estate includes, in addition to the property specified in §541,
all property “that the debtor acquires after the commencement of the case but
before the case is closed, dismissed or converted” and “earnings from services
performed by the debtor after the commencement of the case but before the case
is closed, dismissed or converted.” Under an amendment to §1129, the plan must
commit the debtor’s disposable income for the 5-year plan period.
The Debtor must perform a §521
statement of intent as to secured property within 30 days after the date set
for the first creditors' meeting. Failure to either redeem the property or
reaffirm the debt within 45 days after the §341 meeting results in termination
of the automatic stay (as noted above) and allows the creditor to exercise
whatever remedies it has under applicable nonbankruptcy law, subject to a
request by the trustee to extend the stay upon providing adequate protection to
the creditor.
Support obligations are a first
priority, but the administrative costs of a trustee are paid ahead of the
support costs to the extent that the trustee is administering assets that can
be used to pay support costs. To the extent such support claims have been
assigned to or are directly recoverable by a governmental entity, such claims
are subordinated to the support of claims that are not assigned. The stay does
not apply to the payment of a domestic support obligation from property that is
not property of the estate or to the enforcement of a wage-withholding order
under a judicial or administrative order, or statute, including obligations
accruing from both before and after the filing. Failure to remain current on
support claims is grounds for conversion or dismissal of a case, the debtor
must be current on post-petition obligations in order to confirm a plan, the
plan must provide for priority payment or support debts (with a limited
cramdown available for claims assigned to or owed directly to a governmental
unit), and the debtor may not obtain a discharge unless such obligations are
paid in accordance with the terms of the plan.
Debts for trust fund taxes, taxes
for which returns were never filed or filed late (within two years of the
petition date), taxes for which the debtor made a fraudulent return or evaded
taxes, fraud and false statements under §523(a)(2), unscheduled debt under
§523(a)(3), defalcation by a fiduciary under §523(a)(4), domestic-support
payments, student loans, drunk-driving injuries, criminal restitution, and
fines and civil restitutions or damages rewarded for willful or malicious
personal actions causing personal injury or death are now excepted from
discharge.
Attorneys must disclose to the
public in advertising that “we help people file for relief under the Bankruptcy
Code.” They cannot advise a debtor to incur more debt in contemplation of
bankruptcy. They must disclose all their costs, enter into a written contract
with the debtor and disclose that an attorney is not necessary to file
bankruptcy, among other disclosures.
Under new §548(e), a trustee can
avoid the debtor’s transfer in an interest in property made within 10 years of
the filing if the transfer was made to a self-settled trust or similar device
by the debtor for the benefit of the debtor and the transfer was made with the
actual intent to hinder, delay or defraud any creditor.
The “fourth option” in Chapter 7
cases authorized by some circuits, to retain secured property without
reaffirmation by continuing payments (installment redemption), is no longer
allowed. The provisions of the §521 and §362 overlap, but are somewhat
contradictory. Sections 362(h)(1) and 521(a)(2)
provide that the requirements to file the intention and timely perform it apply
to any debt secured by property of the estate and that failure to comply
terminates the automatic stay. Section 521(a)(6) appears to set out a different
process and time period for the subset of property secured by a purchase-money
security interest, but the rights provided there appear to be less generous
than those already provided by the broader language in §§ 362(h)(1) and
521(a)(2), so it is not clear which would apply.
Taxes related to a fraudulent
return or that the debtor attempted to evade are made nondischargeable in
Chapter 11. The debtor is required to pay administrative tax claims whether or
not the government files a “request.” The new law requires periodic cash
payments of priority tax under Chapter 11 over not more than five years from
the petition date and, in any event, under terms not less favorable than those
accorded to the most preferred unsecured nonpriority creditors (excluding “nuisance”
claim payments). The rate of interest on tax claims is the rate specified under
applicable nonbankruptcy law.
The stay will not prevent or halt
a detainer action if the debtor failed to pay rent after filing.
The debtor must provide a copy of
his or her atest tax return or a transcript at least 7 days before the meeting
of creditors or the case “shall” be dismissed. Said information must also be
provided to any creditor who requests it. All tax returns must be filed for a
plan to be confirmed in Chapter 13. The debtor must file all returns from 4
years prior to the Chapter 13 filing.
Student loan nondischargeability
is extended to for-profit and nongovernmental entities.
Information provided by The
American Bankruptcy Institute.
See also: Bankruptcy
Frequently Asked Questions
Contact: Kathleen S.
Grantham, Esq.
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