Domestic Support Obligations
If you have a family, your ability to support your family
members is an important issue. The courts recognize this fact.
Your domestic support obligations are a priority when you file for
a bankruptcy. These obligations will be accommodated before any of
your other unsecured debt in your Chapter 13 case. However,
secured creditors and administrative fees get paid before your
support obligations.
Limits to Automatic Stay with Regard to Domestic Support
Obligations
An automatic stay is a federal court order that stops all
collection proceedings against you after you file for bankruptcy.
The automatic stay will not stop the collection of a domestic
support obligation regarding a piece of property that is not part
of your estate. Assets traditionally not considered property of
the estate, like your post-petition wages in a Chapter 7 case, or
a pension plan, can still be levied to satisfy a domestic support
obligation.
The automatic stay will not prevent a license suspension or a
tax refund offset under the new law which went into effect in
October of 2005. The automatic stay will also not effect the
"establishment" or "modification" of a
domestic support obligation.
Consequences to Failing to Meet Domestic Support Obligations
The new law puts even more emphasis on making sure debtors
honor their domestic support obligations. Debtors must be current
on post-petition (after filing) support obligations in order to
get a Chapter 13 case confirmed by the court. Debtors must remain
current on these support obligations throughout the entire Chapter
13 plan, or risk dismissal of the case or a denial of discharge.
The new law, in essence, forces debtors to be completely
current on support obligations by the time they are discharged
from a Chapter 13. Any past due support obligations would get paid
as a priority debt in the Chapter 13 and thus must be paid 100% in
the Chapter 13 and the debtor is now required to remain current on
continuing support obligations after the case is filed.
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