New Limits to Automatic Stay
If you owe debt to creditors, they may be harassing you over
the phone or through mail. An automatic stay would alleviate this
cause of stress. The automatic stay is a federal court order that
stops all collection proceedings against you. On the day that you
file for bankruptcy, creditors have to stop their foreclosure
proceedings. Creditors also must stop any pending lawsuits against
you and stop garnishing your wages.
However, the new bankruptcy law places new limits to the level
of protection the automatic stay provides in certain situations.
The following is a list of circumstances that will lead a court to
limit or cancel your automatic stay.
Second Time Filing for a Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 Bankruptcy
If you unsuccessfully filed for either a Chapter 7 or Chapter
13 bankruptcy within the past year, the courts automatically
assume that your second bankruptcy is in bad faith. The courts
will then limit the application of the automatic stay to 30 days
when you file for bankruptcy again. You can try to extend the
automatic stay by proving to the court that you have filed in
"good faith."
If your previous bankruptcy was dismissed for failure to
provide required documents without an excuse, the courts could say
that your new bankruptcy is in bad faith. This is also true if
your financial situation has not changed enough to allow a
financial discharge or completion of a bankruptcy plan.
Note that the courts will not limit your automatic stay to 30
days if you were forced into filing a Chapter 13 bankruptcy after
failing the Chapter 7 means test.
Third or Fourth Time Filing for a Chapter 7 or Chapter 13
Bankruptcy
If you have had two or more bankruptcy cases within the last
one year and you file for bankruptcy again, the courts will not
grant you an automatic stay at all. In order for you to benefit
from an automatic stay, you will have to prove to the courts that
your new bankruptcy is in good faith and must make an application
with the court to impose the stay on your creditors. Thus, if you
wait until the eve of a foreclosure sale, it could be too late.
Failure to Provide a Statement of Intent within 30 Days
If you owe debt on a secured property, such as a car or home,
you will have to state what you plan to do with the debt. This is
called a statement of intent. If you do not file a statement of
intent within 30 days, the courts will take away your automatic
stay with regard to the secured creditors. However, the trustee
could ask the courts to extend your automatic stay if your secured
property is valuable to your estate and your creditor would be
adequately protected.
Conclusion
One advantage to filing for bankruptcy is the automatic stay.
It will stop your creditors from punishing you for not paying your
debts.
THIS CONTENT IS FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY. THIS IS IN NO
WAY GIVING ANY LEGAL ADVICE OR REPRESENTATION. THE INFORMATION
CONTAINED HEREIN WAS COMPILED FROM VARIOUS ARTICLES. FOR ANY LEGAL
ADVICE OR REPRESENTATION SEEK YOUR OWN LEGAL COUNSEL.
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