Eviction, Chapter 7 Bankruptcy and Chapter 13 Bankruptcy

I often receive phone calls from people in Rochester and elsewhere in Western New York who are facing a potential eviction involving a commercial or residential lease.  Usually the debtors do not know what their bankruptcy options are and are seeking advice how to proceed.

A bankruptcy filing by the tenant, either residential or commercial, immediately stops any pending eviction proceedings as a result of an “automatic stay.”  Automatic stay, as I have written previously, is a mandatory injunction that arises by operation of law without the need for a hearing or order of the Bankruptcy Court.  The automatic stay stops all of creditor’s efforts to pursue collections, litigation or judgment enforcement.  The automatic stay protect the debtor and the property of the debtor’s bankruptcy estate.  However, with respect to leases, it is critical to know at what stage the eviction proceedings are.

In the case of a lease, whether commercial or residential, the critical issue is whether a writ of eviction has already been issued from the landlord-tenant court. There is a significant body of case law holding that once a writ of eviction has issued from the landlord-tenant court the interest of the tenant in the lease has terminated.  As result, if the lease is considered to be terminated by the bankruptcy court, the tenant can be evicted and the automatic stay will not stop the eviction.  Thus, if a bankruptcy is being considered to prevent to postpone the eviction, it is critical for the debtor to contact a bankruptcy lawyer as soon as the eviction petition is served.

For a tenant who files for bankruptcy, the available options depend upon what chapter (type) of bankruptcy the debtor may be filing.

If the debtor is filing Chapter 7 bankruptcy, it may provide a delay in being evicted, and discharge the tenant from any liability under the lease.  At the same time, the filing will not allow the debtor to either cure the default or give extra time to make payments under the lease.

For an individual debtor who has a lease, and has not kept up with the payments, Chapter 13 bankruptcy can provide the opportunity to cure the arrears (past due rent) over time.  In a Chapter 13 bankruptcy, the arrears can be paid over a 5 year period, depending on the terms of the plan.  If the tenant doesn’t stay current with post-bankruptcy rent, the landlord can seek “relief from the automatic stay” from the Bankruptcy Court to permit the landlord to move forward to evict the tenant in state court.

If you contemplating filing Chapter 7 Bankruptcy or Chapter 13 Bankruptcy, or are dealing with debt problems in Western New York, including Rochester, Canandaigua, Brighton, Pittsford, Penfield, Perinton, Fairport, Webster, Victor, Farmington, Greece, Gates, Hilton, Parma, Brockport, Spencerport, LeRoy, Chili, Churchville, Monroe County, Ontario County, Wayne County, Orleans County, Livingston County, and being harassed by bill collectors, and would like to know more about how bankruptcy may be able to help you, contact me today by phone or email to schedule a FREE initial consultation with a Rochester, New York, bankruptcy lawyer.

Chapter 7 and 13 Bankruptcy and Inheritances

When a debtor files for bankruptcy under Chapter 7 or Chapter 13, all of the debtor’s assets pass under control of the bankruptcy trustee.   The reason for this transfer of control is so the debtor will be able to discharge their debts and receive the benefit of automatic stay.  As I discussed previously, once a bankruptcy is filed, a bankruptcy estate is created by operation of the Bankruptcy Code which states that the bankruptcy estate is “comprised of all the following property, wherever located and by whomever held: (1) Except as provided in subsections (b) and (c)(2) of this section, all legal or equitable interests of the debtor in property as of the commencement of the case.” 11 U.S.C. § 541(a)(1) (2008).  Under the definition of the property of the estate, it also includes any interest in property that would have been property of the estate if such interest had been an interest of the debtor on the date of the filing of the petition, and that the debtor acquires or becomes entitled to acquire within 180 days after such date. This particular provision dealing with assets acquired within 180 days addresses inheritances and bequests.  Therefore, if the debtor receives an  inheritance, or a bequest, within 180 days of the filing for bankruptcy, that inheritance or bequest, become property of the bankruptcy estate.

Since a typical Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 bankruptcy runs its course within less than 180 days, a bequest or an inheritance may come within 180 days of the filing, but after the debtor receives his or her discharge or a confirmed plan.  Under those circumstances, the debtor has an absolute obligation to notify the bankruptcy trustee of the bequest or inheritance.  Once the money is actually received, the debtor must turn over the funds to the trustee.  Here in Rochester, Chapter 7 and 13 trustee specifically tell debtors during 341 meetings that any inheritance or bequest received within 180 days of the filing must be disclosed to the bankruptcy trustee.  While most of the time, debtors can protect their personal or real property through the use of exemptions and pre-filing planning, inheritances or bequests do not provide this opportunity.

If you are dealing with debt problems in Western New York, including Rochester, Canandaigua, Brighton, Pittsford, Penfield, Perinton, Fairport, Webster, Victor, Farmington, Greece, Gates, Hilton, Parma, Brockport, Spencerport, LeRoy, Chili, Churchville, Monroe County, Ontario County, Wayne County, Orleans County, Livingston County, and being harassed by bill collectors, and would like to know more about how bankruptcy may be able to help you, contact me today by phone or email to schedule a FREE initial consultation with a bankruptcy lawyer.

Creditor Can’t Contact Debtor After the Bankruptcy Is Filed

When you file your bankruptcy case,the creditors must stop calling you.  They can’t continue garnishing your wages.  They must stop all collection activities because every bankruptcy case protects the debtor with the “automatic stay.”   The automatic stay prohibits creditors from taking  actions against you, unless they obtain a permission from the bankruptcy court.

While there are some exceptions, primarily for matters involving marital obligations, otherwise known as “domestic support obligations”, for most people and most debts, bankruptcy provides real relief.

If creditors keep calling you, mailing you, garnishing your wages or taking other actions against you, call your lawyer immediately.  Regardless of whether the creditors acted with or without the knowledge of your filing, a bankruptcy lawyer make them stop.  Also, regardless of whether the creditors acted with or without the knowledge of your filing, the creditors may be liable for actual and even punitive damages as well as attorneys fees.

Section 362 of the US Bankruptcy Code states that § 362. Automatic stay states that the filing of a petition in bankruptcy operates as a stay “applicable to all entities, of the commencement or continuation, of any action against the debtor.” Section 362(k) states that an individual injured by any willful violation of a stay shall recover actual damages, including costs and attorneys’ fees, and, in appropriate circumstances, may recover punitive damages.

So what’s a willful violation of a stay? The creditor needs to know that you have filed for bankruptcy. It must take an action to collect against the debtor after that stay is in effect. The creditor doesn’t need to willfully violate the stay, it needs to willfully take the action. That means the creditor needs to send out the collection letter after that creditor knows of the stay.

Here in Rochester, Judge Ninfo addressed the issue of willful violation of automatic stay in In re Engel, holding that mailing of a billing statement after the bankruptcy was filed was a willful violation of automatic stay.  In Engel, the creditor was listed in bankruptcy schedules and was also contacted by the debtor’s attorney who demanded that the creditor stop any and all contact with the debtor. Even after the debtor’s attorney notified the creditor, the creditor mailed two additional billing statements.  While the creditor claimed that the contact with the debtor was an unintentional mistake, the court found that the creditor’s actions were intentional and ordered a hearing on damages.    

If you are dealing with debt problems in Western New York, including Rochester, Canandaigua, Brighton, Pittsford, Penfield, Perinton, Fairport, Webster, Victor, Farmington, Greece, Gates, Hilton, Parma, Brockport, Spencerport, LeRoy, Chili, Churchville, Monroe County, Ontario County, Wayne County, Orleans County, Livingston County, and being harassed by bill collectors, and would like to know more about how bankruptcy may be able to help you, contact me today by phone or email to schedule a FREE initial consultation with a bankruptcy attorney.

Failure to Disclose Assets in Bankruptcy, Confirmation of Chapter 13 Plan and Revocation of Confirmation Order

What happens if the debtors fail to disclose certain assets in their Chapter 13 bankruptcy and those assets come to light after the confirmation of their Chapter 13 plan?  This situation was recently addressed by Judge Ninfo of the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Western District of New York in In re Cram.

On March 24, 2004, Richard and Pamela S. Cram filed a petition in Rochester, in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Western District of New York, initiating a Chapter 13 case.  A Chapter 13 trustee was appointed.  On their Schedule B of Personal Property, the debtors stated that they had no “[o]ther contingent and unliquidated claims of [any] nature….”.  On April 30, 2004, the court orally confirmed their Chapter 13 Plan, and on October 5, 2004 an order confirming the plan was entered.

At the time the bankruptcy was filed, the debtors had a pending medical malpractice claim which resulted a subsequent lawsuit. On June 14, 2005, the debtors’ lawyer filed an amendment to their Schedule B of Personal  Property, which amended the answer to question No. 20 regarding contingent and unliquidated claims, but did not amend their Schedule C to claim any proceeds that might be received from the malpractice claim as exempt.

Between June  14,  2005  and  April  7,  2008  the  debtors  or  their attorneys did not notify the court of the existence of the pre-petition medical malpractice claim set forth in the amendment, which was a Section 541 asset of the estate at the time the court confirmed their plan, even though in confirming their plan pursuant to Section 1325(a), the court believed that the requirement of  Section 1325(a)(4),  that the creditors would receive at least as much under the plan that they would in a Chapter 7 liquidation.

Section 1325(a)(4) provides that:

(a)  Except as provided in subsection (b), the court shall confirm a plan if—
(4) the value, as of the effective date of the plan, of property to be distributed under  the plan on account of each allowed unsecured claim is not less than the amount that  would be paid on such claim if the estate of the debtor were liquidated under chapter 7 of this title on such date[.] 11 U.S.C. § 1325 (2009).

This section is known as “the best interests test”.

Once the trustee learned of the settlement, he moved to revoke the discharge, as well as for other relief.  He asserted that on April 28, 2008, after the discharge order had been entered on April 7, 2008, the trustee learned that the claim had been settled on or about February 20, 2008 for $125,000 and that neither the debtors, their bankruptcy attorneys nor their personal injury attorney ever notified the trustee of the settlement or any prior settlement offers. The trustee argued, inter alia, that in view of the settlement, the debtors’ confirmed plan did not meet the best interests test.

Unlike in Chapter 7 cases, the court, in confirming a plan in a Chapter 13 case, makes an affirmative determination, as required by Section 1325(a), that, among other things, the plan meets the best interests test. Judge Ninfo held that because of the debtors’ failure to disclose the malpractice claim, which was a  Section 541 pre-petition asset of the estate, either at the time of the oral confirmation of their plan or when the confirmation order was entered, the plan did not meet the best interests test, and neither the debtors, nor the trustee, ever corrected that failure by taking the necessary steps to insure that the plan was amended to include the proceeds of any recovery on the malpractice claim, either before or after the settlement. Thus, the confirmation order had to be vacated, and with no confirmed plan completed, the debtors would not be entitled to a Section 1328 discharge and the court vacated the confirmation order pursuant to Section 105(a).

Judge Ninfo further held that when the debtors filed the amendment to include the malpractice claim, they, as debtors, and their bankruptcy attorneys, as officers of the court, had an affirmative obligation to advise the court, not simply the trustee or their creditors, of the undisclosed asset, so that the court would be aware that its confirmation of the plan was improper and its confirmation order incorrectly entered, and could insure that the confirmation order was vacated or a proper modification to the plan filed to include any recovery.

The court further granted trustee’s motion to dismiss the bankruptcy, unless prior to July 6, 2009, the debtors:  (a) pay to the trustee the amount necessary for the trustee to make a distribution to their unsecured creditors of 100% plus 9%; or (b) otherwise make arrangements with the trustee for the payment of the necessary amount within a reasonable period of time that is acceptable to the trustee and the trustee files with the court the details of such an acceptable arrangement.

The lesson of this case is that the debtors and their bankruptcy lawyers have an affirmative obligation to disclose any and all assets of the debtors, including any contingent or unliquidated claims.  In this case, the consequences to the debtors could have been much more severe.

If you are dealing with debt problems in Western New York, including Rochester, Canandaigua, Brighton, Pittsford, Penfield, Perinton, Fairport, Webster, Victor, Farmington, Greece, Gates, Hilton, Parma, Brockport, Spencerport, LeRoy, Chili, Churchville, Monroe County, Ontario County, Wayne County, Orleans County, Livingston County, and being harassed by bill collectors, and would like to know more about how bankruptcy may be able to help you, contact me today by phone or email to schedule a FREE initial consultation with a bankruptcy attorney.

Removing Judgments After the Bankruptcy

If a creditor obtains a judgment against a debtor, that judgment, if filed, becomes a lien against any real property owned by the debtor.  Any such judgment lien against real property can be removed from the property, if the lien impairs an exemption you claim in your bankruptcy.  In New York State, you can only remove a judgment lien against your personal residence.  Debtor’s bankruptcy attorney usually files a motion pursuant to section 522(f) of the Bankruptcy Code.  A typical motion includes a number of attachments such as a copy of the deed, mortgage, current mortgage statement, a recent appraisal of the property, and copies of the judgment filed in the local County Clerk’s office.

Typically,  the debtor is faced with the following situation.  The debtor owns a home with the total equity of less that New York’s homestead exemption, which is currently $50,000 for a single debtor and $100,000 for a married couple filing jointly.   What a $50,000 homestead exemption means is that the debtor can have up to $50,000 of equity in the residence ($100,000 for a married couple) and your home will not be taken or threatened by the bankruptcy trustee or other creditors.   If there are judgments against the debtor, they are viewed as impairing debtor’s exemption in the property and gives the debtor the right to remove them.

If you do not own a residence when you file your bankruptcy, you do not need to set aside the judgment in the County Clerk’s office, but the underlying debts are discharged regardless whether the judgment is removed.  This may become a a problem if you purchase (or inherit) real property after your bankruptcy.  In that situation, even though there is no actual lien against the newly acquired property, it may appear that there is to someone searching the Clerk’s office.  This is because they will see a judgment against you, and they will see that you own the property.  Without knowing about the intervening bankruptcy and the discharge of the debt that underlies the judgment, they could draw the conclusion that the judgment was in fact a lien against the property.

The problem often surfaces if there comes a time that you want to borrow against, or refinance the property.  Most lenders are sophisticated enough to recognize that any pre-bankruptcy judgments are usually discharged and a typical judgment search, or a title search, in Monroe County will include a check of the Bankruptcy Court’s records.  It is also the reason to keep a copy of your discharge after the bankruptcy so that the lender can have easy verification that the bankruptcy resulted in a discharge.

If you are dealing with debt problems in Rochester, New York; Canandaigua, Brighton, Pittsford, Penfield, Perinton, Fairport, Webster, Victor, Farmington, Greece, Gates, Hilton, Parma, Brockport, Spencerport, LeRoy, Chili, Churchville, Monroe County, Ontario County, Wayne County, Orleans County, Livingston County, and being harassed by bill collectors, and would like to know more about how bankruptcy may be able to help you, contact me today by phone or email to schedule a FREE initial consultation with a bankruptcy attorney.

Bankruptcy Basics – Credit Counseling and Financial Education Requirements

Under the BAPCPA, debtors planning to file for bankruptcy, under either Chapter 7 or Chapter 13, must complete a consumer credit counseling course before they will be allowed to file a bankruptcy petition. Such credit counseling program needs to be completed within 180 days prior to the filing.

A pre-bankruptcy counseling session with an approved credit counseling organization usually includes an evaluation of the debtor’s personal financial situation, a discussion of alternatives to bankruptcy, and a personal budget plan. A typical counseling course lasts about 60 to 90 minutes, and can take place in person, on the phone, or on internet. The counseling organization is required to provide the counseling free of charge for those consumers who cannot afford to pay. If you cannot afford to pay a fee for credit counseling, you should request a fee waiver from the counseling organization before the session begins. Otherwise, you may be charged a fee for the counseling, which will generally be about $50, depending on where you live, the types of services you receive, and other factors. The counseling organization is required to discuss any fees with you before starting the counseling session.

Once you have completed the required counseling, you must get a certificate as proof. You can check if the organization providing the course is approved in the judicial district where you are filing bankruptcy by going to the U.S Trustee’s web site.  Once the course is completed, you will receive the certificate.  Credit counseling organizations may not charge an extra fee for the certificate.

In addition, once the bankruptcy is filed, debtor must obtain debt management counseling before being allowed to complete the bankruptcy process.  A debtor education course by an approved provider usually includes information on developing a budget, managing money, using credit wisely, and other resources. Like pre-filing counseling, debtor education may be provided in person, on the phone, or online. The debtor education session might last longer than the pre-filing counseling – about two hours – and the typical fee is between $50 and $100. As with pre-filing counseling, if you are unable to pay the session fee, you should seek a fee waiver from the debtor education provider. Make sure that you received the certificate from a debtor education provider that is approved in the judicial district where you filed bankruptcy. Check the list of approved debtor education providers at the U.S. Trustee’s web site.

There are three main objectives of the Personal Financial Management course:

  1. The help the debtor understand the benefits of creating short-term and long-term financial goals.
  2. To teach the debtor how to create a budget.
  3. To teach the debtor how to balance a checkbook and reconcile bank statements.

The purpose of these courses is to help the debtor become financially literate and avoid another bankruptcy.

Once you have completed the required debtor education course, you should receive a certificate as proof. This certificate is a different document from the certificate you received after completing your pre-filing credit counseling. Unless they have disclosed a charge to you before the counseling session begins, debtor education providers may not charge an extra fee for the certificate.

The Personal Financial Management course must be completed within 45 days after filing bankruptcy; but before receiving a discharge through bankruptcy. This is important because if the debtor does not complete this second course after filing for bankruptcy, the Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 bankruptcy may be closed without a discharge.

If you are dealing with debt problems in Rochester, New York; Canandaigua, Brighton, Pittsford, Penfield, Perinton, Fairport, Webster, Victor, Farmington, Greece, Gates, Hilton, Parma, Brockport, Spencerport, LeRoy, Chili, Churchville, Monroe County, Ontario County, Wayne County, Orleans County, Livingston County, and being harassed by bill collectors, and would like to know more about how bankruptcy may be able to help you, contact me today by phone or email to schedule a FREE initial consultation.

Bankruptcy Basics – Domestic Support Obligations

On occasion, a divorce may result in one or both of the parties filing for bankruptcy, often without an adequate understanding of the limited relief available in the bankruptcy court. The Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005 (”BAPCPA”) directly addressed issues related to the dischargeability of marital debt and support obligations, as well as to the effect of the automatic stay on collection and enforcement proceedings out of divorce and family law litigation.  Under BAPCPA, domestic support obligations (usually alimony, child support and property distribution) are given priority over almost every other creditor.

Under bankruptcy law, a “domestic support obligation” is any debt incurred before or after a bankruptcy filing that is owed to or recoverable by a spouse, former spouse, child or governmental unit; in the nature of alimony, maintenance or support; and established pursuant to the terms of a divorce decree, separation agreement, property settlement agreement, court order or administrative determination.

In Chapter 7 bankruptcy, essentially all marital and domestic relations obligations are not dischargeable, regardless of whether they are support in nature, property divisions or “hold harmless” agreements, provided they were incurred by the debtor in the course of a matrimonial proceeding or a divorce action which resulted in a separation agreement, divorce decree, court order or administrative determination.

A debtor’s obligation to pay marital debts directly to a third party ( ie., pay the mortgage on former marital residence) and to hold the former spouse harmless on said debts is also deemed to be non-dischargeable if the obligation has the effect of providing support to the former spouse. A debtor’s duty to pay the following expenses are usually deemed to be in the nature of support and not dischargeable: educational expenses of a minor child; medical insurance coverage for a minor child; and life insurance, with the minor children as beneficiaries.

Attorney’s fees owed by debtor to his own lawyer are clearly dischargeable in bankruptcy, but as a general rule, attorney’s fees owed by debtor to a former spouse’s attorney are not dischargeable, if the underlying legal proceeding resulted in the entry of an order or judgment directing payment of maintenance or spousal support to the former spouse.

The division of a debtor’s pension benefits during the divorce action is usually accomplished by entering a Qualified Domestic Relations Order (”QDRO”). Since division of a pension is considered to be a transfer by debtor of a present interest in his pension, and as such, it is not a debt that can be discharged in bankruptcy.

If there are assets in a Chapter 7 bankruptcy, and you owe any domestic support obligations (alimony, child support, that sort of thing) to your spouse, former spouse or child, the trustee will pay that first.  Next, the trustee will pay any domestic support obligation owed to a governmental unit.

In Chapter 13 bankruptcy, past due domestic support obligations owed by a debtor are not dischargeable, unless they are paid in full over the life of the Chapter 13 plan. However, if a debt created by a separation agreement or judgment of divorce is not in the nature of support, it sometimes can be discharged in Chapter 13 without being paid in full.

For a Chapter 13 Plan to be confirmed by the Bankruptcy Court, it must: pay in full to the former spouse all domestic support obligations owed by debtor at the time of the bankruptcy filing, and the debtor must be current on all domestic support obligations incurred after the bankruptcy filing.  Past due support obligations are generally required to be paid in full through the debtor’s plan but an exception can be made if the creditor agrees.  Support debts have a first priority, meaning they are paid before other kinds of priority debts, like taxes.

A Chapter 13 Plan, even if confirmed by the bankruptcy court, is subject to dismissal if the debtor fails to pay any post-petition or post-confirmation domestic support obligations, and a Chapter 13 discharge will not be entered by the bankruptcy court unless and until a debtor certifies that all domestic support obligations have been paid and that the debtor is current on such obligations.

The automatic stay created by a bankruptcy filing bars the commencement or continuation of most legal proceedings, but it has no effect on a proceeding to establish paternity; to establish or modify a child support order, determine child custody or visitation issues, or dissolve a marriage, except to the extent that such proceeding may seek to determine a division of marital property in which the bankruptcy estate also has an interest. In those situations, the divorce can be granted without first obtaining relief from the automatic stay, but the marital property cannot be divided without obtaining such relief.

The automatic stay also does not prevent the post-petition collection of domestic support obligations such as alimony or child support from any property belonging to the debtor, providing that the bankruptcy estate does not also have an interest in the same property; from automatic wage deduction orders created by a statute or judicial or administrative order; from the interception of debtor’s federal or state income tax refunds, or
from the withholding, suspension or restriction of a debtor’s driver’s license or professional or occupational license. Therefore, Bankruptcy Court does not offer much protection for someone seeking to avoid the domestic support obligations.

The above rules will apply to the proceedings in New York State courts. In Ross v. Sperow, 57 A.D.3d 1255 (3rd Dept. 2008), the Appellate Division had to address a situation where one of the parties was seeking to enforce a counsel fee award after the other party filed for bankruptcy. In Ross, multiple violation petitions had been filed by the parties over the course of several years. In August 2006, Family Court upheld mother’s motion for attorneys fees and directed father to pay $5,000 of the mother’s attorneys fees. Father filed for a Chapter 7 bankruptcy thereafter, and listed the award of attorneys fees as an unsecured debt. Father’s bankruptcy was discharged in January 2007. Mother brought a violation petition which alleged that father failed to pay the attorneys fees.  Father moved to dismiss petition on ground that he discharged counsel fee award in bankruptcy. The Appellate Division stated that state and federal courts have concurrent jurisdiction over issue of dischargabilityof a particular debt and held that domestic support obligations in the nature of support are exempt from discharge in bankruptcy. While father contended that counsel fees incurred were for custody and visitation proceeding, the record reveals that mother’s initial petition commencing the proceeding raised issues of financial need and hardship.  According to the Appellate Division, term “in the nature of support” is broadly interpreted in the context of discharge of debt obligations in bankruptcy and held that the award of counsel fees was in part in the nature of support, and as such, exempt from discharge in bankruptcy.

It is very important for your bankruptcy lawyer to be aware of any outstanding domestic support obligations if you are filing for bankruptcy.  Here in Rochester, bankruptcy trustees routinely ask during the meeting of creditors (also known as 341 meeting), if the debtor has a domestic support obligation.  If there is a domestic support obligation, the bankruptcy trustee will want to know to whom such obligation is payable, will ask the debtor to provide the claimant’s address and telephone number, and will inquire if the debtor is current on his or her post-petition domestic support obligations.

If you are dealing with debt problems in Rochester, New York, Canandaigua, Brighton, Pittsford, Penfield, Perinton, Fairport, Webster, Victor, Farmington, Greece, Gates, Hilton, Parma, Brockport, Spencerport, LeRoy, Chili, Churchville, Monroe County, Ontario County, Wayne County, Orleans County, Livingston County, and being harassed by bill collectors, and would like to know more about how bankruptcy may be able to help you, contact me today by phone or email to schedule a FREE initial consultation.

Rebuilding Your Credit After Bankruptcy

If you were in a difficult financial situation, and were forced to file bankruptcy, you should view your bankruptcy filing as an opportunity for a fresh start in your financial affairs and the first step toward rebuilding your credit. After the bankruptcy, you will be able to rebuild your credit and work toward reestablishing your financial future. After the bankruptcy, many debtors are tired of dealing with credit and debt issues that they delay reestablishing their credit. If you received a discharge in your bankruptcy, or are currently making payments pursuant to a Chapter 13 plan, you can start rebuilding your credit. The first step in doing so is obtaining your credit report and challenging any inaccurate information contained in it. If you eliminate any inaccuracies in your credit report, this is likely to improve your credit score. The next step in reestablishing your credit is to obtain a credit card, and use it responsibly. You have to make sure that you make at least the minimal charges and try to pay off the balance in full every month. Even if you have to obtain a secured credit card, it will help you establish a history of payments demonstrating your financial responsibility. The same is true with respect to any other bills you may have such as utilities, rent, mortgage, or any other form of credit. The more you demonstrate your financial responsibility, the higher your credit score will rise. If you are meeting your bills, you may begin requesting credit increase after 6 months or payments or trying to switch from a secured credit card to unsecured credit card. Since an increase in your credit limit indicates that the lender trusts you to repay the debt, your credit score will continue to rise.

At the same time, you have to be careful to avoid credit traps that may set back this rebuilding process. As you work your way to financial health, make sure you steer clear of these common post-bankruptcy dangers. One very common danger is a simple failure to plan. You will not have any debt if you receive a Chapter 7 bankruptcy discharge, however, that will stay so as long as your expenses do not exceed your earnings. While it seems obvious, many people forget that their continued financial health depends on persistent awareness of those facts.

Another solution to common post-bankruptcy problems is developing a budget and following it. Since all filers are required to take the financial management course during the bankruptcy, the suggestions given in the course should be followed to stay out of debt.

Avoid over-reliance on credit since it is what pushed you into bankruptcy in the first place. After bankruptcy, you should avoid costly sources of credit and to try to pay off any credit balances every month.

It is also important to avoid credit repair scams that promise to wipe out bad credit, erase your credit history or achieve anything else that seems too good to be true. It takes time to rebuild your credit and if you follow the steps outlined above, your credit will improve. Any quick fixes or schemes will likely cost you money and hurt your credit. Instead, pay off your bills every month, don’t open more credit cards than you need and stick with your budget. Over the course of a couple years, you should see your credit improve.

As you are working on rebuilding your credit, be careful selecting credit card offers. Make sure that you are fully aware of the interest rates and fees. You can visit a site like bestcreditcards.com to see different options available to you.

With some planning, discipline and determination, you will be able to rebuild your credit and even improve your credit score after filing bankruptcy.

If you are dealing with debt problems in Rochester, New York, Canandaigua, Brighton, Pittsford, Penfield, Perinton, Fairport, Webster, Victor, Farmington, Greece, Gates, Hilton, Parma, Brockport, Spencerport, LeRoy, Chili, Churchville, Monroe County, Ontario County, Wayne County, Orleans County, Livingston County, and being harassed by bill collectors, and would like to know more about how bankruptcy may be able to help you, contact me today by phone or email to schedule a FREE initial consultation.