Articles Tagged with Bankruptcy Exemptions

bankruptcy-estate-150x150A bankruptcy estate is the entirety of assets or property rights that can be administered by the court in a bankruptcy case. The estate is created once a bankruptcy case is filed, and it includes all interests of the debtor in any kind of property.

Essentially this means that when a bankruptcy is filed, a debtor must list all the property they own or have an interest in. They must list assets such as real estate, vehicles, household goods, financial accounts, inheritances, businesses, potential active lawsuits they have against someone else, royalties, income, settlements, insurance funds, retirement accounts, tax refunds, and much more.

A debtor must list all their assets or potential assets in a bankruptcy case to ensure the court is fully aware of all property they own or have an interest in. However, just because the debtor must list all these types of property, does not mean they lose their property.

Bankruptcy has what are called exemptions that are governed by state laws. Exemption is what we refer to as the protections for certain property that a debtor can keep and retain through a Chapter 7. Once a debtor lists all their assets in their paperwork, they get to abide by the laws of the state where they filed and protect certain property from the bankruptcy court and trustee. The exemptions allowed in each state may determine what type of bankruptcy a debtor may file if they want to keep.

You may have heard some Chapter 7 cases referred to as a “no-asset case.” A no-asset case does not mean that a debtor owned or had an interest in nothing. It means that the debtor listed all their assets and interests in their paperwork, but state law helped exempt / protect those assets from being taken by the trustee and used to pay unsecured creditors. In an “asset” Chapter 7, the debtor would have non-exempted / unprotected property that the trustee can take and use to pay towards unsecured creditors that would generally be eliminated (or discharged) by the bankruptcy case.

For example, in Mississippi, your homestead equity, or equity of the home you physically reside in, is protected up to $75,000.00. If a debtor owned a single-family home, that was worth $100,000.00 and they had a mortgage totaling only $25,000.00, they would have equity of $75,000.00 and it would be exempted, and the Trustee could not take it. However, Continue Reading ›

 

 

retirment optionsMany people believe they will lose their retirement money if they file for bankruptcy.  This is not true.  Many clients meet with me and state that they “cashed out their retirement and are ready to file bankruptcy.” This is not necessary.  Retirement accounts and pension plans are fully protected in bankruptcy.  There are federal and Mississippi laws that protect your retirement money when you file bankruptcy.  This includes accounts like 401(k), IRA, Roth IRA, SEP, 403(b), Keoghs, profit-sharing plans, and defined-benefit plans.  Any ERISA Qualified Retirement Account is protected.  In most cases, every penny you have in your retirement account is fully protected, regardless of the amount.  But traditional IRAs and Roth IRAs are only protected up to a total amount of about $1.2 million.

Even if your retirement account is not ERISA-qualified, it will still be protected in bankruptcy by both federal and state law.  Any retirement account that is exempt from taxation under the Internal Revenue Code is also fully protected by other federal laws.  Leave your retirement money alone.  Let it work for you over the long term and don’t worry about losing it if you need to file bankruptcy.

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