The New York Times reports that African-Americans are twice as likely as Euroamericans to file a chapter 13 bankruptcy. I’m not sure why this would be. It certainly does not sound like it is in the best interest of these debtors: I try to avoid chapter 13 for clients unless there is a good reason to put them into it (such as stripping a lien).
I’m sure more commentary will follow.
African-Americans and chapter 13
February 17th, 2012Gary Busey files for bankruptcy protection
February 8th, 2012Actor Gary Busey, known for playing creepy roles, filed an emergency bankruptcy petition yesterday (Feb. 7). No further information at the moment.
When can the IRS use a tax refund to pay off dischargeable taxes?
February 4th, 2012It is possible to discharge taxes in bankruptcy. They need to be old enough and not incurred by fraud. But the IRS still has some tricks: if it has a secured claim, it can still collect the tax from the security after you file bankruptcy, just not from you.
Let’s say you owe $15,000 in taxes for the 2004 tax year. Your attorney does the analysis and has determined that this is a dischargeable debt. You also owe $10,000 for the 2009 tax year, and this isn’t dischargeable. For some reason, no notices of federal tax lien are on file, so there is no question of a secured debt (or so you think). After filing your 2011 tax return, you get a $12,000 refund. Your chapter 7 petition is being filed tomorrow. What happens to the refund?
Answer: it pays off $12,000 of the dischargeable tax from 2004, and none of the 2009 liability.
Why, you ask? And then, depending on your temperament, you may even add the phrase “that ain’t fair” after your question. After all, the IRS didn’t have a Notice of Federal Tax Lien, so why does it get to pay itself on a tax debt that is going to be discharged?
The reason is that the 2004 tax debt, while dischargeable, is also secured. IRC Section 6321 puts a silent lien on all property of a tax debtor to secure the payment of tax. When the taxpayer gives the IRS money in the form of excess withholding of tax, the IRS has a lien on that money to pay the delinquent tax. Because this is not a voluntary payment, the IRS, not the taxpayer, gets to determine where the tax refund will be applied.
So, as of December 31, 2011, you, the taxpayer-debtor, had a credit of $12,000 on your 2011 tax account (even if this computation did not take place until a few months later). You also owed $15,000 on the 2004 tax year, which we assume is the oldest collectible tax delinquency. When you file your bankruptcy petition on February 15, 2012, the IRS is in possession of your tax refund, and it may use it as an offset against the 2004 debt – prepetition asset against prepetition liability. So what if the 2004 liability was going to be wiped out in the bankruptcy? At the end of the 2011 tax year, when the IRS had full possession of the tax refund, the liability existed.
The good news: the IRS won’t apply your 2012 refund against the 2004 liability, because the 2004 liability will have been discharged.
Vanilla Ice remakes houses – and himself
February 1st, 2012Here is a way to remake yourself: Vanilla Ice, the one-hit wonder, is now the star of a reality show involving flipping houses.
I don’t see any reference to bankruptcy, but it sounds like he only avoided it by a little bit. After becoming a top pop artist, he descended into drug use and a suicide attempt. Now he’s back on track with what sounds like a great life.
I’m always interested in people who rebuild their lives after a fall from grace.
A few things I like about Vanilla Ice: he gets up with the sun; no night-time partier here. And it sounds like he has a very strong work ethic.
Altogether, an admirable second chance for life from someone who’s been down and out. This is what we wish for our clients.
How to buy property in a bankruptcy
January 16th, 2012Debtors often come into bankruptcy with a piece of property they can’t afford any more, and that has some value when sold. The trustee then sells the property, and uses the proceeds to pay the creditors off.
I know most of my audience here are debtors, but there may be an investor or two. How can they find out what properties are being sold, and attempt to purchase them?
The Central District of California publishes all sales. Unfortunately, the sales are not easy to find.
Go to the website http://www.cacb.uscourts.gov/
Click “News, Notices, Publications” on the right-hand side of the page.
Go to the center column. Third item down is “notice of sale of estate property.” Click on that. This generates a list of notices of sales by sale date, case number, and date posted. When you click on the sale date, you get to download a copy of the notice of the sale.
Billy Graham and Bankruptcy
January 14th, 2012New York colleague Jay Fleischman has a pretty intelligent take on the morality of bankruptcy here, linking to a Billy Graham post that seems to waffle on the morality of bankruptcy.
I disagree with Jay when he says “Contractual obligations are not moral ones, but are those decided by the parties.” Precisely because those obligations have been decided by the parties, they are moral ones. But sometimes, faced with the impossibility of performing, a contractual actor is better off surrendering to that impossibility rather than ignoring it.
Bottom line: if you’re thinking of filing bankruptcy, talk to others, just as Billy Graham and the Book of Proverbs suggest. We’re here to help too: I have often sent would-be clients away with the advice that bankruptcy is not for them.
Leigh Steinberg, the original “Jerry Maguire,” files for bankruptcy protection
January 13th, 2012Steinberg, a highly-successful sports agent in the 1990s and early 2000s, appears to have lost it all. A subordinate threw a wrench into his business by engaging in a forbidden loan transaction with a represented football player. He then lost track of his business through alcohol-fueled episodes.
He’s now sobered up, and he’s dealing with his business issues by filing bankruptcy. It’s a chapter 7 in Santa Ana, California, which means he strips all his debt at once and keeps only the amount of assets that the California exemption scheme leaves him (usually about $23,000). It sounds responsible to me. The alternative is to keep his head in the sand and pretend the problem will go away, and he can’t solve it any other way.
Bankruptcy homework
January 11th, 2012Clients sometimes are surprised and get frustrated with the amount of documentation and work they have to do in order to file bankruptcy. Here’s a quick list of documents we generally need the client to gather, and why:
- Income verification. For wage earners, this is the last six calendar months of paystubs. Why? Because the means test examines that period of time to determine whether the debtor is eligible to file a chapter 7 bankruptcy, or needs to pay back debt through a reorganization plan. For self-employed people, that means a profit and loss statement and bank records. Trustees will often ask for these documents if they have any suspicion about the debtor’s income.
- Social security card and driver’s license. We want to make sure you have this before the bankruptcy. You will need to produce this at the creditors’ meeting, and we like to know that you have it already.
- For landlords: copies of insurance binders for each property, lease agreements, and cash flow statements. The trustee will want to see these to verify income, and to see whether to challenge the holding of a property (why should unsecured creditors get nothing while a debtor landlord shovels good money into a bad rental?).
- Federal tax returns for the last three years, and California tax return for the last year; we want to verify the last three years of income, which must be reported on your schedules, and we want to have the documentation that trustees routinely request.
- Credit reports from all three major reporting agencies less than 90 days old. We want to make sure that we report every debt you have; some debtors forget a creditor or two. Yeah, it happens.
- Broker’s price opinion on every piece of real estate owned by the debtor. Property values get to be very important in determining what kind of bankruptcy to file, and how to treat a particular property. Creditors will ask for this as verification of the debtor’s numbers too. Best to disclose as much evidence as possible for valuations.
- Purchase contracts on vehicles still being paid for: some have clauses making bankruptcy an automatic default. On those, we will reaffirm the note; if that clause is not there, we do not reaffirm.
- Child support and alimony documentation. This affects income drastically.
- Pending lawsuits, including summons and complaints or judgments. Again, we want to see these to make sure that we are scheduling the debt correctly.
We also ask debtors to fill out a questionnaire by hand, and sometimes online. Our staff finds that it is a whole lot easier to get a correct and accurate petition if we gather all this information and have the time to handle it.
