- What is Bankruptcy?
- Who Can File for Bankruptcy Protection?
- What Are the Potential Benefits of a Bankruptcy Case?
- What Are the Alternatives to Bankruptcy?
- What Are the Basic Types of Bankruptcy Cases?
- Can a Credit Rating Be Rebuilt After a Bankruptcy Filing?

What Is Bankruptcy?
Federal bankruptcy law (Title 11 of the United
States Code, otherwise called the "Bankruptcy Code") was enacted to
allow the honest debtor, who is unable to meet his/her financial
obligations, to obtain a fresh financial start or to reorganize his/her
financial affairs. Bankruptcy law accomplishes this goal by providing
debtors with a legally enforceable mechanism through which they may: (1)
eliminate, reduce and/or extend most debt, and (2) protect themselves,
subject to certain qualifications, during the bankruptcy case, from
pursuit and harassment by their creditors. At the same time that
bankruptcy law seeks to give relief to the debtor, it is also the goal
of bankruptcy law to deal equitably with a debtor's creditors by: (1)
protecting the creditors against fraud, (2) treating similarly situated
creditors in an equal manner, and (3) providing the creditors with
constant notice and an opportunity to be heard during the bankruptcy
case.
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Who Can File for Bankruptcy
Protection?
With only certain limited exceptions, an
individual (alone or together as a married couple) or a business (a sole
proprietorship, partnership, or corporation) may file for bankruptcy
protection. While debtors filing for bankruptcy protection are usually
"insolvent" (meaning that they are either unable to pay their debts as
they become due, or that their liabilities are greater than their
assets), insolvency is not a requirement for a voluntary bankruptcy
filing.
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What Are the Potential Benefits of a
Bankruptcy Case?
A bankruptcy filing is often used as follows:
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By individuals to eliminate overwhelming credit card debt, medical bills, and other types of debt;
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By individuals or businesses to save their house or other real property from foreclosure or to save their car or other assets from repossession;
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By businesses, under a cash flow squeeze to obtain a "breathing spell" from their creditors in order to reorganize their financial affairs or to sell off assets;
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By individuals or businesses to extend or resolve burdensome tax liability; and
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By businesses to stop eviction from leased real property or repossession of leased equipment.
The above uses of
bankruptcy are not exclusive and a bankruptcy case can be used for other
purposes. However, an individual or business contemplating filing a
bankruptcy case should carefully review their goals with a bankruptcy
attorney since bankruptcy law can be complex. A bankruptcy attorney will
be able to determine whether the above goals can be achieved depending
upon the particular circumstances of a situation.
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What Are the Alternatives to
Bankruptcy?
While filing for bankruptcy protection is often an option chosen by
debtors in resolving serious financial problems, there are also
non-bankruptcy options that may provide an alternative to a bankruptcy
filing. Some of these options involve out of court "workouts" or
settlements with creditors. Other options entail answering the
creditor's complaint (within 20 or 30 days) and defending against a
creditor's pursuit of debt by either challenging the legitimacy of the
debt or the methods by which the creditor has attempted to pursue the
debt.
In some
situations, non-bankruptcy options are available and preferable.
However, a bankruptcy filing is often the most direct and powerful tool
for a debtor to deal with serious financial problems. Nonetheless, it
must be stressed that bankruptcy is not the solution for every
problematic financial situation, and that in some cases, bankruptcy
entails certain risks.
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What Are the Basic Types of
Bankruptcy Cases?
There are three basic types of bankruptcy cases: A Chapter 7
liquidation, a Chapter 13 "wage earner's bankruptcy," and a Chapter 11
reorganization. These basic types of bankruptcy cases are named after
their respective chapters in the Bankruptcy Code and are appropriate to
different situations. A Chapter 7 bankruptcy case may be used to
eliminate or "discharge" most debts of an individual or to liquidate a
business. A Chapter 13 bankruptcy case may be used by an individual or
by a sole proprietorship business, that has a regular income, in order
to pay debt over a period of time, and is often used by debtors who seek
to save their house or other real property from foreclosure or
individuals with other problematic debt who do not choose Chapter 7
because of equity in their assets. A Chapter 11 reorganization case may
be used by a business or an individual to reorganize its financial
affairs while continuing to own, manage, and operate its property.
The mechanics,
requirements, and rights involved in these different types of bankruptcy
cases vary drastically and how they may apply to a particular case can
also vary greatly depending on the particular circumstances and parties
involved in a case.
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Can a Credit Rating Be Rebuilt After
a Bankruptcy Filing?
Persons and businesses contemplating filing for bankruptcy protection
are often undergoing serious financial problems that have already, or
will shortly in the future, appear on their credit reports. While a
bankruptcy filing would also appear on a person's credit report, the
bankruptcy filing has the advantage of dealing with and potentially
solving some of the financial problems inherent in the situation.
Therefore, after a bankruptcy filing, a person is often better situated
to repay new creditors and in time can be a better credit risk than they
were prior to the bankruptcy filing. A bankruptcy attorney can advise
persons filing for bankruptcy protection as to the methods by which they
can rebuild their credit rating.
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