Welcome to Bankruptcy Guide
Corporate Bankruptcy Article
. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.
The New Bankruptcy Laws and You!
from:The new bankruptcy laws are really not so new anymore since they were passed in 2005. But they are called the “new” laws to differentiate the current law from the bankruptcy law that was in effect prior to October 2005. Anyone who filed bankruptcy prior to 2005 is under the old law and the old law requirements. Since it takes years for some bankruptcies to be completed, such as a chapter 13 repayment plan, there are plenty of people still being monitored according to the old rules.
The new bankruptcy laws did make some important changes though. Many people feel the new laws primarily benefit creditors such as the credit card companies, because of the creation of the “means test”. The means test is used to measure your capability to pay something back to your creditors.
Under the old law, if you had no assets to be liquidated many creditors received nothing in the way of repayment. Under the new law, if your income meets certain tests then you might be forced to file a chapter 13 bankruptcy. A chapter 13 bankruptcy requires a repayment plan be put into place that is then monitored by the courts through an appointed trustee. The means test compares your income to your state of residency median income and also figures the amount of disposable income you have for debt repayment after basic living expenses. If you have enough net income and exceed the median income, you will most likely have to file a chapter 13.
But the means test is not the only change in the new bankruptcy laws. Others include required debt counseling and an increase in the number of repayment years from 3 to 5 under a chapter 13 filing. But one of the most complicated changes to understand is the changes in the homestead exemption. Under the old law, the exemption had no limit. Under the new law it is limited to $125,000 and can only be taken in a state in which you have lived for at least 3.3 years. This law change can have a big impact on whether you get to keep your house or will be forced to sell it.
Even bankruptcy attorneys were impacted by the new bankruptcy laws. The new law says that an attorney can be held liable for wrong information reported to the court even if the attorney thought his or her client was telling the truth. There is a now a schedule of fees and fines that can be charged to the attorney. The ironic net result is that attorneys must now charge clients more for bankruptcy filing fees in order to cover the increased liability.
There are other new sections in the laws that may or may not affect you. For example, there is a tithing section which says you can tithe 15% of your income to a charity of choice. Also, there is a section that deals with how a car loan is to be handled with a net impact that debtors will have to pay more on their cars in order to keep them.
The new bankruptcy laws have forced many people to file a chapter 13 rather than a chapter 7. But it is important to remember that either way you will get needed debt relief.
Corporate Bankruptcy Specific links
Corporate Bankruptcy News
Kodak to shutter camera business - Reuters
![]() The Guardian | Kodak to shutter camera business Reuters The company was one of the biggest corporate casualties of the digital age as it failed to quickly embrace modern technologies such as digital photography, which it invented in 1975. Kodak, which filed for bankruptcy protection last month, ... Recommended: Kodak (camera) moments are coming to an end Kodak to shut digital camera unit Kodak bankruptcy: Eastman Kodak Co to stop making cameras to cut costs |
Friendly Ice Cream CEO Harsha Agadi resigns following company's emergence from ... - MassLive.com
![]() MassLive.com | Friendly Ice Cream CEO Harsha Agadi resigns following company's emergence from ... MassLive.com He also gave away Fribbles one Saturday last month to celebrate the company's emergency from bankruptcy. Agadi invested his own money in the business when he was hired. Chief marketing officer Andrea McKenna, who also was hired in August 2010, ... |
TEXT-S&P: global corporate defaults total 14 in 2012 - Reuters
TEXT-S&P: global corporate defaults total 14 in 2012 Reuters The second defaulter was Georgia-based Global Aviation Holdings Inc., which filed for Chapter 11 protection under the US Bankruptcy Code. So far this year, missed payments accounted for four defaults, bankruptcy filings accounted for three, ... S&P: Global Corporate Default Tally Rises To 14 |
Corporate "Personhood" to be Tested in MF Global Bankruptcy Case - Sacramento Bee
![]() New York Times | Corporate "Personhood" to be Tested in MF Global Bankruptcy Case Sacramento Bee 7, 2012 -- /PRNewswire/ -- The legal principle of "corporations are 'persons'" is set to be tested in the current MF Global bankruptcy case after a former MF Global client, Adam Furgatch of Hawaii, filed a motion on Monday in Federal Bankruptcy Court ... Global Aviation, US Troop Transporter, Files for Bankruptcy MF Global shortfall worsened as bankruptcy neared |
Solyndra sold assets cheap for fast cash - Washington Times
![]() Washington Times | Solyndra sold assets cheap for fast cash Washington Times By Jim McElhatton **FILE** An auction sign is shown outside the Fremont, Calif., headquarters for bankrupt solar company Solyndra headquarters on Oct. 31, 2011, before the auction on the following day. Solyndra received a $500 million loan guarantee ... |











