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Information
Chapter 13 Bankruptcy Dismissal
Submitted: 2007-01-17 16:17:34
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Bankruptcy is a legally declared inability of an individual or organization to pay creditors. During the course of a bankruptcy, a debtor may ask a court to dismiss the case. If the court finds that dismissal will not harm the creditors, ordinarily a court will grant a petition to dismiss a Chapter 7 or a Chapter 13 bankruptcy.
There are several reasons a debtor may prefer to file a Chapter 13 bankruptcy petition. The reasons include the debtor wishes to resolve certain debts that may not be discharged in a Chapter 7 bankruptcy. The debtor may also wish to protect certain cosigners on personal loans from being pursued by creditors for repayment or feels obligated to repay certain debts. The debtor may believe that future creditors will look more favorably on Chapter 13 reorganization than a Chapter 7 discharge. A debtor may be required to file a Chapter 13 bankruptcy if he or she has received a Chapter 7 bankruptcy discharge within the prior six years, or obtained a Chapter 13 bankruptcy discharge within the prior six years and has not paid off at least 70% of the unsecured debts and was subject to the discharge of a prior Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 bankruptcy filing within the prior 180 days, because the debtor violated a court order, or requested dismissal after a creditor sought relief from the automatic stay.
After filing a Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition, some debtors discover that they are better served by pursuing relief under Chapter 13. By filing an appropriate motion with the bankruptcy court, the debtor has an absolute right to convert the petition to a Chapter 13 filing, if the debtor has not previously converted a Chapter 7 bankruptcy to a Chapter 13 bankruptcy, and the debtor's estate qualifies for Chapter 13 relief.
Chapter 13 provides detailed information on Chapter 13, Chapter 13 Bankruptcy, Chapter 13 Trustee, Filing Chapter 13 and more. Chapter 13 is affiliated with Filing Bankruptcy. |
Article source: Expert Articles
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