This idea that bankruptcy requires turning over all of your property is a myth, particularly in Chapter 13 cases. If you are considering bankruptcy and need someone to help you separate the myths from the facts, contact an experienced bankruptcy attorney.
Are you drowning in debt from medical bills or credit card use? Are you facing foreclosure or repossession?
Find out why more and more people in Alabama and nationwide are choosing Chapter 13 bankruptcy protection as a means of financial recovery. The full-service bankruptcy law office of Jack B. Sabatini, in Huntsville, can explain why Chapter 13 bankruptcy may be the right strategy for your family.
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Protect your home and material possessions. Buy the time you need to repay your debts and stop the creditor harassment that is making your life miserable. All of those goals are possible through Chapter 13 bankruptcy. Experienced bankruptcy lawyer, Jack B. Sabatini can show you how.
Jack B. Sabatini, Attorney at Law has served Alabama clients with Chapter 13 bankruptcy advice for more than 30 years. If you are a victim of the recession, have lost your job, and are buried in debt, the Chapter 13 option may provide the solution to your financial problems. It may help you to keep your home and other property, and offer a five-year repayment plan for your debt.
Effects of a Salary Increase on a Wage-Earner Plan Under Chapter 13
When a Chapter 13 debtor enters into a wage-earner plan, he or she commits the next three years' disposable income — that portion of the debtor's income not required to meet the necessary needs of the debtor and his or her dependents — to the repayment of debt. Often, a debtor's income will increase after the plan is in place, and the question arises as to what becomes of this increase in income. A lawyer at Jack B. Sabatini in Huntsville, Huntsville, can answer these and other Chapter 13 questions as they arise, providing information, reassurance and competent and zealous advocacy throughout the bankruptcy process.
The Debtor May Be Allowed to Retain the Increase in Income Unless the Increase is Significant and There Are No Offsetting Increases in Expenses.
The Bankruptcy Code requires that the debtor contribute his or her projected disposable income toward the plan payments for the first thirty-six months of the plan. Although the Code imposes this requirement only when the trustee or a creditor demands it, in reality the trustee always requires it, at least at the beginning of the plan. Whether changes in salary will change the payment plan depends on a complete consideration of all of the relevant circumstances.
It is possible that a debtor's income could change after he or she files the petition, but before the court has confirmed the plan, which makes it binding on the creditors. A debtor may change jobs, get a raise or start a second job. During the time between filing and confirmation, the trustee will watch the debtor's disposable income to make sure that the payments fit with the debtor's income level and make any changes to the plan.
If the debtor's income changes within the first three years (36 months) of the repayment plan, it may not be necessary to make changes to the payment amounts. However, if the debtor's income increases by a significant amount, the trustee may ask that payments be adjusted accordingly. The trustee generally is not responsible for closely monitoring the debtor's income. After three years of a confirmed plan, if the plan even extends that long, there is no specific requirement in the Bankruptcy Code that disposable income be contributed to the plan, so an increase in income at that point in time would probably make little difference.
The trustee will consider not only the salary increase, but also whether there has been a corresponding increase in disposable income, on which the payments are based. Disposable income is the amount of the debtor's salary that is left after deducting all reasonable living expenses. If the debtor's expenses increase along with his or her salary, the debtor's disposable income may not change and the payment plan will not change either. If the debtor's disposable income increases by a substantial amount, the trustee may ask for the payments to also increase. If the plan goes beyond 36 months, the increased payments may actually reduce the length of the plan. This would mean that the debtor has paid off his or her debts sooner and would receive a discharge earlier.
Speak to a Bankruptcy Lawyer
It could be disheartening to a debtor to receive a raise and have to turn it all over to the trustee for debt repayment, but that is not always the effect of a salary increase. A lawyer at Jack B. Sabatini in Huntsville, Alabama, can put your mind at ease when questions about a Chapter 13 bankruptcy arise.
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