1-310-788-9089

How Bankruptcy by One Spouse Affects the Non-Filing Spouse


Contact Us



1925 Century Park East, Suite 1990
Los Angeles, CA 90067

Telephone: 1-310-788-9089

How Bankruptcy by One Spouse Affects the Non-Filing Spouse


A bankruptcy filing by one spouse does not bring the other spouse into bankruptcy. Neither does the bankruptcy of a spouse give the non-filing spouse the full protection of the automatic stay or the bankruptcy discharge.


Joint Debts


If both spouses are jointly liable to a creditor, the bankruptcy of one spouse does not relieve the other of paying the debt. Upon a bankruptcy, the creditor may look to the other spouse for payment, unless the bankruptcy case is under Chapter 13. If the debt is a consumer debt to be paid 100% through the Chapter 13 plan, the co-debtor is protected by the co-debtor stay in §1301. (Chapter 13 may be the way to go!)


It is not true that marriage alone makes both spouses personally liable for a debt. Liability on contracts such as home loans and credit cards arise by agreement between the creditor and the debtor. Only persons who signed the loan or credit application are liable for the debt. If the debt is a community property debt is another analysis.


A joint tax return, however, makes both spouses liable for the total of the tax due.


You can expect the bankruptcy by even one spouse to be noted in some way on the credit record of the non-filing spouse. There is uncertainty in the law at the moment as to whether it is proper to mention the bankruptcy of one debtor on the credit report of a debtor who is not in bankruptcy if they have joint debts. 


Joint property


If you and your spouse own property together, that property may be included in the bankruptcy estate and could be available to pay creditors. In community property jurisdictions such as California, both halves of the community property comes into the estate: all of the community property is available to pay community creditors and any other creditors of the spouse who has filed. So the filing of one spouse could have significant impact on the other.


Community property discharge


When one spouse files bankruptcy in a community property state, the marital community enjoys the protection of the filing spouse's bankruptcy discharge. Section 524 of the Bankruptcy Code provides that any community property that the filing spouse and the non-filer acquire after the bankruptcy is protected from creditors of the non-filer who held a claim against the non-filing spouse as of the date of the filing. Family law and community property can provide some of the tools to benefit a non-filing spouse from certain debts.


A creditor with a claim against the non-filing spouse can only collect its debt from the separate property of the non-filing spouse. In California, that separate property is comprised of assets acquired before marriage; assets acquired by gift during marriage; or assets acquired by inheritance.


Creditors, despite the fact that the community property discharge has existed since at least the passage of the Bankruptcy Code in 1978, have a hard time believing that someone in a community property state gets the benefit of their spouse's bankruptcy discharge, but that's the law.


Future credit


The bankruptcy of one spouse will have some effect on the credit worthiness of the non-filing spouse if they apply jointly in the future for a loan. The loan grantor will consider the credit rating of both applicants in making a lending decision. 


Back to main Bankruptcy Litigation page

 

Simkin & Associates
Los Angeles Real Estate Attorneys
Proudly Serving Southern California for over 25 Years
For Real Estate, Business Law, Asset Protection, Trust, Conservatorship and Immigration needs in
Los Angeles, Ventura, and Orange Counties

Phone:  (310) 788-9089

Serving Los Angeles and Southern California since 1989
Including Van Nuys, Beverly Hills, Santa Monica, West Hollywood, Culver City, Burbank, and the communities in Ventura County, Orange County, and Los Angeles County

 

Contact Simkin and Associates

Call us at 1 -310-788-9089 or fill out the form below to arrange for a confidential initial consultation.