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Divorce and Bankruptcy


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Los Angeles, CA 90067

Telephone: 1-310-788-9089

Family law and bankruptcy are both incredibly stressful times for people.  Often one also leads to the other.  Spouses split up, can't pay the family debts, or lose jobs, credit problems, bankruptcy then family issues erupt.  Either way, it  is a problem and one requiring a unique approaches for an acceptable resolution.
 

Bankruptcy's effect and family law issues


For those divorcing or divorced, the bankruptcy issues fall into three categories:
 

  1. Child and/or Spousal Support: bankruptcy discharge, payment of support and the automatic stay against actions to collect support
  2. Property settlement: what happens to debts between spouses (e.g. discharge)
  3. Liability to others: who is liable for the debts during and after divorce


 

Bankruptcy Filed By Only One Spouse


California family law looks at debts differently than federal bankruptcy law


Where there are non-exempt assets, a bankruptcy filing by one spouse pulls all the community property into the bankruptcy estate and assures that the available assets are used to pay debts now. Most Chapter 7 cases, though, are no asset cases in which no distribution is paid to creditors because all of the assets are exempt.


The filing of a bankruptcy brings into the bankruptcy estate all property of the debtor and all community property of the debtor and his spouse; and upon entry of a discharge, relieves the debtor of personal liability for all dischargeable debts.


The family court cannot assign marital debts to the debtor after he has received a discharge and cannot make orders dividing the property of the debtor while the property is property of the estate. The family court can divide the property that the debtor exempts; after the exemption is allowed, that exempt property is no longer property of the estate.


The 2005 amendments to the Bankruptcy Code made debts arising in a divorce non dischargeable in Chapter 7, without any action required by the non-debtor spouse, including non-support obligations.  (See 11USC 523(a)15)   As a result, debts to even up the distribution of marital assets or obligations to hold the other spouse harmless from existing debts survive a Chapter 7 discharge. These obligations remain dischargeable in Chapter 13 so often a Chapter 13 filing is preferred over a 7.  That leads to some other issues, such as the “plan” and what assets you have, but you can discuss this with your attorney who files the bankruptcy petition.


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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.