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Background
The potential chapter 7 debtor should
understand that a straight bankruptcy
case does not involve the filing of
a plan of repayment as in chapter 13,
but rather envisions the bankruptcy
trustee's gathering and sale of the
debtor's nonexempt assets, from which
holders of claims (creditors) will receive
distributions in accordance with the
provisions of the Bankruptcy Code.
Part of the debtor's property may be
subject to liens and mortgages that
pledge the property to other creditors.
In addition, under chapter 7, the individual
debtor is permitted to retain certain
"exempt" property. The debtor's
remaining assets are liquidated by a
trustee. Accordingly, potential debtors
should realize that the filing of a petition
under chapter 7 may result in the
loss of property.
In order to qualify for relief under
chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code, the
debtor must be an individual, a partnership,
or a corporation. 11 U.S.C.
§§ 109(b); 101(41). Relief is available
under chapter 7 irrespective of the
amount of the debtor's debts or
whether the debtor is solvent or insolvent.
An individual cannot file under
chapter 7 or any other chapter, however,
if during the preceding 180 days a
prior bankruptcy petition was dismissed
due to the debtor's willful failure
to appear before the court or comply
with orders of the court or the
debtor voluntarily dismissed the previous
case after creditors sought relief
from the bankruptcy court to recover
property upon which they hold liens.
11 U.S.C. §§ 109(g), 362(d) and (e).
One of the primary purposes of
bankruptcy is to discharge certain debts
to give an honest individual debtor a
"fresh start." The discharge has the
effect of extinguishing the debtor's personal
liability on dischargeable debts.
In a chapter 7 case, however, a discharge
is available to individual debtors
only, not to partnerships or corporations.
11 U.S.C. § 727(a)(1).
Although
the filing of an individual chapter 7
petition usually results in a discharge of
debts, an individual's right to a discharge
is not absolute, and some types
of debts are not discharged. Moreover,
a bankruptcy discharge does not extinguish
a lien on property.
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