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Discharge
A discharge releases the debtor from personal
liability for discharged debts and
prevents the creditors owed those debts
from taking any action against the
debtor or his property to collect the
debts.
The bankruptcy law regarding the
scope of a chapter 7 discharge is complex, and debtors should consult competent
legal counsel in this regard prior to
filing. As a general rule, however,
excluding cases which are dismissed or
converted, individual debtors receive a
discharge in more than 99 percent of
chapter 7 cases. In most cases, unless a
complaint has been filed objecting to the
discharge or the debtor has filed a written
waiver, the discharge will be granted
to a chapter 7 debtor relatively early in
the case, that is, 60 to 90 days after the
date first set for the meeting of creditors.
Bankruptcy Rule 4004(c).
The grounds for denying an individual
debtor a discharge in a chapter 7
case are very narrow and are construed
against a creditor or trustee seeking to
deny the debtor a chapter 7 discharge.
Among the grounds for denying a discharge
to a chapter 7 debtor are that the
debtor failed to keep or produce adequate
books or financial records; the
debtor failed to explain satisfactorily
any loss of assets; the debtor committed
a bankruptcy crime such as perjury; the
debtor failed to obey a lawful order of
the bankruptcy court; or the debtor
fraudulently transferred, concealed, or
destroyed property that would have
become property of the estate.11 U.S.C.
§ 727; Bankruptcy Rule 4005.
In certain jurisdictions, secured creditors
may retain some rights to seize
pledged property, even after a discharge
is granted. Depending on individual circumstances,
a debtor wishing to keep
possession of the pledged property,
such as an automobile, may find it
advantageous to "reaffirm" the debt. A
reaffirmation is an agreement between
the debtor and the creditor that the
debtor will pay all or a portion of the
money owed, even though the debtor
has filed bankruptcy. In return, the
creditor promises that, as long as payments
are made, the creditor will not
repossess or take back the automobile
or other property. Because there is a
disagreement among the courts concerning
whether a debtor whose debt is
not in default may retain the property
and pay under the original contract
terms without reaffirming the debt,
legal counsel should be consulted to
ensure that the debtor's rights are protected
and that any reaffirmation is in
the debtor's best interest.
If the debtor elects to reaffirm the
debt, the reaffirmation should be accomplished
prior to the granting of a discharge.
A written agreement to reaffirm
a debt must be filed with the court and,
if the debtor is not represented by an
attorney, must be approved by the judge.
11 U.S.C. § 524(c). The Bankruptcy
Code requires that reaffirmation agreements
contain an explicit statement
advising the debtor that the agreement is
not required by bankruptcy or nonbankruptcy
law. In addition, the debtor's
attorney is required to advise the debtor
of the legal effect and consequences of
such an agreement, including a default
under such an agreement. The Code
requires a reaffirmation hearing only if
the debtor has not been represented by
an attorney during the negotiating of the
agreement. 11 U.S.C. § 524(d). The
debtor may repay any debt voluntarily,
however, whether or not a reaffirmation
agreement exists. 11 U.S.C. § 524(f).
Most claims against an individual
chapter 7 debtor are discharged. A creditor
whose unsecured claim is discharged
may no longer initiate or continue any
legal or other action against the debtor
to collect the obligation.
A discharge
under chapter 7, however, does not discharge
an individual debtor from certain
specific types of debts listed in section
523 of the Bankruptcy Code. Among the
types of debts which are not discharged
in a chapter 7 case are alimony and child
maintenance and support obligations,
certain taxes, debts for certain educational
benefit overpayments or loans
made or guaranteed by a governmental
unit, debts for willful and malicious
injury by the debtor to another entity or
to the property of another entity, debts
for death or personal injury caused by
the debtor's operation of a motor vehicle
while the debtor was intoxicated from
alcohol or other substances, and debts
for criminal restitution orders under title
18, United States Code. 11 U.S.C.
§ 523(a). To the extent that these types
of debts are not fully paid in the chapter
7 case, the debtor is still responsible for
them after the bankruptcy case has concluded.
Debts for money or property
obtained by false pretenses, debts for
fraud or defalcation while acting in a
fiduciary capacity, debts for willful and
malicious injury by the debtor to another
entity or to the property of another
entity, and debts arising from a property
settlement agreement incurred during or
in connection with a divorce or separation
are discharged unless a creditor
timely files and prevails in an action to
have such debts declared excepted from
the discharge. 11 U.S.C. § 523(c);
Bankruptcy Rule 4007(c).
The court may revoke a chapter 7
discharge on the request of the trustee,
a creditor, or the United States trustee if
the discharge was obtained through
fraud by the debtor or if the debtor
acquired property that is property of
the estate and knowingly and fraudulently
failed to report the acquisition of
such property or to surrender the property
to the trustee. 11 U.S.C. § 727(d).
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