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6 Years Before Bankruptcy Filed
  

Prior Bankruptcy Prevents Filing of Chapter 7

You are prohibited from receiving a discharge under Chapter 7 if you received a
discharge in a bankruptcy which was filed within the last 6 years.  A discharge may
still be granted if the prior bankruptcy was under Chapter 12 or 13 and paid 100% of
allowed unsecured claims, or paid at least 70% allowed unsecured claims and the plan
was proposed in good faith and was the your best effort.

This restriction does not apply to the filing of a Chapter 13 after any prior bankruptcy.

11 U.S.C. 727(a)(8 & 9)

1 Year Before Bankruptcy Filed
  

Transfer, concealment or destruction of property prevents discharge in
Chapter 7

The court may deny you discharge of all debt if you attempted to hinder, delay or
defraud a creditor when you transferred, removed, destroyed, mutilated, or concealed
property within one year prior to the filing of your Chapter 7 petition.

The trustee may recover the property from the person to whom you transferred it.

11 U.S.C. 727(a)(2), 548(a)(1)
  

Payment to Relative or Insider is a Preference

A total of $600 or more in money or property which is paid to a creditor that is a
relative or insider (certain business associates) within a year prior to filing is a
preference. The Trustee may recover preferences and divide the money between all
creditors.

In Chapter 13, you may be able to prevent the trustee from going after the relative by
increasing the amount paid into your plan.

11 U.S.C. 547(b)(4)(B), 547(c)(8), 101(31)

180 Days Before Bankruptcy Filed
  

Dismissal of prior bankruptcy prevents filing Chapter 7 or 13.

You may not file any bankruptcy if you filed a previous bankruptcy which was
dismissed in the preceding 180 days either (1) on the court's order because of your
willful failure to obey orders of the court or to appear in court when required; or (2) at
your request after the filing of a request for relief from the automatic stay.

11 U.S.C. 109(g)

90 Days Before Bankruptcy Filed
  

Minimum Residency Requirement

You must be a resident in the state in which you are filing for the last 90 days.  If you
have not resided in the state that long, you can only file in the state where you have
resided, or which has been your principal place of business or which has been the
location of your principal assets for the majority of the last 180 days.

Payment to Creditor is a Preference

A total of $600 or more in money or property which is paid to a creditor within 90 days prior to filing
is a preference. The Trustee may recover preferences and divide the money between all creditors.

In Chapter 13, you may be able to prevent the trustee from going after the creditor by increasing the
amount paid into your plan.

11 U.S.C. 547(b)(4)(B), 547(c)(8), 101(31)

60 Days Before Bankruptcy Filed
  

Debt presumed to be non-dischargeable

Debt of $1,075 for cash advances or "luxury goods or services" incurred within 60
days before the Bankruptcy is filed is presumed to be non-dischargeable.

Applies to Chapter 7 cases, and to hardship discharge in Chapter 13.

11 U.S.C. 523(a)(2), 1328(b)

Bankruptcy Filed
  

Commencement of Case

A voluntary bankruptcy is commenced when you file a petition with the Bankruptcy
Court requesting protection from your creditors under Chapter 7 or Chapter 13.  A
husband and wife may file one petition together and commence a joint case.

The filing also puts a stay under 11 U.S.C. �362 into effect prohibiting collection
actions.

11 U.S.C. 301, 302, 101(42)

15 Days After Bankruptcy Filed
    

Deadline to File Schedules and Financial Statement, and Chapter 13 Plan

Within 15 days after filing the Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 petition that commenced your
case, you must file schedules listing your assets and liabilities, your current income and
expenditures, executory contracts and unexpired leases, and a statement of your
financial affairs.

Bankruptcy Rule 1007(c); see also 11 U.S.C. � 521

In Chapter 13, the Plan must also be filed within 15 days after the Bankruptcy was
filed. The plan provides for submission of future income and the treatment of your
creditors, specifying when and how much each kind of creditor will receive.

Bankruptcy Rule 3015(b)

About 18 Days After Bankruptcy Filed
  

Court Mails Notice of Commencement of Case

Approximately 18 days after your case is commenced, the court mails a Notice of
Commencement of Case to you and to the creditors you have included in your mailing
list.  The notice contains meeting date, deadlines for objections to discharge and for
filing Proofs of Claims.

After Chapter 13 Plan Filed
    

Chapter 13 only:  Deadline to Notice Chapter 13 Plan

In the Middle District of Tennessee, your attorney must mail  your Chapter 13 Plan to
all creditors after the Chapter 13 Plan is filed.

30 Days After Bankruptcy Filed
    

Chapter 7 only:  Deadline to file Statement of Intention

Within 30 days after filing the Chapter 7 petition that commenced your case (or before
the  341 meeting if that is earlier), you must file a Statement of Intention indicating
whether you will be surrendering or keeping property secured by consumer debt.  If
you are keeping secured property, you will need to indicate whether you intend to:  (1)
reaffirm the debt and continue to make the payments remaining obligated for the
balance of the debt, or (2) redeem the property by immediately paying the value of the
property and receive a discharge for the balance of the debt.

A copy of the Statement of Intention must be served on the trustee and the creditors
named in the statement on or before the filing of the statement.

11 U.S.C. 521(2)(A); Bankruptcy Rule 1007(c)

30 Days After Chapter 13 Plan Filed
    

Chapter 13 only:  First Payment Due Under Chapter 13 Plan

You must make your first payment under the Chapter 13 Plan within 30 days after the
plan was filed.

If your plan was filed with the petition which commences your case, your first
payment is due within 30 days of the start of the case.  Since the plan must be filed
within 15 days after the commencement of your case, the latest date you may start
making payments is 45 days after the filing of the case.

11 USC 1326(a)(1)

About 6 Weeks After Bankruptcy Filed
  

341 Meeting

Section 341 (the symbol "�" means section) of the Bankruptcy code requires the
Trustee to preside at a meeting of creditors within a "reasonable time."  This meeting is
usually held approximately six weeks after Bankruptcy is filed.

You (as the debtor in a Bankruptcy case) are required to attend this meeting and testify
under oath, but most creditors do not come to the meeting.  The failure of creditors to
attend the meeting does not effect their right to challenge the discharge in a Chapter 7
or to object to the plan in a Chapter 13.  If you do not attend, your case will be
dismissed.

11 USC 341

45 Days after Statement of Intentions Filed
    

Chapter 7:  Deadline in Chapter 7 to perform under Statement of Intention

In Chapter 7, within 45 days after you filed Statement of Intention, you are to perform
as you indicated.   In that statement, you were required to state whether you would be
surrendering or keeping property secured by consumer debt.  If you were keeping
secured property, you would have indicated whether you intended to:  (1) reaffirm the
debt and continue to make the payments remaining obligated for the balance of the
debt, or (2) redeem the property by immediately paying the value of the property and
receiving a discharge for the balance of the debt.

11 U.S.C. 521(2)(B)

30 Days After 341 Meeting
    

Deadline for creditors or Trustee to object to claim of exempt property

Creditors and the Trustee have until 30 days after the conclusion of the creditor's
meeting under � 341 to object to the property you have claimed as exempt in Schedule
C.  While most � 341 meetings are concluded on the same day they are set, it is not
unusual for a meeting to be continued to a subsequent date, which will extend the time
that creditors have to object.

Bankruptcy Rule 4003

60 Days After 341 Meeting
  

Chapter 7:  Deadline in Chapter 7 for objection to discharge of a particular
debt under 523(c)

Creditors have until 60 days after the first date set for creditor's meeting under 341 to
file a complaint under 523(c).  523(c) allows creditors to object to the discharge of
debts which were obtained by false pretenses, a false representation, or actual fraud;
debt from fraud or defalcation while acting in a fiduciary capacity, embezzlement or
larceny; debt for willful and malicious injury; and debt incurred in a divorce or
separation (other than child support and spousal maintenance which are not discharged
even without an objection to discharge).

The most common objection to discharge of a debt is based on 523(a)(2).  This
section presumes that charges totaling $1,000 or more to one creditor within 60 days
before the case is commenced are not discharged, if they are for luxury goods or
services, or cash advances. This section also denies a discharge to debt extended
because the creditor relied upon a credit application which was materially false.

Bankruptcy Rule 4007(c); see also 11 USC 523
    

Chapter 7:  Deadline for objection to discharge of all debt under 727(a)

Creditors have until 60 days after the first date set for creditor's meeting under 341 to
file a complaint under 727(a).  727(a) allows object to the discharge of all debts
because of misconduct including transfer, destruction or concealment of property;
concealment, destruction, falsification or failure to keep financial records; making false
statements; withholding information; failing to explain losses; failure to respond to
material questions; having received a discharge in a prior case filed within the last 6
years.

Bankruptcy Rule 4004(a); see also 11 USC 727(a)
    

Chapter 7:  Deadline for U.S. Trustee or court to move to dismiss case for
substantial abuse under 707(b)

Until 60 days after the first date set for creditor's meeting under � 341, the U.S.
Trustee or the court may move to dismiss a case in which debts are primarily
consumer debts if it finds that the granting of relief would be a substantial abuse of the
provisions of Chapter 7.

Substantial abuse has been interpreted by a number of courts to mean having sufficient
disposable income to pay more than half of your unsecured debt over the next 36
months.

Bankruptcy Rule 1017(e); see also 11 USC 707(b)
  

Chapter 13:  Deadline in Chapter 13 to file all due but unfiled tax returns

For cases filed in the Middle District of Tennessee, you must file all due but unfiled tax
returns within 60 days after the first date set for the 341 Meeting.

More than 60 Days After 341 Meeting
  

Discharge entered in Chapter 7 case

Court rules require that the discharge be entered "forthwith" after the expiration of the
time for objecting to discharge or moving to dismiss the case. The time for those
objections expires 60 days after the first date set for creditor's meeting.

The discharge is not absolute or final. The trustee can ask that the discharge be set
aside if you do not turn over non-exempt property, and for other violations of the
debtor's duties.

Bankruptcy Rules 4004(c)(1), 4004(a), 1017(e)

90 Days After 341 Meeting
    

Deadline for non-government creditor to file its Proof of Claim

A creditor, other than a governmental unit, must file its Proof of Claim within 90 days
after the after the first date set for creditor's meeting under � 341 in order to share in
payments from the estate.

Bankruptcy Rule 3002(c)

180 Days After Bankruptcy Filed
    

Deadline for governmental unit to file Proof of Claim

A governmental unit, such as the Internal Revenue Service, must file its Proof of Claim
within the commencement of the case in order to share in payments from the estate.

Bankruptcy Rule 3002(c)(1)

3 Years from First Plan Payment
  

Minimum length of payments under Chapter 13 Plan

Unless all allowed claims are paid sooner, plan payments must continue for the three-
year period beginning on the date that the first payment is due under the plan.  During
this period, the plan must provide that all of the debtor's projected disposable income is
committed to the plan.  (This requirement comes into effect only if the trustee or the
holder of an allowed unsecured claim objects; it has been our experience that the
trustee will always object.)

11 U.S.C.1325(b)(1), 1322(d)
    

Discharge entered in Chapter 13

Upon completion of plan payments the discharge in Chapter 13 is entered.

11 U.S.C. 1328

5 Years from First Plan Payment
    

Maximum length of payments under Chapter 13 Plan

The maximum length of a Chapter 13 plan is five years beginning on the date that the
first payment is due under the plan.  After the third year of the plan, the plan no longer
needs to provide that all of the disposable income be committed to the plan.

11 U.S.C. 1325(b)(1), 1322(d)
    

Discharge entered in Chapter 13

Upon completion of plan payments the discharge in Chapter 13 is entered.

11 U.S.C. 1328