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What To Disclose In Bankruptcy Papers

By Cathy Moran

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If the headline drew you in, like the Geico gecko, you can complain you’ve been duped.

There’s no decision involved: in bankruptcy papers, you disclose everything. Period.

Disclosure is the price of the bankruptcy discharge.

Shortchange the system by leaving out inconvenient facts and you risk both the omitted asset and the discharge.

Understand the difference between discharge and dismissal.

A false oath on the bankruptcy papers or transfers intended to conceal assets from creditors are each grounds on which the discharge of all of your debts can be denied, while the trustee recovers and sells the assets.

It’s nasty and comes at a very high price.

Tell the whole truth

The reason for incomplete bankruptcy schedules is seldom an intention to conceal.  It’s more often the filer’s failure to take disclosure seriously.

People ready to file bankruptcy don’t want to read the questionnaire that prompts them for various kinds of assets they might have. They don’t commit to thinking about how this question might apply to their situation.

Or they assume because an asset has little market value, it’s excluded from the schedules.

Not so. The schedules don’t ask for your significant assets or things you have with value;  they ask that you list what you own.

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You would not believe the number of clients whose completed questionnaires tell me they have no clothes.

Yet I’ve never met with a naked client.  They just perform some sort of mental shortcut when we ask about what they own.

Transparent assets belong in bankruptcy papers

The hardest kind of things for laypeople to “see” as assets are those that are just legal rights, or even, possible legal rights:

  • the worker’s compensation claim,
  • the claim against the landlord,
  • the participation in a class action.

All of those are assets that need to be listed.

Often a trustee will elect not to administer even non exempt assets, because the effort to pursue them is too great compared to the possible return.

But even if the trustee were to administer the claim for the benefit of creditors, the loss to the debtor is usually far less than the value of the discharge of debts  you get  in bankruptcy.

More

What your signature on your bankruptcy papers says about you

Your court appearance in bankruptcy

Who you need to pay after bankruptcy

Image courtesy of Wikimedia and Frank Wouters.

Woman without clothes:  Gisela Glardino and Flickr

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Filed Under: How bankruptcy works

About Cathy Moran

I'm a veteran bankruptcy lawyer and consumer advocate in California's Silicon Valley. I write, teach, and speak in the hopes of expanding understanding of how bankruptcy can make life better in a family's future.

Comments

  1. abshandra says

    November 9, 2009 at 5:08 am

    Sometimes that’s what happened. They feel they own the assets are not comparable, and still not be able to close the whole thing. So, better not to include it. But sometimes, too, it was done so that not all his assets taken, so there could still be used for everyday life. Sometimes also broke cuman excuse for not paying their debts. Bankruptcy Records

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About The Soapbox

You’ve arrived at the Bankruptcy Soapbox, a resource of bankruptcy information and consumer law.

Soapbox is a companion site to Bankruptcy in Brief, where I try to be largely explanatory and even handed (Note I said “try”).

Here, I allow myself to tell stories and express strong opinions. We dig deeper into how to consider bankruptcy and navigate a bankruptcy case.

Moran Law Group
Bankruptcy specialists for individuals and small businesses in the San Francisco Bay Area

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