Bankruptcy reasons
1. Eliminate the legal obligation to pay many of your
debts.
This process of wiping the slate clean is called a discharge
of debts. The goal of a discharge is to reduce debt to give you
a fresh start. Whether it is through straight bankruptcy
(Chapter 7 Bankruptcy) or through reorganization (Chapter 13
Bankruptcy), most or all of your debts can be cleared.
2. Stop foreclosure on you house and allow you to
effectively make payments to catch up on missed payments of
your mortgage.
If your home is in foreclosure, Chapter 13 Bankruptcy will
stop the foreclosure any time prior to the sale. Bankruptcy
does not eliminate mortgages on your property without payment.
Rather, bankruptcy will structure a plan in order to repay your
mortgage arrears (the amount that you are behind).
3. Prevent your car or other property from being
repossessed.
Even if the creditor has repossessed your car, filing
bankruptcy can effectively force them to return your car or
other personal property (if the bankruptcy is filed quickly
enough). The past payments you have missed will be consolidated
into your Chapter 13 Bankruptcy plan. After this you will no
longer pay the finance company, rather you will make monthly
payments to the trustee of your Chapter 13 Bankruptcy who will
then pay the finance company.
4. Reduce or even eliminate high medical bills.
Sometimes an unfortunate accident or major recently
discovered illness can completely ruin a family. Many families
have to make choices on allocation of bills. Often, bills that
were once important become insignificant to the large medical
bills acquired by a loved one. Filing Chapter 7 Bankruptcy can
greatly reduce the amount of medical bills.
5. Recent loss of employment.
Studies show that loss of work is one of the most common
reasons people file for bankruptcy. This is very easy to see. A
family can get comfortable on two maybe even one salary. They
can take on regular amount of debts, join clubs, and pay normal
bills with relative ease. All of a sudden one or both spouses
lose a job and a family must go from two salaries to one.
Losing a job is closely tied to high medical bills. Losing a
job means this family may be left without the protection of
insurance that was once provided by their employer. Often times
these two factors combined create an almost impossible mountain
to climb without the help of bankruptcy.
6. Stop harassing behavior from creditors.
Some creditors do not always take the right course of action
when attempting to collect a debt. Often, creditors will
persistently call the home of a particular debtor with
demeaning and abusive behavior. Not only is this unethical it
can rise to the level of unlawful. In essence, bankruptcy will
put on hold the demands of many creditors and stop the
harassing phone calls and other inappropriate behavior all
together.
7. Restore or prevent your utilities from being shut
off.
As you have probably seen many of these reasons overlap.
Some lead to another. If your home is in risk of foreclosure
then your utility bill may also be in risk of being terminated.
Filing bankruptcy can prevent the utility company from leaving
you in the dark.
8. Provide help for large amounts of student loan debt.
While it is true that your student loans will not be
eliminated like several other types of unsecured debt,
bankruptcy can consolidate your student loan debt. This
consolidation will allow a debtor to make monthly payments
through Chapter 13 Bankruptcy that are within the financial
ability of the debtor.
9. End wage garnishments.
Chapter 7 Bankruptcy will stop wage garnishment. Wage
garnishment basically takes away your weekly earnings often
times leaving you without necessities. Chapter 7 Bankruptcy
allows you to purchase necessities for you and your family.
Chapter 13 Bankruptcy will also help in this regard.
10. Challenge certain claims of fraudulent creditors.
Bankruptcy will allow you to challenge these claims from
creditors who are trying to collect more money from you than
you really owe. An attorney can provide the support and the
backing you will need to step up to these creditors. Attorneys
often even the playing field between a big creditor and a
single debtor. Filing bankruptcy with an attorney can stop
fraudulent reporting by a creditor.
Original content from http://www.bankruptcyhome.com
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