Your governing documents may provide for leverage against both your property title and you personally, for your obligation to pay your assessments. As well, assessments due prior to the date of filing are treated differently than assessments due after the date of your bankruptcy filing.
Your bankruptcy counsel can answer your question.
No, that can only occur in a chapter 13. If you filed a chapter 7, a lender would be able to get relief from stay (i.e. would still be able to foreclose on you)
A Chapter 7 can be filed with an open Chapter 13.
Yes.
Bankruptcy must be filed in the state in which you reside for the majority of the year.
Yes. The foreclosure lawsuit is called Lis Pendens and requires an attorney. The Lis Pendens must be filed within 365 days from the date the lien was recorded.
if you filed chapter 13 and it was discharged in 2005 can you file chapter 7 in 2009
Chapter 11 is a type of bankruptcy that can be filed by both businesses and people. Testa Corp filed bankruptcy on October 11, 2013.
It is filed because a secured creditor (who has stopped receiving payments) wants to foreclose on the collateral of the loan/promissory note. It is filed because a BK filing prevents a creditor from trying any collection activity (the "stay"). So a creditor that wants to continue to collect/foreclose must seek court permission to do so- hence "relief" from "stay"
It depends on the chapter you filed under. If you filed under Chapter 7, you have to wait 8 years before filing again. If you filed under Chapter 13, you only have to wait four years.
Yes. A mortgage says that the loan is secured by the property. A "chapter 13" does not allow you to stop making payments on your mortgage.
You would be able to file for chapter 7 but not your husband.
Only if you have filed chapter 6.