Yes. Any creditor can petition the court to be excluded from a bankruptcy. It is up to the judge (sometimes the BK Trustee) to rule on whether or not the request will be granted.
Yes, as long as the claim did not involve fraud.
yes u can u have to contatct the bankruptcy clerks office to pay the fees and get the paperwork started
Take it off your bankrupcy papers and pay the bill, at least the portion that the Insurance gave you. Check with your bankruptcy attorney, insurance agent or doctors office. Generally checks are sent direct to the doctor.
Most attorneys will not charge you for preliminary questions associated with a possible bankruptcy. During this initial phone call, a good attorney will be able to identify whether you qualify for Chapter 7 or 13 bankruptcy, and many offer a free in-office consultation before proceeding with any fees.
One reason that one would need to visit a bankruptcy law office is in order to file for bankruptcy. Bankruptcy law helps by giving a "fresh start" for the honest, unfortunate debtors out there.
The first two digits of the docket number, before the hyphen, tells you the year. If you don't have the docket number, you can go to a bankruptcy court or bankruptcy lawyer's office and look it up on the computer.
No
NPOC is short hand for "no proof of claim filed." The Z may be a term assigned by the Trustee, so you should call the trustee's office and ask what it means.
While there is an office that looks for repeat or serial fillers that abuse the process, it is a matter of time between filings that is most important. BANKRUPTCY TIMING Under the bankruptcy laws effective on October 17, 2005, Chapter 7 cannot be filed unless the debtor was discharged from the previous Chapter 7 or bankruptcy more than eight years ago. The debtor cannot file a Chapter 13 unless: (1) the debtor received a discharge under Chapter 7, 11 or 12 more than four years ago; or (2) the debtor received a discharge under Chapter 13 more than two years ago.
I am not a lawyer, but I do know that you can try to check with the township or county assessor's office and see if the property taxes have been paid and try to find out who is paying them. Also, I would recommend going to the US Bankruptcy Court clerk's office where you filed your bankruptcy. Te address and phone number should be in the government pages of your local phone book. Maybe the clerk can help you look up your bankruptcy file. One thing you might check on is to see if there is an Order of No Assets, No Claimants, and when the bankruptcy was discharged and if it is closed. Also, it important whether you filed a chapter 7 or a chapter 13. Was your mortgage paid prior to filing bankruptcy or mostly paid? Was your house claimed in the exemptions? Did anyone object to the exemptions? It may be wise to have a bankruptcy or real estate lawyer look over your papers.
In a doctors office
you get medicine or a shot