Yes
I believe you pretty much have to.
Yes.
No limit
No child and/or spousal support are not dischargeable in a chapter 7 BK. It is my understanding that child support, student loans, taxes owed, and things along that line cannot be included in a bankruptcy.
TAXES in CHAPTER 7sorry to tell you , but in Texas property taxes can not be discharged in any bankruptcy.As laws change every year it would be best to check with the city you live in
If the foreclosure was not part of the bankruptcy, yes.
A chapter 7 bankruptcy is the nuclear bomb of debt clearing. It will however, not get rid of certain taxes, preference payments, college loans, and other not dischargeable debts.
Yes, you can, and you may be able to discharge the taxes owed, if they are income taxes for returns filed more than three years prior to filing, unless there are more recent adjustments to the taxes owed.You can also file a Chapter 13 to arrange a payment plan for the taxes, though the IRS has become more amenable to reasonable payment plans without a bankruptcy filing.Consult an experienced bankruptcy lawyer in your area.
You have to file your income taxes yearly regardless of whether you have filed for bankruptcy or not. Yes, IRS may garnish your refunds to pay toward your debts. If your bankruptcy is over however, you don't have to worry about that.
If you still owe federal income taxes, they will. But if they don't take it, the chapter 13 trustee gets the tax refund. You should have listed any income taxes that were dischargeable (due more that 3 years prior to the filing date).
While there does not seem to be any limit to the number of loans or debts you can claim on a Chapter 7 Bankruptcy, there are restrictions as to the nature of your claims. Debts that will not be discharged include debts from alimony or child support, debts from accidents involving intoxication, educational benefit overpayment or loans made or guaranteed by any government department, debts for taxes, and certain debts for injuries caused by the debtor to another entity in a willful or mailicious manner. More information on Chapter 7 Bankruptcy rules and regulations is available at http://www.uscourts.gov.
If you are referring to a chapter 20 (chapter 7 + chapter 13), then yes it is possible. The BK court doesnt differentiate between the types of debts (i.e. taxes, mortgages, medical debt, or credit cards) so you cannot file a chapter 7 for personal debt, and then expect to be allowed to file a chapter 7 for medical debt soon after.