This is usually up to the Trustee and varies based on local rules. However, most Trustees want steady and regular payments, so they usually prefer automatic payments vs. you sending a check. Of course most debtors prefer not to have automatic payments as it means that the employer is told of the debtor employee's bankruptcy filing.
No. He automatically joins in Chapter 24.
If you are late on a chapter 13 payment you are at risk of having your case dsmissed. Please try to make payments on time and make payments up if you missed any due to a miscommunication.
Make payments on time
only in chapter 13, you cannot use chapter 7 to catch up on past payments.
All chapter 13 payments are scrutinized for ability to pay. If the plan payments were outrageous, it is highly unlikely that the court would approve a plan that a debtor would be unable to pay.
Talk to the lender, or you can file Chapter 13 Bankruptcy to lower the payments where you can afford them.
Yes, they may.
For chapter 7 BKs, it is unlikely. However, for chapter 13 Bks, most trustees dont want to rely on you sending a check every month, so they will usually have your employer automatically deduct your plan payment from your paycheck and have that money sent to the U.S. Trustee directly. If this is the case then yes, someone within your employer would know you have declared BK.
Don't kill him in Chapter 16, and he should come in Chapter 16x automatically.
No. Only a scam.
I am not a lawyer. If you have a
This is not a question. If your question is, "What happens when the trustee moves the Court to declare a secured claim withdrawn," then one should object, particularly if the secured creditor still has a claim. If this is chapter 7, a secured creditor has no claim except on its collateral. In chapter 13, fight for your claim.