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Bankruptcy law
provides for the development of a plan that allows a debtor, who
is unable to pay his creditors, to resolve his debts through the
division of his assets among his creditors. This supervised
division also allows the interests of all creditors to be
treated with some measure of equality. Certain bankruptcy
proceedings allow a debtor to stay in business and use revenue
generated to resolve his or her debts. An additional purpose of
bankruptcy law is to allow certain debtors to free themselves
(to be discharged) of the financial obligations they have
accumulated, after their assets are distributed, even if their
debts have not been paid infull.
Bankruptcy law
is federal statutory law contained in
Title 11 of the United States Code. Congress passed the
Bankruptcy Code under its Constitutional grant of authority to
"establish. . . uniform laws on the subject of Bankruptcy
throughout the United States." See
U.S. Constitution Article I, Section 8. (http://www.law.cornell.edu/constitution/constitution.articlei.html#section8)
States may not regulate bankruptcy though they may pass laws
that govern other aspects of the debtor-creditor relationship.
See
Debtor-Creditor (http://www.law.cornell.edu/topics/debtor_creditor.html).
A number of sections of Title 11 incorporate the debtor-creditor
law of the individual states.
Bankruptcy
proceedings are supervised by and litigated in the
United States Bankruptcy Courts (http://www.uscourts.gov/bankruptcycourts.html).
These courts are a part of the District Courts of The United
States.
The United States Trustees (http://www.usdoj.gov/ust/)
were established by Congress to handle many of the supervisory
and administrative duties of bankruptcy proceedings. Proceedings
in bankruptcy courts are governed by the Bankruptcy Rules which
were promulgated by the Supreme Court under the authority of
Congress.
There are two
basic types of Bankruptcy proceedings. A filing under
Chapter 7 is called liquidation. It is the most common type
of bankruptcy proceeding. Liquidation involves the appointment
of a trustee who collects the non-exempt property of the debtor,
sells it and distributes the proceeds to the creditors.
Bankruptcy proceedings under Chapters
11,
12, and
13 involve the rehabilitation of the debtor to allow him or
her to use future earnings to pay off creditors. Under Chapter
7, 12, 13, and some 11 proceedings, a trustee is appointed to
supervise the assets of the debtor. A bankruptcy proceeding can
either be entered into voluntarily by a debtor or initiated by
creditors. After a bankruptcy proceeding is filed, creditors,
for the most part, may not seek to collect their debts outside
of the proceeding. The debtor is not allowed to transfer
property that has been declared part of the estate subject to
proceedings. Furthermore, certain pre-proceeding transfers of
property, secured interests, and liens may be delayed or
invalidated. Various provisions of the Bankruptcy Code also
establish the priority of creditors' interests.
However, a
recent decision by the Supreme Court has shifted this power
towards the debtor. In
Rousey v. Jacoway (http://www.law.cornell.edu/supct/html/03-1407.ZS.html),
(April 4th, 2005), the Court held that assets in
Individual Retirement Accounts (IRA’s) (http://www.investopedia.com/terms/i/ira.asp)
are protected under
11 U.S.C § 522(d) and thus exempt from withdrawal from the
bankruptcy estate. This decision has broad implications for the
baby-boomer generation, providing millions of Americans nearing
retirement with increased protection of their earnings.
Recent passage
of the
Bankruptcy Prevention and Consumer Protection Act (http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d109:SN00256:|TOM:/bss/d109query.html|)
in April 2005 has also resulted in major reforms in bankrupcy
law, outlining revised guidelines governing the dismissal or
conversion of Chapter 7 liquidations to Chapter 11 or 13
proceedings. The law also expands the responsibilities of the
United States Trustees Program to include supervision of random
and targeted audits, certification of entities to provide credit
counseling that individuals must receive before filing for
bankruptcy, certification of entities that provide financial
education to individuals before being discharged from debt, and
greater oversight of small business Chapter 11 reorganization
cases.
Retrieved from "http://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/index.php/Bankruptcy"
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