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Well the good news is that there are many options that can be looked at for you to save your house in the event of your bankruptcy. Don't think at this point that it's lost. Also it's a good idea to bookmark this Bankruptcy and Houses website, or put it in your Favourites, so that you can come back and check it out again. To save your house there's a bit to take in. In about 2005/2006 we started to explore what could be done to save the house in bankruptcy. We both saw how pointless it was to have the bankruptcy trustee, or the bank, just sell the house asap, no matter what. A few years ago, that was the mindset. Now I'd say that Alan Nicholls is now one of the leaders in the Saving the House in Bankruptcy field. Read the rest of this website and then, if you'd like to discuss your position with Alan, call 1300 794 492 and ask to speak to Alan about "saving the house in bankruptcy". Say that you came from Fred Appleton's Bankruptcy and Houses website please. If Alan is not immediately available his staff will take a few details off you, or call you back to get them, and Alan will then ring you. Alternatively, you could email him your details to This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it In your email set out your debt that is leading you to consider bankruptcy, tell him about your job and the amount of wage or salary that is normally credited to your bank account each pay period, your car situation, if you have dependent children or a non working spouse or partner, and then the house details. He'll want to know, and be able to check out, its address, its estimated current market value, the amount of the mortgage, the owners' names, other encumbrances, etc. Include your phone number, that's important.
A bit of information though, if you go bankrupt, a registered bankruptcy trustee is appointed to administer your bankrupt estate. His job, his duty in fact, is to realize into cash whatever assets that you've got that by bankruptcy law, he can claim. He then uses these funds, after disbursements and costs and taxes (including his fees), to pay something to your bankruptcy creditors. Alan takes his fee from the funds that your bankruptcy receives in this way. (He mostly does not need to also bill you separately as well). Bankruptcy won't send you broke either. You'll still be able to earn and keep a good income. As a bankrupt the very minimum amount that you can earn and keep, (called the Threshhold amount) is $850 per week, net after tax and after child support. (There's a separate formula to work this amount out, so I won't go into it here). If you've got dependants the $850 amount that you can keep is higher. The $850 mentioned here applies if you've got no dependants. With dependants you can keep more, its $1,002 per week if you've got one dependant, $1,079 per week if you've got two dependants, $1,121 per week if you've got three dependants, $1138.73 per week if you've got four dependants, and $1,155 per week if you've got over 4 dependants. This is your spending money, yours to keep, yours to buy food and run the car, and pay the mortgage, and save, PLUS 50% of any amount by which you go over these threshold figures is yours too (the other 50% goes to your bankruptcy. When you can absorb the arithmetic, life looks different. As a bankrupt the very minimum amount that you can earn and keep, (called the Threshhold amount) is $850 per week, net after tax and after child support. (There's a separate formula to work this amount out, so I won't go into it here). If you've got dependants the $850 amount that you can keep is higher. 50% of your income over the Threshhold amount is paid into your bankruptcy for the (mostly) 3 years that you are bankrupt. This also provides a fund for the bankruptcy trustee to use to get paid. With the permission of your bankruptcy trustee, you can also go overseas while you are bankrupt, but you must get the permission. Overwhelmingly you will get it. Discuss this with Alan if it's likely to be relevant. Concentrating on the house though, it's your equity in the house that the bankruptcy trustee can, and must sell. However, if the bankruptcy trustee so judges that it's in your creditors' best interests, it sometimes can be sold back to you after your 3 years of bankruptcy is over, or, during the 3 years of your bankruptcy he can sell your equity in it to somebody else, your mother or your father for example, or to your non bankrupt spouse or partner.It's the bankruptcy's "interest" in your equity in the house that he can sell. Mortgages aren't changed, and the names on the title aren't changed, but the trustee will more than likely place a Caveat on the title to protect the bankruptcy's interest The important thing to note is that the sale of your equity back to you at the end of your bankruptcy, or to anybody else during your bankruptcy, will be based on the value of the house at the time of sale, and not the value at the time of bankruptcy. Sometimes you may have no equity in your house at the point of bankruptcy. What happens in this case is covered shortly.
And don't forget, the trustee can be paid his fees and costs from the amount so received, so he might not ask you to pay him separately. You should discuss the fee scenario with Alan. Alternatively, presume that both joint owners go bankrupt. The trustee could decide not to sell the house for the three years of the bankruptcy. The bankrupts would still occupy it and pay the mortgage and all costs, but in those three years, they would have the chance to save up the $50,000 equity, or if the equity by then would be more, then the new amount would have to be saved. After bankruptcy, you could buy the bankruptcy's "interest in the house" back off the trustee. This sort of scenario, and others, could be looked at, particularly if there is currently little or no equity in your house. There are of course other scenarios, such as no equity in the house at the time of bankruptcy. In all of this there are ts to be crossed and an I or two to be dotted, but from your point of view, the important thing is that if you've got an emotional attachment to the house, and it makes sense to try and save it, then it is possible. Not all bankruptcy trustees may look at this sort of thing. It's a matter of judgement. Alan's office will refer your matter on to my office for processing, and my colleague Helen Millward will handle the bankruptcy paperwork and forms. (Helen is at my cost, not yours). You can discuss paying the above by instalments with Helen if that's needed. If you become involved with us you'll find Alan very fair, no ego trips, but very professional, and he'll stick to the law. Now let's see if we can get you back on your feet and on with your life. |