SENIORS
FILE CHP 13 TO RESCUE HOUSE AND HANDLE TAX LIENS;
CLIENT
FILES CHP 7 FOR $40K CREDIT CARDS
Clients
are seniors. Husband is 72. Wife is 71. Both are retired and receiving combined
social security and pension total of $4,015/mo. Husband is still in good
spirits although he is not in good health. He has been on dialysis for three
years. He had hypertension when he was still working and left that condition
untreated for years. He was ignorant of the fact that untreated hypertension
destroys the kidneys because too much blood flows through the kidneys for too
long. Damage to the kidneys by untreated hypertension is irreversible, unlike
damage caused by overdose of medication, which is reversible. By the time that
client was educated on the cause and effect of hypertension on the kidneys, it
was too late; his kidney function had been reduced to 10%, requiring dialysis,
3 X a week. But what about a kidney transplant? His doctors say that because of
his age, he may not survive a kidney transplant. So he has resigned himself to
being tied up to a dialysis machine to live. Wife is healthy, and they both
seem happy. Their problem now is two-fold: 1) Their loan modification request
was rejected two weeks ago, and they are now 8 months in arrears in their mortgage
2) IRS has placed a tax lien on their house for $15K for back taxes from 2005
to last year, 3) Credit cards of $30K.
They
said that they wanted to keep their house because it had $150K of equity. They
bought the house for $40K, forty years ago. Now its fair market value is $450K.
They refinanced five years ago and owe $300K on the mortgage. Their default on
the mortgage is $17K, the IRS is hounding them to pay the tax lien and
threatening to sell their house if they don’t pay up, and they can’t pay the
$1K monthly to keep the $30K of credit cards current.
Can
a chapter 7 help clients in their situation? NO. Chapter 7 will not give them
the opportunity to cure their default on the house, and Chapter 7 will not
resolve the tax lien problem. It will discharge the $30K of credit cards, but
the two main problems will remain unsolved. However, Chapter 13 will allow
clients to “freeze” the default on the mortgage and give them 5 years to pay
that off without any interest, and Chapter 13 will “freeze” the IRS tax lien
and allow clients to pay that off over 5 years without interest. And in Chapter
13, in clients’ case, nothing has to be paid to the $30K credit cards, those
will just be discharged in full. How much will they pay on their Chapter 13
plan of reorganization? On the mortgage default of $17K, that will be $283 a
month for 60 months. On the tax lien of $15K, that will be $250 a month for 60
months. They don’t have to pay any portion of the $30K credit cards because
their home exemption of $175K covers their entire equity in the house of $150K.
Together with court administrative expenses, their plan payment will be $586 a
month, more or less.
Can
they afford $586 a month of plan payment to cure their mortgage default and to
pay off the tax lien? Their household income of $4,015 monthly is good enough
to provide them a disposable income that is more than $586 a month because in
Chapter 13, they don’t have to pay $1K a month to keep their $30K of credit
cards current. Under their reorganization plan, the pay credit cards nothing.
If they complete plan payments in 60 months, they will be back on current
status on the mortgage, will owe IRS nothing and IRS will have to remove the
tax lien on their house, and they will owe nothing on credit cards. So, Chapter
13 is perfect for senior clients. It’s too bad there is no Chapter 13 to cure
his kidneys. For that, he has to ask our God, Yahweh, or His one and only Son,
Jesus Christ, for a cure. Jesus resurrected his friend Lazarus who had been
dead for 3 days. Jesus healed the blind and performed numerous miracles of
healing the sick and resurrecting the dead, to prove that He is the Son of God.
So, healing his kidneys, this is something between client and Jesus but it is
certainly possible. He needs to ask and it will be given.
Chapter
7 Client is 50 and single. He has a good job that pays him $55K a year. He
doesn’t own a house and has just bought a new car. He doesn’t want to continue
payments on his old car where he pays $258 a month for a title loan at 22% interest.
He wants to give up the old car and he wants to get rid of $40K of credit
cards. Chapter 7 is perfect for client. He can keep his new car, surrender his
old car and not owe any return deficiency, and discharge $40K of credit cards.
With Chapter 7, he can become productive again and start saving money again.
Without credit card payments and the old car payment, client is looking forward
to beef up his retirement account at least by $800 a month.
“ASK & IT WILL BE GIVEN TO YOU; SEEK &
YOU WILL FIND; KNOCK AND THE DOOR WILL BE OPENED TO YOU.” MATTHEW 7:7
Lawrence Bautista Yang
is a graduate of Georgetown University Law Center and has been in law practice
for thirty years. He specializes in
bankruptcy, business and civil litigation and has handled more than five
thousand successful bankruptcy cases in California. He speaks Tagalog and looks forward to
discussing your case with you personally.
Please call Angie, Barbara or Jess at (626) 284-1142 for an appointment
at 1000 S Fremont Ave, MAILSTOP 58, Building A-1 SUITE 1125, Alhambra, CA 91803
OR at 20274 Carrey Road, Walnut, CA 91789.