We are about to be confirmed with a plan I'm not sure we can actually live with, but we've agreed to it because our attorney won't fight for us and we've been at this for a year.
My question of the moment is: the Trustee indicated that their fee is 6.5%, so that's what I used to calculate the disposable income on the b22c.
When I got a hold of their calculation spreadsheet, though it says 6.5%, when you do the math it's actually 6.95%, and the excess is being tacked on top our monthly payment (so it's now above our DI from the b22c). If they had said it was going to be 6.95%, I would have used that to calculate the DI.
It's not a huge amount, but my objection is to this deceptive practice. Anyone ever seen this before? It may be an accounting practice like banks use to adjust rates for inflation, but is it legitimate and legal?
On the b22c, what if I had estimated the 8% that is the standard for our area (from the doj web site), but they later adjusted their fee down to 6.95% (I think they did this because we have a $2500 mortgage that we're paying through the plan, the fees on which is all "gravy" for them)? Would I have been able to have the benefit of the 8% as calculated taken as a deduction to determine our DI and I wouldn't be quibbling about this addition to our monthly payment?
If we agree to this just to get confirmed (which I will find very hard to swallow, when that amount could literally be used to buy groceries to feed my kids vs. going into the Trustee's pocket), can we get a real lawyer (ours is awful) and contest it later?
My question of the moment is: the Trustee indicated that their fee is 6.5%, so that's what I used to calculate the disposable income on the b22c.
When I got a hold of their calculation spreadsheet, though it says 6.5%, when you do the math it's actually 6.95%, and the excess is being tacked on top our monthly payment (so it's now above our DI from the b22c). If they had said it was going to be 6.95%, I would have used that to calculate the DI.
It's not a huge amount, but my objection is to this deceptive practice. Anyone ever seen this before? It may be an accounting practice like banks use to adjust rates for inflation, but is it legitimate and legal?
On the b22c, what if I had estimated the 8% that is the standard for our area (from the doj web site), but they later adjusted their fee down to 6.95% (I think they did this because we have a $2500 mortgage that we're paying through the plan, the fees on which is all "gravy" for them)? Would I have been able to have the benefit of the 8% as calculated taken as a deduction to determine our DI and I wouldn't be quibbling about this addition to our monthly payment?
If we agree to this just to get confirmed (which I will find very hard to swallow, when that amount could literally be used to buy groceries to feed my kids vs. going into the Trustee's pocket), can we get a real lawyer (ours is awful) and contest it later?
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