I was under the impression that when a Plan is paid on, there is a strict order of who takes precedence in getting paid.
For instance...Trustee and Attys. get their share first. THEN the Secured creditors. And LAST, the unsecured creditors get whatever is left divided up evenly amongst them.
Isn't this the case?
And IF IT IS THE CASE, then WHY can a judge or trustee essentially tell us to abandon our home and stop paying on it, and move to somewhere cheaper if I want to get my Plan confirmed because if I don't, then there isn't enough money going to the Unsecured Creditors? Isn't that doing HARM to a Secured Creditor in FAVOR of the Unsecured Creditors, who are supposed to be LAST in line? How can this be acceptable? Why wouldn't the Secured Creditor argue against this?
I mean, why should it just be decided arbitrarily, and not by the rule of law?
The Secureds take Precedence over the Unsecureds? Am I wrong?
If I can make my house payment to my secured creditor (and I CAN), and also make a payment into a 13 Plan that does pay SOMETHING to the Unsecureds, then HOW can we be told that isn't enough?
I just don't get it.
I know the TT is paid a commission based on what the Unsecured Creditors get, but that should not be a valid reason for them to demand MORE at the expense or Harm to a Secured Creditor.
The IRS estimate for housing cost for a family of 3 in our county should play no role in a 13. We are paying the Secured Creditor on Time, and also can pay into a plan that gives the Unsecureds some payback, and that's certainly more than they would get in a 7, and I would argue they've already made out anyway in writing off the debt, getting tax breaks for that, and also in the exorbitant interest they all collected back when we were making our payments on time for years on end.
I feel the game is fixed against us not by law, but by the whims of who we got UNLUCKY enough to be faced against in the forms of the TT and the Judge, and their personal preferences are superceding the Law, or how it should be applied, especially in this day and age in America, when the Government should be looking to AVOID foreclosure of homes if at all possible.
For instance...Trustee and Attys. get their share first. THEN the Secured creditors. And LAST, the unsecured creditors get whatever is left divided up evenly amongst them.
Isn't this the case?
And IF IT IS THE CASE, then WHY can a judge or trustee essentially tell us to abandon our home and stop paying on it, and move to somewhere cheaper if I want to get my Plan confirmed because if I don't, then there isn't enough money going to the Unsecured Creditors? Isn't that doing HARM to a Secured Creditor in FAVOR of the Unsecured Creditors, who are supposed to be LAST in line? How can this be acceptable? Why wouldn't the Secured Creditor argue against this?
I mean, why should it just be decided arbitrarily, and not by the rule of law?
The Secureds take Precedence over the Unsecureds? Am I wrong?
If I can make my house payment to my secured creditor (and I CAN), and also make a payment into a 13 Plan that does pay SOMETHING to the Unsecureds, then HOW can we be told that isn't enough?
I just don't get it.
I know the TT is paid a commission based on what the Unsecured Creditors get, but that should not be a valid reason for them to demand MORE at the expense or Harm to a Secured Creditor.
The IRS estimate for housing cost for a family of 3 in our county should play no role in a 13. We are paying the Secured Creditor on Time, and also can pay into a plan that gives the Unsecureds some payback, and that's certainly more than they would get in a 7, and I would argue they've already made out anyway in writing off the debt, getting tax breaks for that, and also in the exorbitant interest they all collected back when we were making our payments on time for years on end.
I feel the game is fixed against us not by law, but by the whims of who we got UNLUCKY enough to be faced against in the forms of the TT and the Judge, and their personal preferences are superceding the Law, or how it should be applied, especially in this day and age in America, when the Government should be looking to AVOID foreclosure of homes if at all possible.
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